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••'•

·.

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily Sentinel
·Meigs County's
newest prod~ct
PageBl

Friday, November 12,199J
·
Page-fb

'

Wife with herpes does not mean·infid-elity
Deu Au ••eden: Cu you
1111111 IIIOibt.r leaiew 111 herpes? I bope
10.

Two yean 11110. I becamo ill with
hip fever, chilla llld 1e~ ptet
pain. The diii"'O!is wu acailll
belpcl. At the lime, I!IY il•lllald llld
I bid been IU'IiecllS yeua. He wu

R. DAVID GillSON

EDWIN HARPER

Four night polemic
discussion to be held
A four night polemic discussion
will be held Nov. 15, 16, 18 and 19
with Edwin S. Harper of the United
Pentecostal Church of Huntington,
W.Va and R. David Gibson of the
Church of Christ of the Alto,
W.Va
The first two nights of the
debate will take place at the University of Rio Grande, Fine and
Performing Ans Center. The topic
will be trinity versus Jesus only and
must Jesus be said at the time of
baptism with each participant either
debating or affirming the topic.
Thursday and Friday nights the

lbe only ~ex pu~ner rd ever hid in
my entire life. He showed no
S)'lllploml. Ufe in our houlchold
was hell. 1banta to the help of
several doctllrl, we learned a lot
about genital helpes.
1. Since my husband had other
sex pabiQi prier 10 our m.riagc,
he could have contracllld it lhen.
Some people have sucb a mild c:asc
that they don' even know !bey have
lapes. Nevertheless, !bey become
carriers. Yeanlaru, they may have
llllOih« mild (unnoticed) outbreak
and pass Ill the virus.
2. Condoms do not proteCt against
lapes because the virus is in lbe
entin: genital uea.
3. If a sex pa!UICI with a cold sore
has oral sex, he or she can infect a

debate will be held in the Don
Morris Room of lite Memorial student Center, Marshall University, partner.
400 Hal Greer Blvd., Hunti n~ton,
W.Va The topic of debate will be
do signs and miracles exist in the
church today wilit each participant
affmning or debating.
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - The
Each night's debate will consist acclaimed creator of a rice diet for
of a 30 minute affirmative speech a the overweight is accused of keep30 minute negative speech, a 20 ing a woman as his " virtual sex
minute rebuttal by the affirmative slave" for 20 years, enforcing disand a 20 minute rebuttal by the cipline by whipping her bare butnegative.
. tocks with a riding crop.
For more informmion call 446Sharon Ryan, 43, leveled the
1494 or (304)525-5451.
allegations in a lawsuit against Dr.
Walter Kempner, founder of Duke
University's Rice Diet Clinic.
The allegations against the 90year-old diet doctor are " entirely
Teaching on Prayer" followed by unfounded," said his lawyer, E.C.
prayer by Hope Moore. Helen Bryson Jr.
Teaford had two readings.
More than 22,000 people have
The Christmas party was tenta- participated in the weight-loss protively set for Dec. 9 at 6 p.m. The gram at Kempner's clinic, includplace will be announce later.
ing celebrities such as Elvis PresAll officers were retained for Icy, Buddy Hackett and rival diet
another year. guru Nathan Pritikin.
Attending were Jean Stout,
Duke University Medical Center
Hope Moore, Helen Teaford, Irene said it will investigate the allegaParker, Marie Houdashelt, Wanda tions.
Rizer, Mary Lisle, Beulah Ward,
Duke spokesman John Burness
Bob Smith and Mary Cundiff.
said medical center officials

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

Ann
Landers'

other.

ANN LANDEIIS

"1993, Lao Aile ....
Tlm.. S)11dical&lt;
CreolonSJ!Idl&lt;al&lt;'•

Dear ADD Lallden: Thirteen
years qo, I almost married a man I
had dated fer )rear. "Dan. was the
love of my life. We were not lcids,
both 3!1 years old, tllld Dan had been
married befote. Wedding plans were
set, and then, the bottom fell ouL I
discovered that Dan was not
divorced and that he and his wife
had had a j}ing going all the lime
he was see1llg me. I canc:eled lbe
wedding and him along with iL
Because I was so hurt, I ran
straight to an(llber man, whom I
married. It was a big mistalce. After
12 years of mutual unhappiness, we
spltL
Dan heard about the divorce and
came bact in10 my Jife. He conned
me iDto believing I was his only true
love. We bid a lovely time for t1uee
-lhs. Then, I caught him with lbe

a

·'

4. I am a nurse, so I could have
picked it up while tending a patienL
I am meticulous about hand
washing, but that is no guanmtec.
We still don't know how I got
genital herpes. I have had two
flare.ups since the initial outbreak.
My husb111d baa never bad a
S)'lllplom. I have _ , bid a ICll
panner Giber than my husband.
Please tell "Trouble iii Toletk!" I
believe her buaband complalely.
I know be could have conlnleled
berpes without having 1n quamarital affair because that is
what happened 10 me. -- NEW .
ORLEANS, LA.
.
DEAR N.O.: Thanks for the
backup. I have received many

-woman.

•

;
I

'

•
h!f

Twice he bid bumililred me, 111!1
I wu determined 10 Jet even.~I
calqed a eet!eH'five piiC*I of
in pweUjc: jocby llhans, 'lllaCJied ft
10 helium lillloona, hanimeRcl 11
s1ake in the puund, and there ·it
floated, In front of his houe, faciJik
the road fer al110 lee.
~
It bas been 1 month, and I havat\
heard a word from him or the
woman. Sign me •• PEEliNG

al turkey dinner at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department will stan at
4:30p.m. at the firehouse. The cost
is $5.
CHESTER - The Eastern High
School Band Boosters will sponsor
a craft shOw from 9 am. to 4 p.m.
in the high school cafeteria There
will be a large variety of crafts,
food and entertainment. Everyone
is welcome.

music night from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands are welcome.
Refreshments will be available.
The public is invi~ to attend.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - All Meigs area
singles are invited to a Thanksgiving dinner sponsored by SOLOS at
7 p.m. at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Bring a dish to
share. For more information or
reservation call Sharon at 985 4312.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
from 8-11 :30 p.m. at the post.
POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Music by CJ. and the County Gen- Western Style Square Dance Club
tlemen with Red Carr and Melvin · will sponsor and open dance at lite
RACINE - Southern High
Cross calling. AU welcome.
Senior Citizens Center from 8 to II School
sportS banquet will be
p.m. Caller will be Ed Pabst. All held at fall
I
p.m.
For more informaLONG BOTTOM - Faith Full western style square dancers are
tion
call
Rulit
Shain
at 247-4965 or
Gospel Church in Long Bottom cordially invited. Refreshments
Nease
at
949-2955.
Jeannie
wiil have a hymn sing at 7 p.m. will be served.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the pubREEDSVILLE • "Cross and the
lic. Fellowship wlll follow.
MILLFIELD - There will be a
Switchblade"
will be shown at
round and square dance at the RusReedsville
United
Methodist
SATURDAY
sell Building from 8 to II p.m.
Church
at
6:30
p.m.
Fellowship
with music by Out of the Blue.
will follow . Pastor Phillip Scarber·
HARRISONVILLE - Har- Caller will be John Russell.
ry
invites the public.
risonville Lodge #411 will meet at
7:30 p.m. Work in Enter Prentice
HENDERSON- C.J. and the
POMEROY • There will be a
Degree. Refreshments will follow. Country Gentlemen will play at lite
Thanksgiving
basket dinner at
All master masons are welcome.
Henderson Community Building
Alfred
United
Methodist
Church at
from 8 to II p.m. featuring Frank
12:30 p.m. Turkey will be providMIDDLEPORT - There will be Bowles on the fiddle.
ed. Everyone is welcome.
a revival at the First Baptist Church
MILTON • Mountaineer Opery
from Nov. 13 - 17 at 7 p.m. nightly
GALLIPOUS - Modem Woodand at 10:15 a.m. Sunday with the Hou se will present "Lost and
Found"
and
the
"McPeake
Brothmen
of America Camp 7230 will
Rev. Charles Norris of Racine.
ers" at 8 p.m.
have a Thanksgiving dinner at
Dale's Smorgasbord from noon to
CLIFTON · There will be a benALBANY
Modern
Woodmen
2
p.m. The cost is $2.50 for ages lO
efit hymn sing at.the Clifton TaberAmerica
Camp
4
798
will
hold
a
of
and
up and free for children 9 and
nacle Ch~h at 7 p.m. The Mounmatching
fund
Chinese
auction
under.
Call Mildred Ziegler at 992tain Top Singers will be the feawith
100
drawings
and
cow
plop
at
7770
for
mote information.
tured group. Pastor M.C. McDaniel
Alexander
High
School
starling
at
invites the public.
1'&lt;'11!·
CHESTER - There will be a
3p.m.
slug shoot at the Izakk Walton
TUPPERS PLAINS - The annuLOTTRIDGE - Lotlridge Com- Farm at I p.m. Smooth bore and
mun ity Center wil! host country rifled barrels, no scopes.

received complaints in 1975 that ordered her to rCinove her clothes
Kempner had used a riding crop on and whipped her buttocks with a
several patients, but they character- riding crop, the lawsuit alleges.
ized the incidents as improper ther- Several weeks later, Kempner
apy rather than sexual misconduct allegedly seduced her at her home.
The school said Kempner was
According to the lawsuit,
orderetl to stop using the riding Kempner persuaded Ryan to drop
crop.
out of college, moved her into a
Ryan, in lite lawsuit filed Nov. home he owns and hired her to
4, said she came to Duke to lose work for the clinic.
weight in 1970, when she was a 20From 1970 to 1987, Ryan
year·old college student
claims, Kempner maintained his
Later lit at year, Kempner rcpri- sexual relationship ·with Ryan by
manded her for gaining weight, isolating her from all but his inne.r

VICTORIOUS IN FLORIDA
::
DEAR VICTORIOUS: fm nOt
S!IJe what you think you 'Willi, btft

A Mulllmcdra In c

•'

Memben of the Riverview Oar·
den Club recently enjoyed dining at
the Point of Vtew Resturant in

ParkersbtJ!_g.

Auenchng were Betty Boggs,
Frances Reed, Mary Ahce Bise,
Gladys Thomas, Maxine Whitehead, Ella Osborne, Margaret
Grouni&lt;:kle, Marilyn Hannum and
DCiorel Frant.
NOll' program boots were disttibuled by Mn. Reed, vice presidenC. 1be next meeting will be on
Nov. 18 at the Reedsville Church
of Cbrilt. A Chrjstmu workShop
will ~ conducted by Marilyn Up·
num tllld Ruth Anne Baldcrlon.
MemberS a to tate lifts for the
Pomeroy ~ursing 111d ltebebilita·
lllln Center padenta to .the Novembei meedna. ·and Ill: also asked to
take finger foocb . .

NPw sp.lpcr

Although he feels it is imponant for the kind of jobs that exist in this
the U.S. to have such a pact with disttict.~ Stticlcland pointed out.
·GALLIPOLIS - The North Ameri- Mexico, Stricldand says the poorer
The Kuppenbeimer's clothing raecan Free Trade Agreement could re- country is not ready.
tory in Wellston is a such a planL
sult in lowered wages and lost jobs"It seems to me that Mexico needs Most workers there, he said,cwntly
two blows the area's frngile economy to make some intermake just about minicould not take, Congressman Ted nat changes before "I'm concerned it's not mum wage.
Sttickland, D-Lucasville, said.
we enter into this
"They'll be comSoutheastern Ohio's voice in con- agreement," he said. good for the district and peting with plants at
' gress plans to let o.ut a resounding
Strickland said his ,
•
• • Mexico that may pay
"no" on Wednesday when the House biggesteoncemisthe 1m voting no, lwpmg 1ts . their workers sixty.votes on NAFTA.
"do~nward p~es - de/eOled.,
five ~nts an hour I!Jid
"I'm concerned it's not good for the sure on Amencan
Ted Strickland not mm1mum wage,"
disttict and I'm voting no, hoping its wages that would DC he said.
defeated," he said. "I hOpe we can go cur should the agreeD-Lucaavllle
But losing jobs is
right into talks .with Mexico and ment become legislite ultimate fear about
Canada to get a better deal for the IJ!tion. Opponents of NAFTA bave entering into agreement with a coonAmerican people.n
argued that compc;tition with cheaper try that pays lower wages. The border
NAFTA would remove aU tariffs lal)or will cause American wages to and its inexpensive workers might
.and' other trade barriers among the plummeL
draw them away.
U.S., Mexico and Canada to create
"The lcind of jobs that will be sus·
Strickland said he has been invited
the world's largest free trading zone. ceptible to that lcind of pressure are to visit the Mac Tool Co., Inc. factory

•

circle, strictly controlling bcr diet
and medical care and persuadinJ
her to stop seeing her psychiatrist
Ry an plunged into mental illness and a deep depression, oo\)'
realizing the scope of Kempner s
actions during thenlpy after quif·
tjng her job in 1987, she claims.
Kempner, who retired las( year,
developed the rice diet in 1939 for
patients with severe high blood
pressure and later used it to treat
patients with diabetes, kidney dis,
ease and other health problems
worsened by obesity.
,.

Meigs Junior High Schoobhas Daniels, Brad Davenport, Scott Marshall, Rusty Marshall, Stever
released its hqnor roll for the ftrst Dodson, Robin Donohue, Crystal McCullough, George Miller, Shiellt
nine week grading period.
Eblin, Elizabeth Farley , Chad Nease, Danielle Peckham, MelisslJ,
Seventh grade : Lacy Banks, Folmer, Jason Frecker, Brianna Ramsburg, Jenny Sigmon, Wendi
Wesley Barnett, Jamie Barret~ Tri- Gilmore, Danielle Grueser, Cort- Shrimplin, Amy Smith , Zinnia
cia Davis, Sarah Dean, Meridith ncy Haley, Chad Hanson, Jenny Spears, Eddie Trader, A.J. Vaugh~
Felts, Ben Fowler, Jennifer Heck, Hayman, Sara Lee. Mich~cl an, Melissa Williams and Sandra
Melissa Holman, Justin Jeffers, Leigheit, Jason Litchfield, Dusty
Young.
;
~Y Johnson, Becky Johnson, Jesstca Johnson, Matt Justice, Misty
Hart, Kristina Kennedy, Lori Kin:
nison, Kelli Lightfoot; Arland
.
.
McCartney, Tamera O'Dell, Kim
Ritterbeck, Rebelcah Smith, Clay.
ton Tromm, Bridget Vaughan,
Kasey Williams, John Davison,
Missy Darnell, Jenny Howerton,
T.J . King, Ben Molden, Stefani
Pickens and Josiah Rawson.
Eighth grade: David Anderson,
Lauren Anderson, Rachel Ashley,
Pd. for by the caridldme: .
Billi Jo Bentley, Leigh-Ann CanRt. 1, Box 150, VInton,.Oli. 45188
(
terbury, Carty Chasteen, Wcndi

in Sabino, where ~sentatives told . .
,, . ·. . .. ' --:-~ -. "·, ( .,:-';:;.,_;;:::(: '
him discussion is underway for the
plant to be closed and moved 10 Texas ·strt~klao~~$.qpp6.ijiti)n
to NAF'J'A at+giJih,ee
in the event that NAFTA is passed.
"I thinlc that this is not unusual," he
said. "I thinlc this is happening in ' • Lost X»bs,
plants across the country."
lower wages
Striclcland said it is not unreason- ,
able for the U.S. to ask iLl southern
. :Potential for
neighbor to make some changes on
·
~nomic corruption
labor issues. The European Economic
Community - wl!ich was some 30
years in lite making - had similar
• No reason to rush:
concerns with Spain.
Not thiS NAFTA
The difference in economies
throughout that community,
• Conc11m for Mexican
Strickland estimated, is no greater
labor laws
than 3to I. That ratio for lite U.S. and
Mexico could be as great as I 0 to I.
Ironically, Stticldand said, Canada
• WllleBP"r811d national
may have similar concerns about the
JiXIec:ISIOn '
Continued on pagt A2
:~

·"

.·

'

,'

agreed "pon by the commi~s , as:'/ltni.fi.c!fil
•'to .
t•-.!

1994 BUICK CENTURY

AS LOW AS

!-... -~ ~t- ·

1·

GaUia CQuhty; cuid, they
I

•

~

'=i

have .J,ee'n determined as
Staerlng committee
co-chair Wayne King

14,795•

5

Tu a 1111e Not lnclue!ed

Gov. Voinovich gives last-minute boost to trade a~cord
By ROBERT E, MLL£8

Century Special Sedan

•Standard Driver Air Bag
•Anti-Lock Brakes
.Power Locks &amp;Windows

AS LOW AS

-cruise Control
•Tllt Steering
•AMIFM Stereo Seek &amp;. R"''"

A•wllttd .er,u Wrtt• ,

COL~US,Obio(AP)-Gov . GeorgeVoinovich's

•Split Seats
•Trunk Release

admil)isllation hoped to give a last-minute boost to the
N~Ameriean Free Trade Agreement by lobbying two
Ohio congressmen who ~ain undecided.
Atthesamelime,aspolcesmanfor!he800,000-member
Ohio AFI,.-CIO said labor Q!!ions around the. state will
continue working to defeat the proposal to be voted on
WedneSday in the U.S. House.
Michael Dawson, the governor's press secretary, said
Friday that Voinovich will telephone U.S. Reps. Paul

'REGAl CUSTOM

$18,675*

Tu .. 1111e Mol; lnohoded

Gillmor, R-Port CliniOn, and Thomas Sawyer, D-Altron,
who are undecided about NAFI'A.
Meanwhile, Agriculture Director Fred Dailey said he
and three other state agricultune officials will tour the state
Monday for NAFTA, a ptoposal he said will benefit
Ohio's farmers.
They planned to stop for news conferences at airports in
Cleveland, Tiffm, Dayton, Cincipnati and Columbus.
Daily said 'agricultural trade with Mexico already is
booming "and llllification hf NAFTA will only further
accelerate this trend."
Others on the trip will be William Swank, executive

vice president of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, and
President C. Ray Noecker and Executive Direc10r Steve
Maurer of !be U.S. Agricullllllll Stabilization and Conservation Service.
Voinovich announced his support for NAFrA in August. He said lifting trade barriers among lite United
States,CanadaandMexicowouldmeanatleast3,700jobs
for Ohio during the next 10 years.
Kent Darr, spokesman for the Ohio AFL-CIO, said
Ohio'slaborunionsremainconvincedthatNAFrAwould
cost the state jobs and industries because of cheap labor in
Mexico.

He said unions also will continue I~ against
NAFT A, especially in WashingiOil btltalsoin thedislricts
of House members who remain undecided.
Local unions were buying media time foranti-NAFTA
ads in districts that include those of Sawyer and Gillmor
Darr said.
'
The AFL-CIO also was writing Ohio's members of
Congress who oppose the treaty, he added.
Three of Ohio' s 19 House members announced Thursday that they have decided to support NAFfA: Reps,
David Hobson and John Kasich, both Republicans, and
Rep. David Mann, a Democrat. .

Hillary pitches health · News capsules
~~==~============~=========
charged with
NLRB seeks injunction against
·care pl~n in· Marietta lee!'l
attempted .murder
UMW, former BCOA members

MARIETTA. Ohio (AP) - ij.illary Rodham Clinton accepted a newspaper's
invitation and visited this city on the Ohio River to explain the Clinton
adminisaation's health care plan.
·
The fJrSt lady spoke for 30 minutes to 2,250 people at Marietta College in
southeastern Ohio after a maning visit to Clev.eland.
' 'This is a historic opportunity, one that comes only once in a generation,' '
Mrs. Clinton said. ' 'Other generationssiOOd up to their challenges. It is time for
this one to do so as well.' l · .
She viSited Marie)ta after an open leucr from The Marietta Times asked her
to address the concerns of small town reSidenu. Accompanying her were Sen.
John Gleim, D-Ohio, Rep. Ted Stricldand, D-Ohio, and former Gov. Richard
Celeste, the a4minisaation's point man on health cane reform.
•'National issues ought 10 be decided in placell like Marietta," Stticlcland said
while introducing the fii'St lady. "You heard us and you renewed our faith in
government's ability to Slay in 'IDUCh."
.
She paused after ber speech to shake ltands with the crowd but did not field
any questions.
, .
··
.Evelyn Hall, 86, of Marietta, is legally blind and wheelchair-bound. She said
~was ~'thriUedoutor.myslfin"toshalce. ~ds · twice-withMrs.Cii!lton.
. "11ove those two kids," the wolllan said, referring l!l President and Mrs.
· Clinton. "I to14'her I pray for tlteni every day." .
·
·
Earlier in the day,lbe fJrStlady told 12 families Of patientS at Rainbb'w Babies
,and CliiJdren' s Hospital of University HospitalS of Cleveland that the plan will
focus bn incentives.
,
·· ·
She said it will encouraae health care facilities to keep children and adUlts
.
·
Continued qn plge A2

•Key~ EnJiy

•Tilt -cruise·
•Aluminum
Wheels
.PoWer Seat .
.
O.Concert
Sound .
r
.
.
,
ol.eather EJucket Seats -Dual CCimfortemp Air Conditioning '· S~akers

'

.

POMEROY

FAlL CO'OLIN,
. . G'SYSTEM
•Drain &amp; Flush Systt~~
•Add 2 Gallone. ·Anti~Fr-.ze
· •lnepect Hosea and Belts
•Prenura Teat system
~~

E
'

$

9·5
..

Cake and Bever~~•• WIIJ Be S•tved . .
.

'I"JI :•rJ IJ o 'JH

Pomeroy a14bmitted
projects for funding

THANK YOU
FOR YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE
. .
SALEM TWP. TRUSTEE RACE.
-CLARENCE.E: MIGH,t

Hillside Baptist Church
SUNDAt ·NOVEMBER 14th, 11 A.M.
There will lae special singing by
The Chlldr.en of God and ·
Th• Redee111ed Quartet.

Mrddleport- Pom r•ro'i Cdllrpolrs-Pt PIPil ' ..lrll- November 1-1 1'J'JJ

Meigs junior high honor roll announced l

•3800 V6 Engine

4th ~nniversar~

Clinton bargains for votes, AS

By JAMES LONG
Dmtt§lntlotl Nm §taU

Regal Custom

STATE ROUTE 143

LOW 50s

,strickland casts resounding 'no' on NAFTA

if that stunt made you f~1

"victllrious,• it may ha~ been worih
the effort.
.
·,
~hat's rhe mull abolll pot, cQ.
cm~~e, LSD, PCP, crack, spuJ aNi
dnWMrs? 'The Lowdowll 011 Dope~
1uJs 11/1-IO·the-mmute ifl/o1'llttltloll 011
drugs. Send a st/f-addrt~d. lo11j,
busifless·si'll e~~velope lllld a check
or 1f1DMY ortkr for $3.65 (tlris ;ft.
eludes postage allli ltandli11g) IQ:
Lowdow11, c/o ·AM Lollders, P.Q.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061/.05~2. (In Canoda, sellli $4.45.)
'

\U:

Garden club
distributes
new books

Hl70$

•
nnts-

Woman claims she was dominated by Duke Diet founder

Eagle class revamps church
A report on project work W@S
given when the Eagles Class of the
Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
Church met recently at the church.
During the meeting conducted
by Irene Parker, it was reported
that the class has purchased new
drapes for the social rooms and
new flower vases for the altar table.
The bathrooms have also been
painted and new carpet is to be purchased for them.
Devotions were led by Jean
Stout and the topic was "J esus'

teaen from ~ who Wlllllld 10
vouch for "Toledo's" husband
bec•JIIe they. 100, had had the Slme
experience. My~. bless them,
ue loyal not ooly to me but to each

••'

Irish upset Florida State,.Cl

..

JAMES R, ACREE SR., PASTOR,
INVITES THE PUBUC TO AmeND.

J

.. ..

'

NELSONVILLE,Ohio(Al&gt;)A teen-ager wounded in a
shootout in which his brother
waslcilledandtwopoliceofficers were injured was charged
Friday with two delinquency
coon~ of attempted murder.
Jos.hua McFall , 15, of ~nvltteOIIIoer
Nelsoilville, was in fair condio!,ocly King
lion Friday, with a hip \VOUnd at O'Bleness Memorial
Hosjlital in Athens.
,
McFall's brother, Sean, 19, was lcilled Thursday
after he ftred on officers as they approached a car
suspecllld in ~ hit,and-run accident.
The officers wowided in the gun baute outside a
convenience store on U.S. 33 remained hospitalized ·
Saturday 11 Grant Medical Cen~r in Columbus.
, Nelsonville Officer Jody King, 30, was in serious
condition with a htad wound, and Buchtel ·Police
Chief I&lt;;evin Clawson, 26, was in fair conditi011 will!
shoulder and leg .wounds..
.. Two{)ther Nelsonville juveniles in Sean McFall' s
cat were'release4to lbeirparents becapse they 11ere
not involved in the sllooting.
.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - The National Labor
Relations Board has gone to federal oourt to prevent the
United Mine Workers from entering into contracts with
four former members of a coal industry bargaining
gro,up.
A hearing is set Nov. 29 before U.S. District Judge
Joyce Green in Washington, D.C., on the injunction
nequestrtledTuesday.
The labor board wants to bar the UMW from entering
into agreements with AMAX Coallndustties Inc. of
Indianapolis,FR:eman UnitedCoaiMiningCo.ofMarion,
Ohio, HDinerCityCoaiProcessingCotp.ofHomerCity, ,
Pa.., and American Electric Power Co. of Columbus,
Ohio.
The four companies dropped out of the Bituminous
Coill Opemtors Association after the UMW went on
~e May 10 against association members over job
seamty.
They have reached separate interim agreements with
the union.
.
Without an injunction, lbe union and the companies
' ' willcircwnventthecoUectiveblrgainingprocessatthe
expenseofotheremployermembenoftheBCOA," the
labor board said in its filing.

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
19 Sections - 198 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classilieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Almg the River
Sporm
Weather

01&amp;8

B4&amp;5
D2·7
Insert
A6

AJ
A7
81
Cl-8
A7

Columns
lim Freeman
Aug Lauders
IiJD Sands
CbuckStpnc

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Page-A2-Sunday nmes

Senunet

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point .Pleasant, WV

November 14, 1993

Strickland to vote 'no' on NAFTA Patrol cetebr~tes .60th
lhc McxJcan COWitry for air ttaflic
U.S.
cootrolllld dirce indiviWals came to
''Onwta•s w.p a:aJe lellds 10 1!e his bolel room and asked for a $1
IIIIIJ:iDallybigberdllnoun,~be DOlled. millian bribe.Wbcnitwasdri\'CIIfrom~lhis · The silesman also claimed to bave .
fall, tbc longtime Libeul m¥ldty received tbreals on bis life befon:
.-ry hadsupportofNAFJ'A asatey tcstifyinJ. ·
plank in its·plllform.
Becau.e oflbesc concerns, as well
Strickland said be fcan:d Ibis is as lbc widcsJmd indecision on the
what happens when lawmakers sup- issue, Slrickland concluded that lheir
porta llldcaareement wilh acOIDitry is no leiSOR to rush NAFrA into
lbat J111YS ils workers less.
legislalion.
But wage differences are not all
And lbc conpessman looks for lhc
lhat worry Strickland.
&amp;gi'CeiRCIIt to become a model for
He said he feels sure that a ll'ade fuJuro pacts with lhe South American
agreement wilh Mexico will !brow counlries-aUihemorereasontoget
U.S. businesses to a world or shady it right lbc fustlime.
dealinp where 1hreals aild bl:ibery · As .' of Thursday aftemoo11 ,
a commoo pncliees.
•
Slric:klaJ'I(I reported 'tbal 221! bouse
. lntestimonybcforetbcsmallbusi- votes wa'C finnly against NAFrA
ness commiuee, of wbich Stricldand . and Jbat 24 leaned in that direction.
is a member, an IBM salesman re- Opponents noect 218 votes to till the
layed such an experience.
aareemenL
SJriekland reported that lbc man,
"I think its going to be exJremely
"JesJifled under Ollh that he traveled difficult for lhe president to pulllhis
tollll'llllgeasaleoflBMequipmentto off," he predicted.
oontlnuecl hm Pllll' A1

Where Ohio lawmakers Highway
COLUMBUS (AP)-TheState were as~gned to differelltllleaS in
Patrol will mark its 60th the state and lived in pri vate
stand on trade agreement' Friday
y~o::~~~~~~~:a~~tbegan ho~~~y were on call24 hours a
wilh .the graduation of lhe day and g91 two days .off a month
lDK

AGAJNST

Rep. John Boehner, R
Rep. David Hobson, R
Rep. John Kasicb, R
Rep. David Mann, D
Rep. Mike Oxley, R
Rep. Rob Portmail, R
Rep. Deborah Pryce, R

Rep. Doup Applegate, D
Rep. Sherrod Brown, D .
Rep. Eric Plngerllua, D .
Sen. John Glen!l, D
Rep. Toay Hall, D
Rep. Martin Hoke, R
Rep. Marty Kaptnr, D
Sen. Howard .Metzenbaum, D
~· Ralpb: Repla, R
Rep. Loula Stokes, D
Rep. Ted Strickland, D
Rep. James Traftcant, D

IJNDECIDED

Rep. Paul Gllbnor, R
Rep. Tom Snyer, D

!25th recruit class. The 63 troopers
went lhrough 27 weeks of training
and will begin tbr.ee additional
monlhs of on-lhe-jOb training Monda
·
)~ 1933, 60
were in lhe
first patrol class that gradualed
from Camp Perry ·in Ottawa County on lhe shores of Lake Erie.
Troopers had 37 jlays of trainina. rode motorcycles and wore
leather helmets. There were no
pan;ol posJS or offaces, and Jroopers

troopen

Unveiling of
strategic plan
·set for'Nov. 23

• A• reported Fr!dly by the Auoclltlld Pre..

McDaniel told lhe group· tbat
Pomeroy'SIOI!Sinpointscamemoslly
from lhcwealtmarteting strategy plan
IIIII VIICIIICics in lbc downtown. She
emphu!zed lbc impcl111111Ce of sare8sing lhoae row areas by developing
plans fur Clqlllhding lhe marketing
111ea and for filling lhe storefronts
before this go-around.
John Musser of Downing-QtildsMullcn-Mullcr Iuurance Agency
will spin bead up Pomeroy's efforts
· to get
of the available clowntown revitalization funds from ·
ODotD.

some

To assist wilh lhatJ. Michael Stroth
of SBA Consultants, Inc. Jackson,
will continue to worlt with the village
on the project. Among the others at
lhe meeting held at the Meigs County
Public Library were John Blaettner,
Pomeroy Village Council, Joe Clark,
merchant and president of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association,
Mary ~well of lhe Meigs County
Park Dilllrict; and Dr. Hmold Brown.
Middleport's Project
McDaniel, who wiD not be a part of
the application review team for
ODoiDihisyear,toldMiddleponrepn:sentativca thatlhe village last year
was "not far from being funded".
She spoke lhe chantcter and ar-

or

cbitcetunll signifiCIDCC Of the downtoWn buildings and lhe need for pres·
ervation. As in Pomeroy's applica·
lion, McDaniel poinledtolhe marketing strategy, mtlthant participation,
and vacancies as lbcareasshowing up
weak in last year's application.
.
The discUssion tnmed from lhe
downtown revitaliZJJtioo project toone
dealing with the torrelatioo between
changing lhe physical image to binging in more business.
"Our concma", said Tom Dooley
of lhe Middleport Depanment SIDle
"is wbclher a face lift will bring in
business or if we'll just be spending
money to fiX lhings up and business
won't improve.

" We want help but wc.'re not sure
whelher i,mproving Jlie facade will
l1ring in new business. That's!Ucon-

cem."

McDaniel said that shows a weak
martctingstrategyandsuggestedlhat
pelhapsinsreadofdowntownrevil81ization at Ibis time, technical assistance in business development mjght
be indicated. She said lhitfunding for
that is available.
As for vacant storefronts, Jean
Trussell, Middleport's grant coordi·
nator, said that ooc of lhe problems
lhe village faces is thatmany'ofbuildings need updaling before IIIey a
suiJable for QCCupancy.
McDaniel's response was that you
can't "build on top of a cnimbling
foundation" and again proposed tcehnical assistance in developing inarketing strategy perhaps in conjunction with or in lieu of downtown revi-

Continued from~· A1
interest in .Gallia County's future."
The Program wiD explain lhe stra·
tegic planningproeessand detail each
long range and shoitrange objective.
The plan was developed ilirough
lhe efforts of llaulKommittees, organizCd by Gust and King. James B.
Radabusgh, Group Vice President of
Corporate Development for Bob
Evans Farms, Inc., has functioned as
leader and ¢onsultant for the steering
committee, which is oomprised of the
sub-committee chairpersons.
Barry M. DorseY, Ed.D., president
of lhe University of Rio Grande bas
been closely involved in the plan's
dcvelopmenL
The work was sponsored and suppotted by the Gallia County Chamber
of Cominerce and lhe Community
Improvement Corporation.
.
The finished product will be presented to lhe public by lhe Strategic
Planning Steering Committee m~\1~~­
bersandsub-commiueechairpersons.
Plan participants will be available
during lhe presentation to answer
questions.

martitlJ!g~gy~~~·
eacholherinbriniing~totown.

Rep.Maloneurgedthatemyonewcxt
together to develop an overall buSiness plan.

~ .PRICE
BASKETBALL

respond to cal~

REEDSVILLE - A public bearing scheduled for 9 a.m. Satwday by ~ Olive. Township Board of Trustees concerning lhe proposed zorung mlinance has been canceled.
·

Meigs County Emergency·Medical

CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency
will be hoi~ free clothing day Wednesday from 9 a.m. to noon at
the old Cheslilie High School buHding.

Deer cause accidents
POMEROY .,:_ Four automobile accidents involving deer were
reponed to the Meigs County Sheriffs J?epartment Friday and early

Satwday.
1
At 7 a.m. Friday, John H. Allen, Reedsville, hit and killed a. deer
lhat ran into lbc path of his vehicle on. State Route 124 in ·Olive
Township.
.
.
At 5:55 p.m. Friday, Donald R. Spaur(21. Racine, struck and
killed a deer on CounJy Road 28 about I mile.from State Route 124.
His vehicle received light damage.
.
At 6 p.m. Friday, Lewis F. Young, Rudand struck and tilled a
deer on State Route 692. His vehicle received moderat,e dama~. .
At 7 a.m. Saturday, Jerry Uribe, Pomeroy, stru~k and killed a
deer on State Route 143. His vehicle received be'avy damage.

Youths cited for shoplifting
PoMEROY - Two 16-year-old Athens County residents were
cited by 'Meigs County sheriff's deputies for shoplifting at Fisher's
BigWheel.
'
The juveniles were cited to lhe Meigs County Juvenile Coun on
a charge of petty lheft after allegedly taken a Timex watch.
Both youths were released to the custody of their parents pending a hearing.
·

Accident causes light damage
POMEROY - An accident Friday morning on Union Avenue
caused light damage to two vehicles, according to a Meigs Cowlty
·
Sheriff's Department report.
1
Geo&lt;ge D. Lowery, New Lima Road, struck the rear of a car
driven by David J. Warner, Jackson.
Warner has sto,PPed for a school bus that had stopped to pick up
children. No inj~s were reported.
.

RG slates open registration

AROOKS.

HURON

""..,,_ White

RIO GRANDE - Open registration for winter quarter at lhe
University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community ·College will
be Monday from 2-6:30 p.m. in the E.E. Davis Technical Careers
Center:
. .
.
Winter qwirter classes begin Tuesday.
A variety of classes are &amp;yaiJable tllroughout t!Je day, including
an expanded schedule of classes offered after 3 p.m. At the same
time, credit and non-credit classes are scheduled lhrough the Office
of Adult and Continuing Education. These classes .are offered bolh
on- and off-campus during day and evening hours.

till p.m.
Tu ..., Wsd.,
Thu111. til 8
Sat. t115
Sundlly 105

Authorities a"est three
.GALLIPOLIS -Local aulhorities arrested three people belwecn
Friday night and early Saturday m~ng.
· .
,Jailed were Dale R: HaU. 29, Columbus, on a municipal courtoldeted commitment for a previous charge of driving under the

~

conduct;
and Statey
;~~~~~~~·~25,for1609disOrderly.
Bunce Road,
Gallipolis,
by
Crown City, by
lis

·• l ie* • • Stowt, ·
. SulteiOO .
CokJmbua, Ohio
1-100-IH OLAW

Ro ~d,

Area man cited for DUI

Hillary pitches health care plan in Marietta

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work. That's my ll!ain concern howisitgoingtowOIX?"Mrs.Abrams
said.
M13. Clinton also spoke to about
200 people at the Martin Lutber King
Jr. Library, and presented the center
with a copy of Clinton •s summary of
the health refonn plan.

.rr__

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

WELLSTON:- The·Gallia. J~. Meigs, Vinton Solid Waste
~gemeJit .District ·Policy committee will meet Tuesday at tbe
Jackson ;Extension Center, Standpipe Road, Jackson, at I 0 a.m.
Tile•purpose of lhe meeting is 10 certify ratification or lhe Solid
WUIC Drafi Plan.
.

THE1

·E.ffectlve "Dec~m·e~ 1;
1993 ·the Gallia County
Landfill Will ~· Open tlie
First Saturday Only ·
of Every MontJt.
· I· P.M. til 5 P.M. Only

"

IJJ40

··~JO

If the:flrs.t Saturday Is a. .
Holiday' then the Landfill .,ul·
lie open the Second . Sat~rday
Of that .•onth.
•

2
••

Solid waste !IJeeting scheduled

Editor's note: Namea; -ces and addresses are printed as they
appear on otrk:Ial reports.
.

Units of the

Services respon~ to ~vcn ealls .
for ilssistance Friday lllid Saturday
morning.
U:nits responding were: 9:28.
Lm. Rutland to Meigs Mine 2 for
Irvin Potter who was ltlnsported to
O'Biencss Memorial Hospital;
12:09 p.m. Tuppers Plains to State
Route 681 West for Bill Robinson
who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospit;tl; 12:31 p .m.
Middleport to Brown Road for
Rub)' ~ynon who was .transported
to VMH; 7:11 p.m. Middleport to
South Fourth Street for Rhonda
Stobert who was transported to ' .
VMH; 7:12p.m. Tuppers Plains to'
County Roa4 9 for Ray Smilh who
was transported to St. Joseph's;
8:22 p.m. Racine to Antiquity for .
Mabel Rose who was treated atlhc ·
scene and 7:32 a.m. Rutland to
Salem Street for Burl White who
was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Lucus
Grueser, Reedsville.
Friday discharges - Gary Rose,
Pomeroy; Merle Davis. RuJiand.

MOVING COMPLETED - Pictured above
members of tbe Knights or Columbus, SL Louis
Council 3335 as they transferred furnishings
from tbe former SL Louis Catholic Church rectory at 87 State St., Gallipolis, to the former
home of Bill and Karen Eachus at 85 State SL
Members of the church voted to purchase tbe
Eachus property some time ago and the move

New Haven knifemaker finds work rewarding
By MicheHe Carter
OVP News Stair
Wben Van Barnett decided to
become a full-time custom knife
maker, bis family and friends were
skeptical. Two years later. Barnett
is making a name for himself
among tbe top knifemakers in lhe

nation.

With his business based out of
his New Haven, W.Va., home, Barnett travels at least twice a mon lh
to cusmm knife shows all over the
country. In 1993, he added four top
awards to his collection.
In October, Barnett was awarded top honors for "Best Custom
Fixed Blade" at the Norlh Carolina
Wildlife and Sportsman Show in
. New Bern, N.C., and "BesfCustom
Fixed Blade" in Louisville, Ky .. at
Jhe National Knifemakers Collectors Associalion show.
Barnett received the "Judges
Award" in March on his fii'St folder
knife in Cincinnati . In 1992, he
received a $300 cash .l'rize and a

RiiJ Grande·~
council to

meet Tuesday
RIO GRANDE - The Villl!ge
of Rio Grande Council will hold a
·special meeting Tuesday to discuss
life contracJS, annexations, insurance bids, appropriations and
sa4lfy recomm_endations for 1994.
The meeting will be held at 7
p.m. in the municipal buildin~.
The regular council meetmg for
December will be held at 6:30
p.m., Dec. 7. The Board of Public
Affairs will hold a special meeting
Tuesday at 6 p.m. 10 discuss annexation.
·

certificate at Parker's Knife Show
for "Best Custom Strlligbt Blade."
For two years, Barnett placed
first atlhe West Virginia State Arts '
&amp; Crafts Fair in Ripley. One of his
pieces was also pictured on the
fair's promotion brocllure.
Of ail of his accomplishments,
Bamen is most proud of his "Best
of. Show" award in North Carolina.
His creation was picked over 77
top lmifemakers in the United
States. He will be feaJurod at next
year's show in New Bern.
Barnett does not let his success
go to his head. Holding one of his
custom creations, Barnell said he
"knows aU the flaws" of his work.
He stated he is never satisfied with
his creations because "you never
get any better" if you are satisfied.
"The judging at shows helps
you know you're doing the right
thing," he said. "I bad never won
anr,lhing before I started going to
knife sbows."
A self-taught knifemaker, Barnett bas ~n in lhe b~ for 13
years: A creator of miniatures,
swords, daggers and hunting
knives, the 29-year-old said his ·
father and grandfalher influenced
~is interest in knife making
because IIIey made bunting knives.
The two knives Barnett has won
lhe most awarde' on are a six-sided
pearl handle knife wilh sterling sil. ver and an ivory and gold handled
Damascus. The Damascus blade
has a unique "swirled" steel look.
According to Barnett, to create Ibis
affect, 1,260 layers of steel are
used.
'
All of Barnett's knives are selfcreations. To him. lhe favoriJe part
of his craft is the fascination of
designing a knife in his mind and
then bringing it to life wilh his
hands.
The son of a professional artist,
Barnett credits his interest in art

with part of the success of bis ereations. "Creativity makes every·
thing flow," he said.
Bamen said he just changed bis
forte from oils and canvas to steel.
According to Barnett's wife
Cindy. he can be watching television when an idea will hit and he'll
begin sketcbing. "It is easy for me
to create in steel," he said.
·
One of his creations was a
sword in lhe shape of a scorpion.
This featured ruby eyes. diamonds
and a curved black handle with a
spilce at the end. Cindy said her
brother is now lhe "proud owner"
of the sword.
Bamen begins his creations with
a bar of 440-C steel onto which a
panem is drawn and then hand profiled into shape. This blank is then
drilled and the blade portion is
brought to a satin fmish.
The blank is then hollowed,
ground freehand- using no jigs Or

guide - and cleaned 10 fmal 120grit satin finish before being hardened and tempered using state of
the art equipment
The personal anention Barnett
uses in his craft insure buyers IIIey
are getting a knife of10p quality, he
said. Each blade has iJS own inclivlduallook and feel

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~'Ill

GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis police cited a local man Friday night
for driving under lhe influence.
Tickeled was Gene E. Payne, 36. 300 Coun SL, Gallipolis, for
DUI, da'iving wllh defective exbanst and driving under·suspension.
In anolher ttaflic stop, police ticketed Thomas Hodge, 23 , 102
Quail Creek, Gallipolis, for driving .without a license.

POMEROY -

CHANGE OF·· HOURS
GALLIA COUNTY LANDFILL

--~--~------~
·~
I .IIIM ' ._.M,. , pfll._

-

- .A Lawrence C&lt;;&gt;unty man .and his passenger
when lheir vehicle ran off the road in Green
lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe State High-

way
repotted.
Woodson W. Richardson, 45, RL 2, Pedro, and Dick L. Morris,
1621 Rt. I, Kitts Hill, were transponed by lhe Gallia County Emergency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center wbere they were
Jrealed and released.
According IQ lhe 11CCident report, Richardson was eastbound on
Slate Route 141 when the vellicle went off the left side of Jhe road
and struck &amp;.guardrail. The vehicle then crossed lhe road and struclc
a ditch and a culven.
Ricl)ardson was cited for failure to conlrol..His vehicle sustained
heavy., disablin'g damage and was towed from the scene. The accident Is stiH under investigation.

DISCUSSING DOWNTOWN
McDaniel, IWid representatiVe fr1111ttbe Ohio
Department of Deftlopment, was In Meigs County Friday to discuss project applications for a shll'e .of lhe
$2.3 mlllloD In revitalization funds to be IIWIIrded In April. Here she talks about Pomeroy's project with Rep.
Mll'k Malone, John Musser, project chaltman, Sen. Jan Michael Long, and Pomeroy .Couacllman John
Blaet1Der, I tot.

.m.vcr

Galli~

on a rule 4 summons.

VAJ.;J.JU'\J'LI::&gt;

Jeanne Abrams, of Solon. said ber
Continued from~· A1
well, ralher lhan perfonnmg numer- 6-year-old son Jobn was diagnosed
ousandoflell unnecessary procedures. with leukemia three years ago. She
Changes in the plan are possible, said she is also "cautiously optimisbut basic elements will not be open to tic" about lhe reforms.
compromise, shC said.
''The pl8n sounds very good, espe"This (heallh reform) is not just a cially the coverage f01' th~ cbildren
dream or a vision, this is a reality withOut cancellation and continuing
andthat'sworlhfightingforasAmeri- lbcrapy, but we bave yet to see it
I
cans,•• Mrs. Clinton said.
·
•'llhink we sbould bavc had health
reform along timeago.'•LucilleHill,
67, of Cleveland, told her. "We all
need it My soo is 3S years old, but~
doesn't have any inslllliiiCe brew•
be just c:ameOul oldie .my. No~
lbcir ap s!Jonld be denied
beallh (31:.,'

· .

Mon. &amp; Fri.

talization.
She suggested that perbaps lhe village fOcus III(ROII geuing businesses
to come in and leas on lhe physical
allribuJes at Ibis time.
Mo"IJS CcuntyComm'
.
and
. , us,aner
former MiddlepOrt May~r Fred.
Hoffman said JbalrevitaliZJJt1()!1and8 .

ILL BROOKS

EMS units

Public hearing canceled
Free clothing day slated ·

- plus Sunday morrung to go to
church, Starting pay was $1,200 a
yearTroopers. were
·
to'ld to
. be friend,
ly to farmers .and establish rapport
with the public to elimhlate fears
that IIIey would be highway bullies.
The patrol .was _nicknamed
Smolccy Bear and adopted a wheel
and the wings of l&gt;fercury as its
logo. The wheel repi'C$Cnts traffic
law enforcement and .the wings
suggests·speed.
"The rriission remains the same
- to provide traffic services to
keep lhe roadways safe, to provide
emergency respon~ and support
Services to the public and criminal
justice community and to investi- ·
gate criminal actiyities on stateowned and state-leased . ~.' '
said Col. Thomas W. Rtce, palrol
.superintendent

L

1993

Tri-County Brie(s. _.

...------· ---- birthday on Monday

Middleport, Pomeroy explore options
for downtown revitalization funding
Continued from peg. A1
-A blgbcr funding matcb lhan 1bc
0110-10-one required.

November

TAWNEY.STUDIO

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Nation/World

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Obio/W.Va.
Elections Commission offers .Glenn·looprto.le i~ payi~g de~t
\

November 14, 1993

t•

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···,

B1 KATHERINE RIZZO
.
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- The .Federal Election &lt;;ornmission ~~a new
legal loophole to help Sen. Jolm Glenn, D-Ohio, erase the lingenng debt
of his 1984 presidenlial cam~.
. .
.
. ,'
GleM •s presidenlial committee owes $3.18 million to vanous creditors mostly four Ohio banks.
·
His committee had been unsuccessful in whittling down the debt, and
st times had not even kept up with the interest payments. .
On Friday, lhe commission defied ~e objections ~f tiS own law~ers
and voted 4-0 to let Glenn put more of has own money mto lhe debt·rettre·
ment effort
·
.

can?=~~~~~~o~~~r!:,~givinganym~t!:.,~e~:
p31gn had accepted $3.15 m11Uon ~tax money.
. .
.
himG~~ 0C::1~ ~rressed~~~

, , , .,

By 'J'lte ~!&amp;ted P):ess
A M~ssouri truc~er suffered a
broken arm after a rock ·_came
through a window in 'his rig in
north-cCntral Ohio.
·
It was' the only serious incident
reported stalewide· during the secpnd day of a trilckers' protest high·
er diesel fuel pri~.
Joseph M. Rowe, 37, of New
Cambria, Mo., suffered multiple'
fraCtures in ·his upper left arm about
2 a.m. Friday. He managed to drive
12 miles to a hospital, where he
underwent emerg~ surgery.
Rowe was •hauhng a load of
children's purses from New Jersey
to Minnesota when he was Struck
on Obia 18.

Ohio News in·Brief:-,
.

Medical school installs president
TOLEDO - The Medical College of Ohio has inaugurartd its
fourth president
Dr. Roger C. Bone, who assumed lhe presidency Sept. 1, was
inaugurated Friday. He succeeded Richard D. Ruppert, whon:tired
after serving in lhe post since 19TI.
·
• ·
Bone, 52, said he would continue to' practice pulmonary
medicine at the college.
.
•.
"His credentials as an administrator, academician and clinician
are most impressive, and he shares our foalS to aehieve national
prominence for MCO in the near future,' bQard fJf trustees Chair·
man George Issac Jr. said in a news re~. · .:.
·.
Bone formerly was dean of Rush Medical College in Chicago
and vice president of clinical affairs at Rush-Presbyterian-St.
Luke's Medical Center.
COLUMBUS - Ohio Sena1e President' Stanley Aronoff canceled a Senate session planned for next week and said tbi! Senate
will not reconvene for the rest of lhe ,.~. baiTing 111 ·em~ncy.
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said Fhday he c111celed the session
because a House-passed elhics bill was not ~ for a Senarc vOle.
The bill would ban speaking fees .for Ia~ and tigflten regulations on the fmancial relationships between lobbyists and legisla·
r

DAYTON {AP)- Two ~le
were arrested in an undercover
investi~ation bf alleged PfOStitution
at Wngbt-Pauerson Air Force
Base, the Dayton Dally News
reported Saturday.
Kalhy J, Lyons, 18, of Moraine,
was.charged Friday with soliciting
for prostitution. Daniel Moore, 44,
of Dayton, was charged with carry·
ing a concealed ivC8{'00- a .380·
caliber semi-au'\lf!laiiC {'istol.
The n.ewspaper saad a ·sworn
statement by an FBI agent said Ms.
I,.yons worked f~· eSCOrt service

NEW CUMB:f:!RLAND, W.Va. :....·A teen-ager who pleaded
guilty to rust-degree muriler. in tl!e s~)'ing ·of· an 11-year-old boy
was senlenced to lit'e in prison with the possibility of parole after 10
years.
. .
Sean Harris, 17,, showed DQ emotion Friday as h~ told Hancoclc
County CircUit JUdp Ron WQaon lhat bC beat Sean Carnahlll Aug.
4 with a piece of a lailroad tie and stabbed him with a kitchen knife.
The boy',s body,was found .m,.IOCids near a Weirton Steel Carp.
railroad yanl . '
.
.
.
Harris hid tolchuthorides be killed lhe boy because Carnahan
ll8d informatioR about 'a buta1ai'Y Harris had ~iUed. .
. · "If you lock.ll whit hi!¥1JMd, IIIYOIIC.wllo cominlt$ an act like
that has to~ .a~ coij ~.•" ~id,~k c;o~ty frosecu•

Jllld Moa:e.w~

Harris; ofJWtiitoa, wil!.be· ~i to the West v~ ~
.

., ·

Striking teafhen eye proposaf

WOODSFIELD -" Sl!ikin&amp; .t.,.hers ill an eastern Qhio school
dislrict are to meet IQdly to 'dUcass the stbool board's latest con- :.
tract proposaL
'
.
"
"
. •' ".
. Teachers will decjde then whether to vole on the Jll~, Rita ·
Walters, presidelit of the S~ of Ohio Education Associa· ·
lion, said Friday, '•
.
1
•
•
•
Meanwhile, Monroe County Common Pleas Judge George
BUrkhart has suspen~ court-orde(ed negotiations, his secretilry, ,
Saia McKeever ·said Frida
'·
·
Board la,':"Yer Steve Fi:fi'~ said negotiations schec!uled for friday
and Saturd.liy were canceled, and no new negotiations had been set.
Tbe 235 teacht.n in the dislrict, which has 3,300 students have
held partial strikes since Sept. 7.
'·
; The union has said teachers would strike all day every day
. beg~~~ing Monday unlen agreement on a new .c~imact was

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The agent met Ms. Lyons in a

room at the viSiting officers qimr·

ters and she told him she would
engage in sex in exchange for
money, the sworn statemeqt'~d.
The stalement said Moore drove
Ms. Lyons to the meeting.

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· ·:,'

•, Piesident.Clinton elevltis the eco·';-nomic relationship .to new ·heights
• ~ next week as host of a IS-nation
.•· Asian-Pacific Economic Coopera-

lion forum in Seattje.
Crossick, chairman of the Belmont
The president and other top U.S. European Policy Centre in Brusofficials have traveled Ibis year to sels. Ralher, he says, the relationEurope as well as Asia. They talk ship is centered on immediale irri·
of revitalizing NATO and are rants such as the fractious Uruguay
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emergin~ E~stern Eu~~Pf!'
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gen'1 chairman•of the Dutch' Parlia·
ASsistant secretary of stale Win·
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said recently on his return from a encouraging in eying to explain lhe
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· ·
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"We have mere Asian immigralonger-term tssues, adds Stanley tion. Our population has moved

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iJR,efugees report atrocities

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whatever it is worth in any given
district lhat I lhink that isn't fair,
that the vote was not a partisan ·
vote. I don) ~lieve any mem~
of Congress should be 4efeated if
they vOted for NAFTA."
:;trail.
.
Clinton also said lhe fight over
., In an interview with newspaper lhe treaty is not just a battle over a
repor1ers Friday, .Clinton said he trade deal, but'a m81ter of Ameri·
:-:has off~ed .political protect,io~ to ca's natiOnal and .economic securi·; •Republicans who maght get mto ty, its relationships with other
. 3trouble for voting for the agree- nations and the countty's vision of
&lt;menL .
itself in the next century.
":'• "I don't believe any member of
;There could be more support for
;.congress shou d be defeated if lhey the treaty from the GOP in the
. · :,voted for NAFTA,'' Clinton said. House than from DemocratS.
} '' l cio notbelieve any member of
Clinton told liste11ers in his
;··congress should be defeated for weekly radio ~ Saturday that
":'~oing what is plainly in the nation- the debate aver the three-nation
; a1 interest."
trade pact is "a defining moment
·.: If any Democrat attacks a for America."
. ~epublican in a congressional race
"Will we seize tlie moment?"
;cor voting for NAFTA. the presi· he asked in an Oval Office address
·;llent said, "Then I will say, for !aped a day earlier. "Will we vote

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SARAJEVO, Bosnia•Herzegov·~na (AP) - Muslim refugees flee·
' ing to a battered central Bosnian
: 'town and Bosnian officers there
&lt;teported. massacres and rapes by
. Serb f~ wilo bymed several vii·
).ag!IS, a U.N. official said Saturday.
:. Many villagers wept as they
"'recounted their suffering tQ field
·workers of the UN. High Commis·
,sianer for Refugees .who reached
··the towQ of Olavo on Friday, said
ipokes11181l Ray Willcinson.
.i: Olovo, abou~ 2p miles norlh~
.!(,{Sarajevo, is on ~he front !me
ltividing. territory of Bosnian Serb
;jaationali~ts and the !'&lt;luslim
. ·1~!1
llasnian governmeQt; It has lleen
)ombarded for months.• and the
· V..N. relief ageil~y ha~. not ~een
llble to deliver 'fOod . there for two .
fmOI,ItbS, Wilkinson said.
·
' 1 ' IJosniln 'radio said Serb forces
shelled' OlovQ all d~y Friday. It
· ·jald they resumed shelling Satur·
• Clay and mQUIIred infantry attacks.
; . Wllkinion said Olovp's p~:ewar
populetlon lif' about s,Ooo had
ilropped to fewer than 110Q0. But
· be said 300 refugees had arrived
!here in .the put few days, flee
. ing
. ~y, yillaaelatlll:~ by Serbs ..
1
. ;
' l'hey told of rape, loo\iag and
exDCIIIe hostility by Serb forces,"
.

few years.
.
_ But widespread defense cuts
have not touched the .military presence in Asia and the Pacific. U.S.
troops are holding steady at about
I 00,000 in a region unsettled by
North Korea's nuclear weapons
program, Japan's growing military
strength and China's progress
toward superpower status.
. Vital U.S. economic interests in
Asia were underscored this year
when Clinton named former vice
president Walter Mondale ambas·
sador to Japan - a prestigiou s
appointee some Germans had
for hope over fear'/"
The trade pact, which would hoped would come their way. This
eliminate most trade barriers monlh in Tokyo, Defense Secretary
between the United States, Canada Les Aspin offered to help Japan
and Mexico over 15 years, ."has build a missile defense system in
become a symbol of our commit- exchange for more access to its
ment to growth and to trade advanced commercial technologies.
Earlier this year Clinton attend·
throughout the world," Clinton
ed an international economic sumsaid.
mit in Tokyo. The centerpiece of
his APEC week is a Nov. 19 meetStill short on votes with time ing
wilh Chinese President Jiang
running aut before Wednesday' s Zemin,
whose country has the
crucial House vole, Clinton said a world's fastest
economy.
victory on NAFTA would sttenglh· The imponance growing
of
the
relationship
en his hand heading into a confer- has been underscored by Clinton's
ence wilh. Asian Pacific leaders in decision to renew military ties and
Seattle next- weekend and improve maintain China's favorable trading
prospects for wrapping up world · status
despite human rights violatrade talks this year.
tions there.

·THANK YOU FOR VOTING FOR
ME ON NOVE,.,BER 2••••

~-

'

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And people
who uphold them.

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HOLIDAY LOAN SPECIAL

· ,

Gallo and Popovic appealed the
December ORI ruling. A threemember board set up by the
Deparunent of Health and Human
Services ruled last week that the
ORI failed to prove its case against
Popovic. The ORI asked for a
week's delay in tbe Gallo appeal
and then decided on Friday to drop
tl!e case.
Bivens said the Gallo charges
were being dropped because of the
appeals board's ruling in the
Popovic case.
"It is clear that the panel now
applies different standards from
lhose applied by OR I..." Bivens
said.

CARL UNDOLPH

Wilkinson said.' "They repeatedly
broke down in tears."
·
He said the United Nations had
no iridependent verification of lhe
allegations, but he noted that the
refugees' accounts were "similar
lind consistent"

Equal Opportunity Lender ·

proved lhat a specific virus was the
cause of AIDS.
French rescarcht.rs shortly afr«·
ward cllimed that the virus Gallo
idculifled bad actually been isolat·
ed earlier It lhe Paateur Institurc
and that the ADtericana were false.
lydaiming credit for the discov«y.
Afr« negotialiona, the issue was
settled in 1987 with both the
Frencl! and Americans agreeing to
recoanize Gallo and Pasteur
researcher Dr. Luc Montagnier as
co-discoverers of the AIDS virus.
They also agreed ID llwe royalties
from the parent of 111 ;.IDS blood
test developed in Gallo's lab.
The controvmy was revived in
1989 after new charge~ were leveled against Gallo and a senior scientist in his lab , Dr. Mil::ulus
Popovic. The ORI and its ptedecessor agencies at the NIH investiRst·
ed and ruled last December that
both Gallo and Popovic were guilty
of misconduct in the 1984 AIDS .
research publications.
The Pasteur Institute has hired a
New York law flrm to attempt to
revise the 1987 agreement. That
issue remains unsettled.

pro:iee~ed level

l.f.in lieu ofvotesfor NAFTA
·~ WASHINGTON - President
·&gt;Clinton is raising lhe stakes again
.• ', in the battle over the Norlh Ameri·
; 'can Free Trade Agreement, even
';p!o'mising to help ltepublican
-")louse members on the campaign.

By PAUL JUOCER
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON - The gov·
ernment dropped misconduct
charges Friday against Robert
Gallo, the renowned AIDS
researcher who had been accused
of violating scientific ethics in his
pioneering work on the virus.
Gallo, S6-year-old co-discoverer
of the AIDS virus and head of a
1abora10r,y st the National Instibltes
of Health, said he was "complercly
vindicated" by the action.
Dr. Lyle W. Bivens, head of the
U.S. Public Health Service investigation of Gallo, ·repeated the alle·
galions and said they were dwppeJ
only because his a~ency could not
meet "a new defimtion of scientific misconduct" demanded by a
review board.
Gallo' s Washington attorney,
Joe Onelt, called Bivens' starcment
"outrageous" and hinted at future
legal action by his client
"He never got his day in
court." said the lawyer. "But lhat
may happen yet."
A hearing on Gallo's allllCai of
lhe charges had been schedsiled far
next week. He had been found
guilty by the Public Health Service's Office of Research Integrity
of failing to give proper credit to
olher researchers and with makinjt
a misstatement in a science publi·
calion.
"The reason that they didn't
pursue the case is that the ORI
knew that it couldn't prove its false
charges before a fait: and independent tribunal," Onek said.
In a statement welcoming lhe
action, Gallo said, "I will now be
able to redouble my efforts in the
fight against AIDS and cancer." .
Gallo and his laboratory colleagues published a series of ani·
cles in 1984 that identified and

toward the West Coast. Our eco·
nomic stake in Asia has grown dra·
matically," he said Wednesday .
"This is not to say Europe does not
continue to be extremely important.
It just means in relative terms, we
thank Asia deserves a higher pro·
me."
With security threats ·~~~'!,
troop levels in Western P.o

-;~ Clinton offers campaign help

·, i Extra-react\:lloH IQI

- -ilti"FiEiiiix- .. : i a·uv Ai.eN'Noi HEAT "PuliP. :.

on As.ia worries some diplomats

-:!. the,Clfnton· administration is ·
·.: taiQt!&amp; . ..~dail to · d
:::trade 8iJd, oiher tleS oortbe : .

AMP

'

Cincinnati seminary. .
recently began recalling the alleged involved in about two-thirds .of the
Bernardin, a former president of sexual abuse duril)g therapy. He cases. AU lhe involved priests were
the National Conference Of said lhe alleged abuse drove him removed or had already resigned,
Catholic Bishops; was archbishop into a sexually promiscuous life retired or died, the archdiocese said
of Cincinnati from 1972 until he and he has contracted AIDS.
at the lime.
Also named in Cook's lawsuit
moveilto Chicaso in 1982.
His attorney. Stephen Rubino,
Cook also accused a second said Cook is an unemployed menial are Harsham; the Archdiocese of
priest, the Rev. E!Us Harsham, of health counselor. He said Cook Cincinnati; the Cincinnati archbishabusing biin repentedly from 1975. doesn' t want to answer 'any more op, Daniel Pilarczyk; and Francis
-when Cook was 16 -to 1977.
questions, and refused to disclose Voellmecke, the former rector of
the seminary Cook attended. The
Cook said lhat on one occasion his whereabouts.
Harsham brought him to · Bernardin said he had no recol· lawsuit accused Pilarczyk and
Voellmecke or being negligent in
Bernardin's privale !!Uarters· There, lection of Cook.
Cook said, Bemardm gave him a
A priest for 42 years, Bernardin hiring Harsham .
A woman who answered the
book and a framed picture, then . said he has faced other allegations
sexually abused him. Cook said he of impropriety over the last year. telephone at lhe St. Luke Catholic
doesn't remember lhe date or year.
He told reporters a woman accused Church in the Dayton suburb of
"I don't really know if you can him ofiaking pan in a satanic ritual Beavercreek, where Harsham lives,
put words to describe it, what lhat and a man s3ld Bernardin: partici- said he was out of town and could
pain is like," Cook said Friday in pated in an orgy. Bernardin denied not be contacted.
Pilarczyk called Cook's claims
an interview lVith CNN. "It shat· lhe allegations.
A panel Bernardin appointed to "rubbish," saying the archdipcese
ters your world, it shatters your
soul, it shlitteis your life."
review 59 allegations of sexual investigated lhe allegations against
. Cook, who now lives in the abuse against priests since 1963 · Harsham but found them groundPhiladelphia ·area, said he . only reported in. l992 that abuse was less.

AJsociated Press Writer
., WASHINGTON - · Soon theUnited States will have the same
, level of troops in both Asia and
.:: Europe - a sure sign of shifting
~ U.S. pPorities, and to some a dis·
. , concerting one. ·
·
·~ As lhe Cold War tecedes, near'?'~'term threats to U.S. ·~ecurity are
·: concentraled increasingly in Asia
.~ !r~ru~o&gt;"" Pai:ifi&lt;&gt;l So are u,s. ~o-

IIIII~·

BeruardiD h• t*a ~ccued ot aexually ~~~Sault·
iag a teeaaaer wlille he was archbishop In
(AP file photo)
Cincinnati.
.
.

· center, wa~thed .
Daniel PUarczyk in

'• . By JILL LAWRENCE

;~
. ~":!'Ml
..':'1~\iCS.

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' OLIVE·TOWNSHIP FOR
SUPPOimN8
AND' EIICTING
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BILL OS.IORNE lluSIEEe ' .

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was $12 million.
. , ·
~y~I~'IRG~-·~

One driver reported 'gl8ss in his
eyes and another reeeived a fractured arm · ftam .a roc~ thrown
through a windshield, lie said;
All of the incidents · were
believed to be connected to .the
strike, but remained ooder investigalion.
.
.
"ff lhey are all related, they are
basically mlimidation tactics by a
very small num~r," Born said.

· ·•

v'oTE IS·Oriii ;' ·

,

~~n ~t~~ ,

IU"'"'·

. . ..

aa

By

SAIWI NORDGREN
·· Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO ~ Cardinal Joseph
:•~ Bernardin, as the leader of the
. nation's second-largest Roman
• ~atbolic archdiocese, has been at
tl)e front ,of efforts to root out sexu1 l!lly abusive priests.
·
. Now Bernardin himself is
:,; accused of molesting a teen more
• thail a decade ago - a. charge he .
;'ft. calls false and humiliating.
.;, ''I atn 65 years old and.! can tell
; you that all my life I have lived, a
::•chaste and celibate life,'' Bernardin ·
·~ said Friday. "In the final analysis, I
&lt; am not really concerned about
;• myself. I am mnocent. I am more
. concerned about my people."
·
• The allegations against
:•. Bernardin, lhe spi..rltual leader of
·, 2.3 million Catholics, came in a
· , federal lawsuif,:flled Friday lhat
; .seeks $10 million and his removal.
••. He is the highes.t ranking U.S.
.· Raman Catholic official to face
.- such claims.
· Bernardin said 'the charges
'• would.be investigated by an inde·
, pendent board he established last
,, ycilr, consistin&amp;. of six lay iJCOple
. , and ·three priests.
;
The lawsuit was filed Friday in
• u.s. District Court in Cincinnati by
." Steven Cook, 34, who said
•Bernardin abused him 'while Cook
:; was in a high school~ at a

·""e'

Mixon said he had no details on
lhecase.
But th~ newspaper said Karen
Fannin, a special agen~ with the
FBI, said;lll·undercover agent with
the Air Force Office of" Special
Investigations made a date l"ith
·Ms. Lyons through an escort' service.
·
.,
•

Superinlenclent Richard Edge said school officials had not decided bow the schooJ.s' would operate under the neW strike plan.
-The AJsociated Press

By Tbe AJsoclated Prtll
Here are lhe winning numbers
drawn Friday in tl!e Ohio"and West
Virginia lonmes: T

charge
c·js 'humiliating,'
,·Bernardin claims

drl!c.r•- ........~.

gale.

reacnou.

Lottery numbers

~~ M'Olesration

. B.oth·'appearCd Fnday tx:fare
U;S. ' Magls~aie 1udge Michael ,
Merz.
"' .
•
··~w; .!:;yons pl!sted a $l,OOO cash
bOnd and was released. She faces
up to 60 days in jail' and a $500
fine if•convicted. · · ', . , · '
.Moore, who'ltould receive two
· years 'in: prison ani\ a $5,000 ·fine ,if
·convicted, was :released without
haVing to post a cash bond: He ~ to
appear obefore Merz,at •atpreliminliry examination Monday.
The arrests· were made at the
'Hope Hotel and Conference· C.ent,r,• which ·serves as temporary
quarters for .visiting officers; base
spokesman Bobbie Mix'on •said.
The center is inside the base's
sei:urity' fence, close to
main

rorriin'Davis. '.' ' ,, ·
·· • .
·
·- . " •.., Oinulhtd.u-t widi~)if:~{l)e areo.Mmer,u~Weir·
·'·iiiiLltilrfiiEH~~'I~U~•In Wirren, e&amp;IO~·X ."IL

:Vouths in .Salem. ~i .

.Yfaces fire

more expensive, cleaner"burning
fuel taxes and a requ ~ment for fuel. ·
..
•
it li • .. tl 1 ~· Ii • 1 • 1 1 • • • . • • • • I • • •

1nnnr1 . . I • .lrl • I I lrMIIII a .,.,.

Government clears
-top AIDS ·researcher
of ethics violations

.

·~]eader

.

~ountry recently beca~sr,.of new
·

yields arrest of teen, driver

Teenager .gets life sentence

. llome fo~

. er was an ~own object from an
overpass, saad Sgt. John Born of
theTpatrOI._ L• ,
said.wo ®c..,.·were vandalized, he

Prostituti~n sting at' air.base

It would forbid lobbyists from paying ·tor leJislators' travel and
lodging costs .at out-of-state conventions and limit their food-and·
drink expenditures to $100 per year per laWIIIllker.
·

..

•

'

. ·and hiS supporrcrs so !1e could get more money li'om people.-who had
•given tl!e $1,000 m&amp;,Ximurn allowed by law. · ·
..
•
..
" Tho i:otnmi&amp;tiioners did nat change tlie $1,000 ceilmg on donauons
from noncandid8,1es, however.
..
"Obviously we would have preferred that our full request be granted,
Ruff said.
.
· . .
. both
· The FEC's in-~ouse legal staff had_llf8ed commiSSioners to reject
of Glenn's requesis,l!fgUinglhat Glenn .knew !he rules whe~ ~e ~ccep~
· tax money and no new prt.cedents should be set for· public Y mane
campaigns. .
'· .
·. .
. .
. .
But duri11g public mee!lllgs, commaSSJoi'Crs SIUd theyd andwere mclarglineed to
make an exception (01! 91enn because his debt wa&amp;·so o1
so
·

Word of tl!e . protest spread
::ffely lhraujlh"111onymous fliers,
The protest ~ererated 15 skirover ciuzens band radio and .
mishes m Ohio m two days, .but no toll-free hot lines. Past wildcat
other ilijuries, the State Highway demonstrations have occasionally
Patrol said Friday.
resulled ·in highway shootings or
Seven of ~ incidents involved alterealions at trUCk srops.
gunfire, five were fram rocks
Diesel ti:rices rose,as much as 40
lhrawn from ·overpasses and aneth- cents a gallon in some pans of the ·

Aronoff calls off Senate s~ssion

'-1

,..-

Tunes-Sentinel/AS

.;. Catholic

'

Rig_:.' d_ n. ~er su~"ers
broken
."fn.
incident
':JJ •
. , ., _ arm
,.
.. strike·
. .
.

:t~ne~':!e: t!:,::~hib~i:

.~

f

. ."That will be determined by !)ow much the committee can raise
tluo!!gh fu~ fund-raisers arid through discussions lhe senator wiD have
. wjlh"~ family and fmanclal advisers." The ~paign's next fund-~&amp;
is ~uled fCr Monday in New Ycrl City. · _
'
Glenn's invesunents after his ~ria,ut and miljtarY ~ ~e ~ a
mullimilliooaire; last vear, during his. re-el.ecuon. campatgn an O!Jio. he
released an accounrantfs swement putung his net wonh 8,1 $10,4 fDlllion.
. The FECri!ling 1J18bs it possible for him to spend his own money but
does nott~q~ any more payments,
·
.
· ~Is Senator GleiUl now liable for any of lhe debts? The answer IS
clearly no," said Glcpn's attorney, Charles F.C. Ruff. .
,
G~ had. asbd lbC FEGIO lift1he conlributiO!I caps on both Glenn

debt he w~uld be~to pay himself.
"Precisely bow much he'll put in is impossible to know right now"
'
spokes man Dale Butland said Friday.

tors.

...

November 14,

•

• Sunday Thnes-Sentinel/M

,.

•·

Before you select the ring or jewelry you 'II wear and cherish a
lifetime, it's important to find a jeweler who can explain the
4 C's and lwo months salary guidelill&lt;!.
Diamonds and fine jewelry Clllnot be judged on appearances
alooe. Subtle differences in quality can greatly affect value and
prict. That's why the experienct, ethics and credentials of
your jeweler •~ so important.
We're proud to be memben of the American Gem Society, a
group ol•rs in North America dedicated to mnsumer
protectioll. Since its founding in 1934, the society hu upheld
the hjpest ethical business standards. We're tested annually
to maintain membership. AGS certifsation is your guarantee
of ethics and knowledae.

�-

.

~

- .......

~--

•

Comm.entary
Talk-show president should beware

November 14, 1993

~tC
lll Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 991-1156

ROBERT L WINGETI'
Publlohtr
MARGARET LEHEW
Coalnlller

Executi.. Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Assccijion.
LETrERS OF O)'INION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All leiters arc subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned tellers will be
published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues not
personalities.
'

-

conclusion from this."
Oh yes you can. Had the
Democrats won in all tlm:e races,

After the national debacle that
Democrats suffered at the polls;
there are two metaphors that could
possibly describe President Bubba.
. He's either a California firefighter, desperately- and successfully - trying to contain those
brush fires, or he's Alfred E. Neumann with that vacuous grin on
Mad magazine's cover. "What, me
worry?"
Yes, Mr. President, ·worry. "It's
a big, big defeat for the •White
House," declared Senate Minority
Leader Ro~Dole.
Yet Clinton shrugged off those
three devastating Pemocratic
defeats in New York City, New
Jersey and Virginia with a Neu, mann-like lack of concern: "I
. don't think you can draw too much

Chuck Stone
Clinton would have jt~stifiably
basked in the victorious sunshine.
Afte_r all, he campaigned tor New
Yorlt: City and New Jersey incumbents Dinltins and Florio.
Is this a Republican trend? You
decide. This year, Republicans
defeated Democrats in the senatorial race in Texas, the gubernatorial
races in New Jersey and Virginia
and the mayoral races in the country's two largest cities, New York
and Los Angeles.
Any more of this you-can't-

draw-inuch-coriclusion-from-this
menrality and Clinton's presidency
will be in intensive care.
But elsewhere, ArnerK:a is doing
fine and Clandy. Women made his·
tory by winning the mayoralties in
Durham, Lexington and Minneapolis. First-time black mayors were
elected in Minneapolis and
Rochester. Black mayors were reelected in Cleveland and Seattle
without even bream:~ hard.
And that is the
dest irony of
all. No president has been more
committed to making democracy a
felicitous reality for all of his fellow Americans than William Jefferson Oiflton.
·
·
From his historic Cabinet
appointments to his legislative pop-

.

Hard-luck sports town
takes another·hit with
Bernie Kosar's departure

TR~SE

ARf OUR MJST PRIVATE DIARIES...
ONLY VOIJ AND THE SENATE ETHIC~
COMMITTEE HAVE THE KEY.

By RICH HARRIS
Associated Press Writer

CLEVELAND (AP)- It's been a difficult year for Cleveland sports fans.
Backers of Cleveland's three bi~-league teams- major
league baseball's Indians, the Nattonal Football League's
Brovtns and the Cavaliers of the National Basketball Association- have had a lot to deal with in 1993:
- Two Cleveland Indians pitchers were killed and a third
seriously injured in March when their power boat collided with
a pier durinS a day off from spring training.
-Cavaliers coach Lenny WilkCns resigned in May.after an
emban:assing four-game playoff sweep by Michael Jordan and
the Chicago ~ulls.
-The Indians, who had hooed to be realcontenders in their
last season in the aging Cleveland Stadium, ended the season
in sixth p).ace, losing 86 of 162 games.
The Indians move to a new stildium next year.
-Another Indians pitcher, Cliff Young, died in a car crash
earlier this month in Texas.
-And on Monday, Browns Owner Art Modell and Coach
Bill Belichick shocked and enraged fans by firing longtime
starting quarterback Bernie Kosar.
"S~ is not doing what it's supt&gt;Osed to do when it starts to
miwcreallife as much as it is now," said Jack J. Lesyk, a consulting and sports psychologist.
"These sudden changes and the upheavals have all been very
!lpsetting," said I:esyk. who said abOu! aqu~ofhis practice
mvolves work With athletes from the Jumor high school to the
professional and Olympic levels.
,

•

Voters order law and order_
·

_Rasc-alsO-ut}Hal-lof-Farne_.---

Wiser than the wisenheimers, tion, a new system of regional fed- goodies from Vice President
more alarmed than their attorney eral prisons will be established for Gore's •'re~inventing government''
general. more pugnacious than an estimated 80,000 state convicts. proposal); Bob Byrd took up
their peculiarly passive president The states will get federal money, Gramm's offer; Chairman of the
- let's hear a loud cheer for
Judiciary Committee Joseph Biden
American voters! On Election Day
stitched it together; Connie Mack
I 993 the voters did what voters are
provided much of the conceptual
supposed to do: shape their destiny.
frameworlc for the Republican bill.
They took an issue -crime -and -provided state penal codes cut Hooray for the Senate!
ma.de !t 7entral to _our politics, down "revolving door justice" Meanwhile, in the House,
wh1ch 1s JUSt where 11 ought to .be. by keeping thugs in prison for at ~mocrats played softbal.l. ProviS~isentertainment,butfanstaketheirentertainmentvery
seriously and the ebb and flow of athletic fortune can have a big The American crime wave is a self- leaSt 85 pen:ent of their sentence. stons necessary for a full-bodied
PQiilical~w~.· and~, . (J!_ ""'ition,. {~l'!ll 11l.Oni~s · will
Senate-style crime paclcage were
effect on morale.
•· • -~.....
·' " iJiflic~
~nly
be
self-healed
thiough
pohhelp
fund
100,000
"community
sent off to languish m committees.
"In Cleveland, people probablydo identify more with spons tiCS.
police."
As
camouflage for cowardice,
bec111se w,cdo,s.ee ouiselv.es as a bit of,a hard-luck city, and one
. Tile voters spoke, locaUy.
Thus, the Senate amendments, Democrats in the House ·pushed a
diirig that inatces us feel better is the ,~ty that spon can bring d1dates se;en as too soft on cnme approved 94-6, marry the best of few minor items, mostly dealing
us," he said. "When there are 80,000 people down at the (mostly hberal Democr.ats) l~st. Re~ublican crime le,islation (fea- with drug rehabiliration, costing $5
stadium, cheering together, that feels gOod - bein~ on the Re~erendums demand,ng fum turmg "incapacitation of crimi· billion. In charge was Jack Brooks
actions were passed. Surveys nals") with the best of a Democrat- seeking to avoid fights with libersame-side feels gOod- and this has been disrupted.
Cleveland's teams haven't won a professional champion- showed great conc~rn and a ic crime bill (featuring "prevention als.
of crime"). The Senate action
A scathing commentary by
ship since the Browns won the NFL Championship in 1964. . demandfortoughso!uuons. . .
Bu_t
wtll
the
national
pohucal
chan~es the empluisis from the trivHouse Republicans explains what
The Indians last went to the World series in 1954 and
respond to local sen- ia1 (' Brady bill" gun control, and happened: " ... these bills may ...
languished in the American League cellar throughout the e_srablishment
ument? The Senate alre~dy has. a new list of arcane crimes subject make for good political rhetoric,
1970s and 80s.
The House of Representabves pur- to the death penalty) to the serious but do not deal with the most seriThe Cavaliers have made several trlfs to the NBA playoffs posefully has not. The Clinton (more cops and more prisons to ous
problems facing the criminal
but have never won a title. In Wilkens seven years, the team White House is in its dither mode. keep more thugs locked up). It pro- justice system ... (keeping) repeat
went to the playoffs five times. Four times, including this year, , We shall ~ see h?w much arro- vides $22 billion over five years, in violent offenders off the street....
gance IS left m Washmgton.
a package that started out at $5 bii- The amount of violent crime has
the Bulls ousted them.
Three
days
after
the
election,
the
lion.
The Browns have won five Central Division titles, but have
increased 531 percent since 1960,
Senate
passed
a
set
of
amendments
Many senators - Democrats , yet violent criminals are serving
never made it to the Super Bowl. The 90s have been a period
that represent the fust serious fed- and Republicans - were instru- shorter sentences. The average time
of supreme frustration for Browns fans, who saw their team ·eral
bill in America, one that mental in the Senate's effort. Phil served by violent offenders is only
bum61e its way to a franchise-worst 3-13 record in 1990 then couldcrime
actually cut violent crime.
Gramm figured out how to fund the 37 percent of the sentence given."
finish 6-10 in 1991 and 7-9last year.
According to the Senate legisla- marriage (by lifting the financial
Characteristically, the waffling
· This yell!, the team seemed back on track, leading the

Ben Wattenberg

c:an-

:
;
:
:

:

:
r

:

•

:
'

division with a S-3 record. But the firing of Kosar - a
hometown hero who never wanted ·anything other than to play
for the Browns- prompted some fans to swear they'd never
watch another Cleveland game as long as Belichick was coach.
· Bill Needle, host of a midday sportS-talk show on WKNRAM, said he thinks the teams, and their fans, will outlast the ups
anddowns.
''Things that Cleveland ~ns fans have ha4 to U!idergo this
season have been matters of life and death: In the hteral sense
in the case of the three
.
Indians pl~yers, an~ in the figurative
sense with the departure of J?layers IikeBerme Kosar, w~were
really members of the family," h~ said.

Berry•s World

-

years ago, a geruus phySICist named mtelbgence-gathenng and a rapid
J. Robert Oppenhe1mer persuaded nuclear incident response force.
the governll!ent. to esta~lish a Currently, they~ quietly concenhaven for sc1en11sts workmg for
Pro~t Y ~f ~e Manhattan Engineenng D1str1ct. What became
known as the Manhattan Project
was so secret that residents of the
nearest c!ty had no notion what_ the
burgeomng commumty of sctenlists were lloing.
In 27 swift month,s, t!'e scientists built the world s f1rst three trating on efforts with Russia to
nuclear bombs. Today, Los Alam- Control their stockpile. One of the
os' scientists are :han'lessing their scariest scenarios is Russian nuclecoUective brain~er on behalf of ar material falling into the hands of
another historic, but far more a terrorist group. Iran and North
daunting mission: putting the Korea, meanwhile, are pursuing
nuclear genie back in the bottle.
their own nuclear programs.
This nuclear lab is at the, foreThe'41ab' s director since 1986
front of current U.S. and world Dr. Siegfried Hecker, was reluctani

called it, in an interview with our
associate Dale Van Atta. "But let
me tell you what concerns me the
most ~ keeping track of all the
nuclear weapons, and the nuclear
material in the former Soviet
Union," he said...As soon as one
nuke gets away or the material
.gets away, you'v~ lost the ability to
even answer a tejrorist threat again.
Ever.
"In other words, if you know
that there are 10, 20, ·30 pounds of
plutonium missing somewhere
from the huge Conner Soviet materials stoclcpil~, then .you'll never
know again whether a terrorist·
threat is serious. Because once they
have the·material there's no queslion that ~bs ~be builL"
Both sides recogni:te there are
hllle problems in tryin' to control
proliferation. The onaotnJ _effort is
.
·
multi-pronged, according to our
sources. F'ust, lab expetts here are
.
By Tbe Associated Preis
sharing computer and nuclear~oday 11 Sunday, Nov. 14, the 318th day of 1993. There are 47 days tracking expettise 10 develop a
left mthe,YCII!'· . . . . .
.
, Russ!~~ stoCkpile cjarabiise. Second,
T~y s Higliliaht m Hislay:
.
.
the venflCatioli · .· and ArncriFifty y~ ~~Q; on Nov. 14, 1943, Plesidel!t Franklm D. Roosevek and
fl
regpne. ~ th
his joint cbiefl IIIITOW~ disaster in t!Jt Atlantic while sailin to can n~nc1a 1 assistance, o.r . e
the Tehran cotlference ·
the U.S. bauleshlp !OWL An escort shi gthe d,esttucUof\ of lon~-ranae ~ussl8R
William D. l'lirl«, IECidallally fbecl "• live IOipedci at the Iowa,
the nuclear weapons~ •s_. speedmg up
torpedo explodecllllrmlcaly in the Iowa's wilte.
'
u_nder the StrateB_IC Arms R~uc.
On thistlerc: , ·
.
tHIP T_reaty. !h.ud, the Umted
In ISS I litnnan Melville's novel "Moby Dick" was published in the States 18 ~goliabng to ~ to buy,
United stales.
· ·
.. .
for several bi~lion dollars, m.o';C .
In 1881, Charlcl J. Guiteau went 011 trial for auaasinetlng President than SOO metrtc tons o_f, R~~Sla s
Garfield. Guiteau wu ~vlc:ted ind hlqed the f~ year.
lllghly enriched uramilm m an
In 1889, illspired by Julel Veme,l'lew YodiWorld reporter Nellie Bly effort tQ draw 111!1 stoCkpile down
aiiO ~n as Elizabeth ~ ~ out to travel IIOUJid the world ui -but the seem.~ hiVe stall_ed.
leu than so deyi. Silo 1ucreocled, matins the hip 1n 72 days.
In the meanu~e. i,be,.Russ1111s
In 1922, the Brllilh Bnwtca•ilig Cilfp~ 'bePn its domestic radio sc:r- ·hive lhown 110 II!~ 1n selliDJ1
vk:e.
,
· . •
.
. .
·
,any of Its huge ~ Cit: pi~In 193S, Preaideni Pnnklln D. Roose¥elt proclaimed the Philippine ·!1"1110 the Unlred ·States flO setst out
Islallds a me CQIIIIIIOIIWeiJJh,
· .
·
. of circulation. Tl!ey've priv~ly
In 1940, durini W
. qrld W• ll, Gaman planes destroyed most of the !014 ~ f!!al' they ~ IIKJ!'C
Englisl\town of Coventry.
· tnte~ in '!•.•~l 'pluton•um sn
In 1943, Leonanlllanltein, ~ 2S-y~-old assisllllt cojldilctor of the · fuellq their c~vilian nuclear~~ew York~~. mac1e hiS.debut with the orc1Ura wheii he fdled llln than l,bc hil!'ly enriched urarum for the alli11,1 Brunei Wlller prior to a nationally broldcut concert.
urn.
., .

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

IJi

.,...

"'··

'·----

~

' .,.,,, Is called 'Packwood's Diary,,' by ~ .. •

'

.,.

Ben Wattenberg, a senior fel·
low at the American Enterprise
Institute, Is author ot "The First
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press.

~?AL~~!~~~~~i~2!!!~2!1!~pai~o~~! ~ ~~h~lleng~ :

•
h
•
.
10
I
Story
110 day

..

White House seems to endorse
both House· and Senate actions,
sending out opposing signals, seeking to take' credit for toughness on
crime without biting the bullet.
White House hawks want .to push ·a
Senate-style bill. White Hous.e
doves want the Gore money for
other Clinton programs. Attorney
General Reno never a saw a prisolt
she couldn't depopulate.
Only suong White House preSsure on House liberals is likely tb
bring about a serious Senate-style
crime bill.
·
'
Clinton ran for office as 11
Democratic crime hawk, and wa5
elected because he ran that way,
eating the lunch of Republican lawand-order types. ("We believe in
preventing crime and punishinjl
criminals, not explaining away
their behavior.")
,
Now Clinton has the opportuni.
ty to stand and deliver, to change
the American criminal justice system as we know it, to heed !he
voice of angry voters, to stop the
hemorrhaging of the self-inflicte41
wound, and start the self-healing.

'

.J

,. .

Smce 1975! U.S. offlc_1als m
charge ~f th~ng the untlunlclible
res1de •n a l!ttle•kno~n Energy
Department-directed urut called the
Nuclear Emergency ~~h Team.
More than 600 top sc•en~sts at this
lab, as well as nuclear-k'nowled,geable officials froni other agenc.es,
are on callnrespond 10 an~!~
~or emergency._ ~beth~ ~~ s~a
Civilian
a military IDC!delll
or~ ,terronst t!tii)SL
. ,
.'
We pnWI'!e, experUSe, While
allowed. But tt s more than· that.
When Los Almos exJIC:fiS are d}s·
patched,, they are equ1ppcd With
comll!umcators that C?nnect them
back mto ~ labs, whiCh have the
!JIOSt soph1Silcated supen:ompliters
10 the wqrld. Some of the. equil!·
me~l may allow ~e!l' to f1nd ,\l)e
radiOl!Clivc .material !" the dev1ce,
and disarm~!, '?dD!C II goes Off. :
_Hecker IS Jusufiably,~ot san- ·
gwne aboui the prospect ¥SOIDII·
one has a nuclell!' bomb 1n N~w
Yorlc Harbor, who. are tJ:tey go1n11
to a~k what _to do wub that?
They -~ ~Kl!. gomg to go to a local
electriCtan.
·•
The "whol.e flavor" of the
NEST team focus lias chan ~ he
says. "We did ·not' worry t~ yWs
ago whether there would be li 1il08e
Soviet nUke that we'd have to be ·
concerned about with the NEST
teAm. They 'had ~onirol o( their
inventlkY. OIJr conclllli wu that~
had our weapo0s arouftd the wor~
An4 SOIIId!Ody could get acte~s ta
than. The Sovieu had a llght·hO~
Today,lhe'world bas ct.~gc;d...
fnevltably, expeita here· daril31
pmlict, Iii IIIIi.US. tenorilt grouJI .
or lndl~llll williiOIIIebow fninu1
fat~urc 0r obtain 1-nuclelr ttevle4
Md threaten its cletonadon· in thO
United Silica. That's Yiby'sc~
~ world!lf apinst the c!ocli; ~
the odds, m ~':.11h11 nu~l,
aenie blck Iii ~
11. · · .·

re:actor.

i

'

•••

I•

'

:~uanita

'
•&lt;

M. Miller

MIDDI.:EPOR'r- Juanita M. Miller. !W,, Middleport, died Friday,
.,- Nov. 12, 1993 at the Ohio State University Hospital in Columbus fol:" lowing a brief iUness.
.,. She managed the family business for several years and was a homemaker.
•
Born Oct. 24, 1909, in Fayette County, W.Va., she was the =h.-. ter of the late Lewis and Anna Lee Jones Peters. She was prec
in
,: death by her husband of 54 years, Ronald L. ''Runt" Miller, as well ~
one brother and two sisters.
"
Survivors include two sons, George W: Miller, Middleport, and
· · Ronald (Shirley) Miller, Racine; three daughters, E. Joyce Miller,
. Jacksonville, Ala., Nancy (Lowell) Beaver, Middleport, and Donna
• (Raymond) Stewart, Gallipolis; a half-brother, Lewis Peters _Jr.,
" Ciifton, W. Va.; a special friend, Marianne Crawford, Jacksonville;
nine grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and 9 great-great-grand, children.
. •
Services will be Monday at 1 p.m. at the Fisher Funehll Home in
'·
· Middleport with AI Hartson officiating. Burial will follow in the
• · Riverview Cemetery, Middleport
: · Friends may call today from 6 Ill 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

··Connie Nibert

GALLIPOLIS - Beulah ·B. Lewis, 72, 553 Second Ave .. Gallipolis.
died Saturday, November 13, 1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital. She was a
homemaker and attended Elizabeth Chapel Oturch.
Born ADri11, 1921m
.· Kanawha ~ty. W.Va., she was the daughter ·
of the late Willie and Hazel Louder Birchfield.
Survivors inclUde one son, Edward Lewis of ~allipolis; three bro~.
Clarence Birchf~tld of Seville, Junior and Burl B~rthfield of Crown Ctty;
six sisters. Florence Dean of South Charleston, Ohio, Betty Bos!Cf of Barboursville, W.Va., Ml!xine Queen and Alma Canaday of Patnot, Mace!
RaineS of Crown City. and Anis Shoemaker of Proctorville; four grandchildren, five step grandchildren and four step great grandchildren. .
She w~ preceded in death by her parents; her husband, John Clinton
Lewis, who died in 1984; tlm:e infant children and two brothers, John and
Otho Birchfield.
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday at Waugh:Halley-Wood F_uneral
Home. ·Services will be held I p.m. Monday at D1clrey Church w1th the
Rev. Alfred Holley offiCiating. The body will lie in state at the church one
hour prior to services. Burial will be in Dickey Cemetery.

AI,.FRED -Glen E. (Bill) Robinson, 79, Alfred, died Friday, Nov.
12, 1993, at Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Born on Oct. 7, 1914 at Salem, W.Va .. he was the son of the late
Wilbur E. Robinson and Samantha A. Glover Robinson. He was a retired
fanner and storekeeper, and a member of the Modem Woodmen of America and the Forked Run Sportsman Club.
He is survived by a daughter, Glenda Marlene Donovan; a son and
. daughter-in-law, Wilbur E. and Marilyn Robinson, a grandson and h1s
wife Gregory A. and Paige Winebrenner, and a granddaughter, Michelle
Donovan, all of Alfred; and three grandsons, Larry Ritchie, Derik WinebreMer and Tyler Winebrenner.
Besides' his parents, he was~ in death by his wife, Dorothy M.
Watson Robinson, and by an mfant son and brothers Clair and Donald
Robinson.
Services are Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
The Rev. Sharon Hausman will officiate and burial will be in the Tuppers
Plains Christian Church Cemetery.

Watergate conspirator
Haldeman dead at ,67

Cordie E. Smith
NORTHUP- Pallbearen for Cordie E. Smith Sr., 90, who died Friday
Nov 12 at Holzer Medical Center, were announced Saturday by the
Willls Funeral Home. They will be Jay Jarvis, Gary Jarvis, Allen Kuhn,
Harry Pitchford Bill Angell and Smeltzer Rose.
.
.
In addition U, the survivors printed in Friday's Tribune, he 1s suTVIvcd
by seven great grandchildren.
. .
.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday at the W1U1S Funeral Home w1th the
Rev. James Chapman officiating. Burial will be m the Centenary Cemetery.

Myrtle M. Thivener

In Honor Of
'
I

I"

-The

Staff Sergeant
Ellis
L. Catter
.
'

• 1942-1946
world War 11
Love Always,
Your Family .

for all tim~ a family name and the
memory of those you love. Choose
from the largest selections in Central
and Southeastern Ohio.

10% deposit and
balance in convenient low monthly
paymenll.
·
Convenient
cn!dlt terms - We

carry

H.R. HALDEMAN

------Weath~r - - - - - - South-Central Ohio
Sunday. mostly cloudy and
warm. A chance of morning showers. Wann with a high from 70 10
75. Southwest winds 10 to 20 mph .
Chance of rain is 40 percent. Sunday nigh~ mostly cloudy. Showers
likely after midnight hundcrstonns
also possible. Low 60 to 65 .
Chance of rain 70 percent. Monday, showers likely. High around

for his role in the scandal. Ehrlich-

man served 1-1/2 years. ·
. Haldeman joined Nixon's second vice presidential caml?aign in
1956 and worked in Nixon s failed
196Q presidential campaign, his
race for C~lifomia governor in
1962 imd Nixon's victorious 1968
election.
Haldeman was a major figure in
the coverup. Six days after the
Watergate break-in, he suggested
that an FBI investigation that was
comins too close be derailed .

--

By The AssQciated Press
A threat of rain continued
through Saturday night with a better chance today as a weather system aloft moved near Ohio and ' a
cold front approaches. Highs will
range from 65 to 70.
·
The cold front will move into
the state late tonight and move east

·'

Monday . Highs Monday with a
chance of rain will be 60 to 65.
Extended Forecast
Monday-Wednesday:
Chance of rain Monday. Lows
in the 50s and highs 60 to 65. Fair
Tuesday and Wednesday. Lows in
the 30s. Highs in the 50s.

Let us copy your old
family photoa. Special 25x7's for $14.95. Reg.

$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
also do paaaport photoa,
ldel)~lflcatlon photos and
photo finishing.

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AV£.
GALUPOUS

New Carpet•••
New Painted Walls•••
New Lights•••
New Ceiling•••
New Fall Merchandise!

our own

lOGAN

MONUMENT
·- -- CO.

AU LADIES

POMEROY
Meitll County Dlepllty Ylrd HMr
Pamaroy" an llrklga
A. Bu..,,Mgr.
IIN5II

lEVI'S JEANS

20%oFF~-.

""m•

VINTON

Count=:;'':;:"

Gallla
"-Y a Joe
•
111...-IL-2'11103

n11

--""---.

1'111

•

Cold front approaches Ohio

IUY 3 PAIRS LOI'S
ANY mu, AID Gn A

I .

70. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Extended forecast :
Tuesday through Thursday
Tuesday, fair , except for a
chance of iain extreme south. Lows
from the upper 30s 10 lower 40s.
Highs mostly in the 50s. Wednesday , a chance of rain statewide.
Lows upper 30s to lower 40s.
Highs in the 50s. Thursday, fair.
Lows in the 30s and highs in the
50s.

We have completely redecorated our building inside and out and we
are anxious for you to see our "New Look". We have restocked and
are loaded with new fall merchandise now at special prices during
this Grand Re-Opening Event.

.tctounts.

I

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

Via Associa~ Press Gtaplie6Nel

NEW HASKINS·TANNER CO.

guarantee in the industry. It is the
idealtn'bute . .A perfect way to preserve

ln.

,,,,,

ArTIIE

'

. -

I

That Lasts furever

STANLEY A. SAUIIDIRS MONUMINTS
.~

' ' ' ' ' •lcolumbuslsr

THE GRAND RB.OPENING

Rock of ~liM otrenl you ·· choice of 8 different coloNel llnlnltM. WNtever your requhmenta may be, complet• lllllf~
lion Is ..-.c1 with RoOk of Ages. ·
HOIIII: 9:00--4:011 M-T·Th-F. Oth8ra by appointment.
5113 81111 or 441-2327
··
·

u.s. Army

'''''

Memory

A beautiful Rock of Ages Monument is backed by the strongest

..

IND.

CROWN CITY • Myrtle M. Thivener, 90, formerly of Crown City
died Saturday at the Scenic Hills Nursing Center.
Born Sept 26, 1903, ,she was the daughter of the late James W. and
Sarah Jane Sheets.
She is survived by her husband Cleve H. Thivener of Gallipolis and
one sister'Pluma Caldwell of Gallipolis.
She was preceded in death by four brothers Arthur, Ira "Tobe," Shirley
and GrOYer Sheets;· one siltet&gt;'Ciara"HolslOII:'atllh?O half&lt;slllen 1!.\la
Syrus and Stella Woodyard.
. .
.
Services will be Tuesday at the W1llis Funeral Home w•th Rev. Alfred
Holley officiating and burial in the Crown City Cemetery. Friends may
call6 to 9 p.m. Monday at the Willis Funeral Home.

I

-.

•

IToledo I 62" I

Glen E. (Bill) Robinson

· ConnielreneNibert,23, 555 Jerry'sRunRoad,AppleGrove, W. Va.,died
friday, November 12, 1993 at the Ohio State University hospital in Columbus.
• Born Apri14, 1970 in Gallipolis,
'she was the daughterofWillardNibert
·and stepmother Kathie Nibert of
'\\5hviUe, Ohio. She was preceded in
death by her stepfather, Marvin
·"Cotton" ·Smith; paternal grandparents, Willard and Nora Nibert; and
maternal grandfather, Harry Smith.
• Survivors include her mother,
Joyce Smith Holley, Jerry's Run
Road, Apple Grove; her father and
stepmother listed aliove; maternal.
grandmother, Margaret Smith of
Gallipolis; three sisters, Tammy
Lucas, Apple Grove, KarenReynolds,
'AppleGrove,andPamMoore,Rocky
Mount, Va.; one brother, David Nib.ert. Circleville, Ohio; one halfbrother,
'Willard L. Nibert Jr., Ashville; one
CONNIE NIBERT
half sister, Usa Smith, Newark, Ohio;
"~- ~~P brothen, Stanley H?ward.
'"
·
.
AsllviU~Dot!gHoward,Ashvtlleand
_
.
'D3Vid Renner, Ashville; one Step sister, ~ Ho~. ~v11le; four
.nieces,J:Jral\dY,MJ!~•.Apple;Grove,.Ailu!nda·NliJert,,CircleviUe, Ta~
Nibert, Circleville, Megan Moore, Rocky Mount; and one nephew, Bnan
Mayes, Apple Grove.
.
.
.
· Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Fatr Ha~~ Methodist &lt;;burch,
Kanauga, Ohio, with the Rev. Marlin Campbell officJabng. Bunal wsll be m
Reynolds Cemetery, Addison, Ohio.
: Friends may call from 7to9 p.m. today as wellas2to4 p.m.and7to9p.m.
Monday at the Willis Funeral Home.

SANTA BARBARA, Calif..H.R. "Bob" Haldeman, Presidem
fJixon's fiercely prorective chief of
siaff who served 18 months tn
prison for covering up the Watergate break-in, died Fnday. He was
67.
Haldeman died of abdominal
cancer in his home overlooking the
Pacific Ocean. His son Hank said
·. he had been ill for only a month.
· : Haldeman was convicted of
• ~onspiracy to obstruct justice,
.·obsbUction of justice and lyinjl to
the FBI and a federal grand Jury
,·and was sentenced to a 2-1/2- to
eight-year term by U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica.
· The June 17, 1972, break-in of
·..Democratic Party headquarters at
.•Washington's Watergate complex
eventually forced Nixon from the
·.White House.
· Haldeman had been in advertis-ing when he met Richard Nixon in
.-.the 195~s. and \Jecame one !'f ~e
,earliest ilnd most trusted of N1xon s
~ G:ampaign aides.
·
;,. "I am not a politician," ~e said
..once. "I had no real interest m pol)tics, and no participa~on, until I
yolunteered for a N1xon campaign."
. , Mter the 1968 election, u'aide·
_man became Nix&lt;in 's chief of staff
and thereby the gatekeeper to the
-Oval Office, a post he valued.
:other than John N. Mitchell, who
;bad been Nixon's campaig11 manager and attorney general', no one
-was cloSer to'the president . .
. , Mitchell and another top NIXOn
-aide, John D. Ehrlichman. also
.,.-ere convicted of Watergate con;spiracy. Mitchell, who died in
1988, served 19 mon!hs in prison

Accu·Weather• forecast for
MICH.

, OAK; HILL - Morgan Ray Hammond Jr,, 26, 1219 W. Main St., Oak
. HiD, died of an apparent bean attack Friday, Nov. 12, 1993 in Oak Hill
•ColllJIIIDlity Medical Center.
' Born SepL 23, ~967 in Oak Hill, son of Morgan Ray and Cathy Sexton
Hammond Sr., who survive, he was a laborer at A.P. Green RefraCtories.
_: Also surviving are his wife, Anita Hammond; two daughters, Courtney
•Gale and Ashley Ray Hammond; three brothers, John David Hammond,
:·Eric Lee Hammond and Steve Dale Hammond, aU of Patriot; paterruit
,grandmother, Zelda Hammond of Patriot; maternal grandparents, John
and Kathryn Sexton of Jackson; and several nieces and nephews . .
. Services will be Monday at I p.m. in !he Gallia Baptist Oturch, with
' li'e Rev. Liston Halley officiating. Burial will be in the Gallia Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home, Oak Hill,
' ·n-om 2-9 p.m. Sunday. and at the church two hours prior to the service.

.

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Nov.14

Beulah Lewis

Morgan Ray Hammond Jr.

ulism and mandate for public service, Clinton has offered the American people a lovelier vision be
themselves. But they are .not buS'ing it.
One problem is Clinton's proclivity for quick fixes. Hiring RC~~·
ganite guru David Gergen was .a
diSBSIU. Con artists, no mauer holv
elegant their background and in~­
lect, are still con anists.
Another problem is that tile
embers of change are stiU smoldering. Americans still want more ra$. •·
cals thrown out, Democrats as well
as Republicans.
But the hean of Clinton's problem may He in the nature of his
presidency. Scholars have written.
about Nixon's "imperial presidency," Johnson's "administrative
presidency" and Ford's "substitUte
presidency."
What is Clinton? "He's a talk
show host!'' · observed John
Sweeney, a university professor
and advertising expert.
Arid indeed he is. Adapting to
the culture of his time, the interminably voluble Clinton is constantly massaging the American
people, whether it's at the mike. on
the tube or at a town meetin~.
To Clinton's credit, he 1s communicating his presidency through
this forum. But he's making a terrible mistake. He is conducting his
presidency as if it were a talk show
and he were the host. Instead of
Clinton using the medium, the
medium is using him.
"You can't be Larry King and
inspire confidence in government,''
observed a distinguished scholar
friend.
..
If the talk-show-host perception
persists, 1994 could bring an even
more precipitous drop in Clinton's
ratings. And that is the year ttie
voters may decide to install Bill
Clinton in the THRO (Throw the

Sunday Times Sentlnei--Pag&amp;-A7

Pomeroy-:-Middleport-Galllpolla, O.H -Polnt Pleasant, WV

---------------Area deaths----.....__ __

.

'

HOBARTWI~N JR.

November 14,1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A6

A DiYiaiOil of

82S Tlllnl An., GaWpoU., Oblo
(614) 446-1342

'"•

•

01.

UYI'S SWEAT SHIRT

ALL MEN'S SUITS &amp;
SPOITCOATS ......... 20%·50%
MEN'S
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WRAPPING
_,

�•

Page-AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Novernber14,1993

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

Along the Ri:ver

~~~~~v.~~v.~~v.~.

Section Bl

. .

'

November 14, 1993 .

One man's hobby: ·m~sical
collection spans the ·years
.

.

• By CHARLENE HQEFUCH

an antique one, Bailey points out.
The tiansistors introduced by the Japanese in the
POMEROY - Pitching horseshoes on courts about mid 1950's lihl!ngcd the entire industry, he stales.
: the country is a fine pastime during the summer.
Some of the early radios using transistors are a pan
But what does an avid panicipant in the "ringer"
of Bailey's collection. He has one done in the shape
·; ganie do when
of a coke boUle from
win~ comes?
tile late 1950's. The
• Pomeroy
neck of the "boUle" is
' resident, Hany L.
turned to COIIIIOl
Most items of his collection were
; Bailey, has found
volume while twning
1
a perfect solution
the bottom changes
Yf_cquired when Bailey worked as a
to the dilemma.
the stations. Another
He retreats to
of his novel radios is
repairman after returning to his
tile wann basethe replica of a
ment of the Bailey
Budweiser beer can
Meigs County home from serving in
home to enjoy
and Bailey has one of
,- another of his
the fust beach radios,
World War II.
· : hobbies-his
packaged in srnall red
. collection of
and black plaid case.
· antique phon&lt;&gt;Beach radios were the
. graphs, records and radios.
,
fli'St on the·marlcet to operate either on electricity or D
As the temperatures begin to dip lower and lower
batteries.
• and the days grow snoner, Bailey spends more and
So while the weather outside may get "frightful"
: more of his time enjoying his int=sting hobby.
this winter, Bailey will keep warmed up at his home
Much of the equipment and records in Bailey's .
through his unusual collection'of the memories of
collection dates back to the early 1900's, a time
yesterday.
. · ,when radio was the "in" thin' and families were
practically glued to the amazmg new invention to
· catch the latest episode of Amos aiid Andy, Lum and
Abner, or the Little Theater Off Times Square.
Most items of his collection were acquired when
Bailey worked as a repairman af~ reluming to his
Meigs County home from serving in World War II.
After the war he underwent a training program in
• the repair of radios and recool players which
· equipped him to make his living for a li!ne as a
· repainnan, not only of radios and record players, but
also of televisions.which were just beginning their
: eventual strong role in entenainment and influence
· on the American scene.
Bailey's work as a repairman eventually·gave
• way to another vocation but his int=st in antique
' phonographs and radios has hung on through the
years.
Considering his hobby a pretty neat answer to
coping with cold, winter days, Bailey loves kicking
back and listening to some of "those old recordsthe ones we used to play so long ago" in the wannth
· of his nome. Or, perhaps, he'll worlc on an old mdio
· or phonograph to get it back into playing order.
"It doesn't take much energy, and I don't have
much." Bail~y comments.
Among Bailey's collection are a number of
.~ recordings on cylinders, an Edison invention before
. the tum of the century. He also has one of the very
: • early phonograP,)lS:-111911 crank t)'J»-which
· plays the aged cylindm and this eq\lipment is, of
: course, one of the most prized items of the collection.
·
Enhancing·his uriique eollection
the big
: "horns" which amplified recordings before more
; sophisticated speakers came into vogue and el: egantly carved cabinets which house the mechanics
of lhe phonographs and radios.
Another of Bailey's favorite pieces in his collec. lion is a 1920 phonograplt which plays tile first disc
· records to be produced. With this he has several of
' those early cut discs which were ·about a qWU1er of
: an inch thick.
Oilier choice items include a Selector from 1924,
an Atwater Kent from 1928, an RCA Radiola from
:. 1929, a 1927 AC currentPhilco with globe tubes,
and an RCA ViciOr, also from '27.
NOVEL RADIOS ·The introduction of trans is·
"And most of lhem work", Bailey repons, but
tors in the 1950's changed tbe sound Industry and
keeping them working could be a problem since
led the way to the manufacture or novel radios.
' tubes for the radios made their exit when uansistors This radio in the shape of a coke bottle has tile
became the way to go wilh equipment The only
volume control in the neck. Stations are changed
~ tu.be radio that an individual can purcllase today is
by turning the bottom.
-: l'm•i:Stntlnt_lSJtH

.

Vaughan's Cardinal will be
g homemade
Christmas Dinners.
Special Orders are requested
so order yours today.
Your Christmas Dinner will
include:

. Vaughan's Cardinal
Produce bas the right
fruit basket to fit your
needs. Stop.in and
checkout our,selection of
baskats
or
.
spacial order yours today.
'

s
'

•2 lbs. Homemade Sweat Potatoes
•2 lbs. Homemade Dressing
•lib. IDIDIIDada Graq
•l . lb~ Bamamada Cranberry Sauce
•lib. Homemade Cola Slaw
•l.daZIIn Halhamade Bolls
~lomamada Pumpkin Pia
.

.

'

.Vaughaa 's.lldao·ls·your
place tor·Cbrlablaas Items•.
·. .
of ~Jir. Pra.vlously

•2 lbs. loillemada Sweet Potatoes
•2 lbs. Graan Beans
'

Via~ad .m~··

and g..... .

ara on sale!

.

'IIIDD

•

·.sPECIAL ORDD

IIRDmn•a

'

v'·

'-- - - - - ·

.....-~

.'

EARLY RECORDINGS·
" ~~-~~~~,._e,
Harry Bailey bas both tile
cylinders which were turn-of·
the-century recordings and
the quarter-inch discs which
were forerunners to the old
78 rpm's so popular during
the 1920's. One or the most
prized items, at right, in
Harry Bailey's collection of
early phonograplts is this
1911 model which plays
celluloid cylinders.

•

Photos By Charlene Hoeflloh

locate the equipment they needed to produce the crups.
"After we found out what we needed, we had to fmd
what we needed," Mike explained . Eventually most of the
equipment was purchased second-hand in Pennsylvania
and placed into Sharon's garage which was specially
adapted to handle lhe machinery.
Making chips
Kettle-style potato crups, as the group explained, are an
old-fashioned type of chip involving more hand work than
other chips which are produced mostly by machines.
"Kettle-style chips are thicker an1 tastier," Doug said.
First, the potatoes are washed, inspected and plaeed in
a special maci(me !hat peels them . They are lhen washed
again, rinsed and placed into another machine !hat slices
them.
The slices are then placed into the cooker. similar to a
giant deep fryer, for a specified time period, removed.
allowed to cool and salted.
The chips are then inspected again, bagged and pre·
pared for uanspon.
Locally focused
The group decided on the name"Vallee" because of !he
area'sassociation with theOhioRiverValley. In addition,
their package depicts a stemwneeler and lhe mouo "A
boatload of flavor" further enhancing !he company's local
image.
Currently the company uses clear plastic bags wilh
stick-on labels but a new package is in the worlcs. Layton
Graphics of Columbus is currently designing a new package.
"To the best of our knowledge, we are the ftrst potaiO
chip company in Meigs County," Mike said.
"We would like 10 be known for maldng them on a fann
in the country," Doug added. "We've got a wann reception and lots of support from local mcrthants."
Although some industries would considerthecompany' s
·Danville location a liability, Vallee POiato Chips considers it an asset Danville is centrally located within a half
hour of our proposed marlcets, Doug said.
To maintain. its local focus. future plans include in1
frolllle"- delllonstrlie tbe process uaed In lllllklJII kettle-style
volvement in area school and church fundraisers wilh
'""' the clllptart removed from tbe c:ooker prior to coolin1 Special packages including the name of the school or
Cblps.
'
'
.

"Everybody uses them. 'There is probably a bag in every
Dmai=Senllot! Staff
house," he added.
Mike compared the research work to a big puzzle being
DANVll.LE ·Meigs County's newest product should
solved one piece at a..time.
be appearing soon in local stores.
Much of their research was conducted at Ohio
Vallee Potato Chips is the culmination of two years
researth and development by employecVowners Doug University's Alden Library in Athens: In addition, the
and Pam Jude, Mike and Flossie Jude and Sharon Hall, group visited olher areas and purchased sample of potato
all of Danville. ·
cltips.
About two years ago, tile five started nisearching
In the end, they decided on kettle-style chips, a lhicker
potato chips, mostly in Pam's ld!cllen.
type ofchip which involveslunorelabor-intensi ve method
"We were always uying.tocome up with ideas," Mike of production ..
After
on kettle-style chips, the group had to
Jude said, ''then we thought of po!Aio chws."
By JIM FREEMAN

•l-71b. 8am

.

~

are

.

Meigs County's newest product:
Vallee's kettle-style potato chips

ER

•l
Cola Slaw
. ·lb. IDID81RIIdl
. '
•lib. Ram•mada Cranberry Sauce
•I daan Ba•amade RaDii
•lalnamada Pumpkin :Pia

~

~
~

•ID-12 lb. 7urkay
.

~

MEMORIES OF YESTERDAY ·HarryBailey'scoUectionofantiqueradiosandpbo!Joarapbsand
his many records dating back to the early 1900's are hfi memories of yesterday which bring joy to
today.

T--·--(

• "'•--' ••••• •-· ••-• •

BAGGING - One of the last steps involved in
producing potato chips is bagging. Pam and Flossie
Jude, from left, of Valke Potato Chips demonstrate
how the chips are bagged in preparation for sealing
and shipping.
organization. Unlike other company from outside the

area, it is imponant for us to help the school children.

Sharon said.
We want to expand but be locally focused, Sllaron
explained. Keeping with the local focus, even lhe stands
are made locally by Jeff Baughman, she added.
We encourage the local people to support us, Mike
said. As we grow with the market, we plan on adding a
new building and getting more employees.
Doug pointed out Vallee PotaiOChips may use about
3,000 pounds of potatoes every week, perhaps providing a marlcet fer local fannm.
We would like to buy locally produced potatoes if
they can be grown here, he added.
Doug explained tllat Vallee Potato Chips will be
comparable in price to olher chips but maintained they
wiU be fresher than chips brought in from other places.
In addition, the comptny will sell bulk amounts of
crups made on·tlle-spot at its production facility .
The five are currently tile only worlcers, but that may
ci!Bnge soon. "We llope to be a big employer," Doug
said.
Monday, Hall 's garage may be bustling with activity
as tile five go to work preparing their kettle-style potato
chips.

�. Page-82-sunday nmes-Senllnel

lpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

November 14, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH4olnt Pleaaant, WV

Sunday nmes Sentlnei-P9 B3
'

U.S.
argues
disabilities
·
act
protectsl
.
.
some vo_luntarily obese
people
.

.

ByL~URANNEERGAARD

Assol:iated tress Writer
.WASHINGTON (AP)- A new
interpretation of federal disability
law may help some obese people
· resolve employment conflicts or
even get a comfortable seat in
movie theaters. '
The government is arguing in
court that some obese people are
protected from discnmin.ation
under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regardless of
whether the weij!ht was caused by
disease or poor dieL
"Before, if something was
deemed voluntary, it wasn't a dis-

TRACY WAUGH AND SCOTT STANLEY

Waugh-Stanley

WENDY FRY AND JOSPEH BENEDETTO
JOANNA SWORDS AND CLARENCE FERRELL

Fry-Benedetto
POMEROY - Mike and Jane
Fry of Pomeroy and Kathy Fry of
Denver, Colo . announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Wendy Michelle to Joseph
Benedetto, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Benedetto of Lancaster.
Wendy is a physical therapy
111ajor at Ohio State University and

is employed at Lancaster Hospital.
Joseph IS a major in industrial
design at Ohio State University and
is employed at Roxane Laboratories. Wendy and Joseph are both
active members of Fairfield Church
of Christ
The wedding will take place in
July 1994.

Swords-Ferrell
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
Steven Swords of Bidwell
announce the engagement and
upcoming wedding of their daughter Joanna Michele to Clarence
Ferrell son of Danny and Barb
Swords of Portsmouth.
Joanna is a 1991 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School.

Clarence is a 1991 graduate of
Portsmouth West High School and
is currently employed with M and 1
Welding.
The open church wedding will
be 6 p.m. Nov. 27 at Stoney Run
Tabernacle, Portsmouth , with a
reception to follow.

STACY COON AND LAWRENCE ROE

Coon-Roe

~

NEW HAYEN - Mr. and Mrs.
·f;dward A. Coon of New Haven,
:W.Va. announce the engagement
.lnd approaching marriage of their
-daughter, Stacy Renee, to
1:.awrcnce Manning Roe. Manning
js the son the L.E. and Suzanne
Roe of Beckley, W.Va.
:. The bride-elect is a 1992 gradu-

ate of Marshall University and is
employed at Gallia-Meigs Head
Start, Pomeroy. Manning, a graduate of West Virginia Institute of
Technology, is employed as a field
service enjPneer for Goulds Pumps,
Inc., HunbngtOn, W.Va.
. The wedding will take place on
Dec. 4 at SL Paul Lutheran Church,
'New Haven.

Experience the
Charm of Rlver!J4)at I
Travel aboard the

lv'e.rt tlf"J''iria Bt-!le

Wildwood garden:
club members meet
for Halloween party
RACINE - Members of the
Wildwood Garden Club, dressed in
Halloween costume, met at the
home of Evelyn Hollon recently.
The meeting opened with devotions by Doris Grueser.
Roll call was answered by members naming their favorite fall
shrub or tree.
Kathym Miller gave a repon on
the fall regional meeting held at the
CarletOn School an4""oted that
Evelyi\4 follon received tout ribbons on her arrangements entered
in the Meigs Showcase Flower
Show.
Juanita Will has furnished
arrangements this summer for the
Mt. Hermon United Brethren
Church with roses from her garden.
The new program books were distributed by Doris Grueser. •
Evelyn Hollon gave a program
on disease and infected plants. She
named all the various kinds of
insects, how they effect plants and
how to protect against them.
She said all house plants should
be examined before being brought
indoors, that plants should be
c~ed weeldy for pests even after
bringing tbem indoors.
For. repotting, she recommended
fresfi potting mixture. The importance of fertilizer, water, tempera-

emphasis in· Mathe matics and
Computer Science.
. .
Scott is tbe son of William and
Linda Stanley of Gallipolis. He is a
1988 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and a 1992 graduate
of the University of Rio Grande
with a Bachelor of Science degree
in Biology and Chemistry. He is
employed Gould Incorporated Foil
Division as a chemical analyst.
The wedding will be held at
First Baptist Church at 7 p.m. Nov.
20.

GALLIPOLIS - Tracy Waugh
and Scott Stanley an.nou·nce their
engagement and upcoming wedding.
Tracy is the daughter of John
and Wanda Waugh of Gallipolis.
She is a 1990 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and a 1993
graduate of the University of Rio
Grande with a Bachelor Science
degree in Mathematics and Computer Science. She is a ~raduate
student at Ohio University with

lure and ventilation to plants during
the winter months indoors was discussed.
For "Now is the Time," Peggy
Moore noted to keep lawns free of
leaves and other litter during the
winter, continue mowing as long as
new growth continues, use leave$
for mulch compost, dig up tender
bulbs and store in sand or boxes in
a cool, dark place. Transplanting
should be done early enough to
allow pllnls 'tO lli\t:&amp;me .well tstablished before the ground freezes.
For a Halloween 11f!angement,
Hollon used orange silk mums and
fall leaves with a witch in a black
container, also one with yellow and
orange mums, corkscrew willow
and boxwood.
For show and tell, Belly Milhoan had gold maple leaf napkin
holders made by her daughter-inlaw, Carla.
The meeting adjourned with the
hostess serving refreshments.
Juanita Will won the door prize.

and

Santa's Showboat
'

,j

Wa'a~ ·VIrginia's

premiere paddlewhealer adorned
with, iover $70,000 In lights, decorations and
animation.
lWindley- Park

Pt.Pieaunt
T~y,Nklv. 16
'

Sightseeing Cruise

'
Country Dance Cruise
Sightseeing Cruise

Salurday, Nklv. 20

.

r::RNITURE
GALLERIES
Layaway Now
For Christmas

Endearment Reg. $625
SALE $499

I

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Contact Person

Galli•, Jackson

I PhOne
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and Retail Merchants
Mall tQ 16 State Street, Gallipolis, Ohio
or Pbone 446-0596

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Meigs

.

A Private, Not for Profit Agency Working
Hard to Serve You in
Galli&amp;, Jackson, and Meigs Counties.
Woodl1111d Cente11, Inc. Ia funded In part by the
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Addiction &amp; Mental Health Services.

Ann

.

Howard Miller GRANDFATHER

CLOCKS

14 DIFFERENT
STYLES

STARTING
AT

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Send a self-addressed, lo11g

busiNss-siu e11ve/ope allll a clred
or money order for $5 (tiiU int:IIIM&amp;
posl4fe IJ1ld lriwJli11g) to: NuJ~eU,
c/o AM l..onders, P.O: Box 11562
Clticago, IU. 60611-0562. (/11
ada, serrd $6.)

Call:

RECLINERS
Bolla for

Colonial Star Reg. $525

oRootc.n....
oCryet.l &amp; Bran

right to be wroDJ.
· Oak1ancl, Calif.: I have beea a
nunc for 30 yean and lliR'C with
you I00 pen:enL I IIIli sickened by
the painful proc:edures we must
inflict when the prognosis is
hopeless.
Roscoe, Texas: rm enclosing a
canooo by P. Steiner. It lhows a
patient in I hospital bed, and the
doctor llliDding next 10 her say1,
'Medical cdlica do not lllow me to
assist in your death. I 1111, however,
pemaitled to keep you milertlble as
long 81 poaiblc.. That aid il all,
Ann.
And now, dear radlin, there is lo
much provocative mail on this
subject that rm going to print additional c:anments tomorrow. Thanks
to all wbo \VIOle.
F~rset to .ravt some of J0"' fa.vome Ann Lo11ders coliUrllls?
"NKggets and Doozies" is the tui-

:~0:: a;::t =~~:~ ~':a;:Sir:!r

25th anniversary celebrated

'*199'5
MAPLE
MR. AND MRS. DONALD WOOTEN

POMEROY - Donald and Phyllis Rife Wooten of Pomeroy will
celebrate their 40th wedding
anniversary on Nov. 21.
The couple was married at Gallipolis by the Rev. Paul Niswander
on Nov. 21, 1953.
.

PRICES START AT

Why should I seek help?:
Each and everyone of us. at some time In our lives, may
need someone to share our burdens with ... to help us
solve problems so that we can fully enjoy and par1icipate in our day to day routines. Early intervention can
prevenJ small problems from becoming overwhelming
ones.
Services Offered:
1. Outpatient Clinic
3. Crislsline
2. The Residential Crisis 4. Adult Comrnunily Training
Intervention Center
5. Case Management

Modesto, Calif.: When I ssy,
"Thank God for you and your
forum," it oornes from the depth of
my liOUl I, too, am in my 80s and
MR. AND MRS. WB.UAM WOOLDRIDGE
epprecill.e your COUJagC more than I
can say.
Bloomsburg, Pa.: Too bad Hillary
.
• dclerioralion and dleaded the day
Rodham Clinton can't suggest
BIDWELL -William L. and two grandchildren, Lacey Easthom when be might be in a similar
optional dadh for the elderly and
Delores Wooldridge recently cele- and Tyler Wooldridge.
condition. He then spoke llbout bis
temtinally ill as a way 'to rein in the
brated their 25tb wedding anniverMr. and Mrs. Wooldridge own hope that in the not-too-distant criticism from people wbo want to escalatina cost of health care. It
sary. They were married in Vinton and opera_te B and D Auto Sales, future, people would be allowed to impoee their religious beliefs on you would sure make a lot of sense, but
Methodist Church, Vinton, October Inc ., Bidwell, OhiO. Mrs. exit this life in a painless dignified IIIII everyme else. Ignore 'em. - J.K. of course, she wouldn't dale.
5, 1968.
Wooldridge is a full-time student at III8IIIICt
'
IN CLEVELAND
Dawson, Ga.: I watched my
They are the parents of Chandra Ohio U~iversity cmnpletin~ her
1 resPonded, "What you have
FIORI Arcadia. Calif.: I started father die a Jingering death in a
L. Eastham of Bidwell and Tadd Mas!e~ s pegree ID Bus•!'ess suggested is 1 sane, sensible, mlding your column in high school
nuninc home. He bad emphysema
Wooldridge of Bidwell, and have· AdmmiStrabon. ~ey attend Vmton civilized alternative Cltisting in 1
10
and continued through . college, tmd Alzheimer's. It doesn't get mucll
BapbSt Church, Vmton, Ohio.
nursing home, draining family medical school, psychiatric training' worse than tbaL But God's JliUilOIC
resources and lqling the"end wiD at Yale and neurologlcal training was fulfilled in allowing this to
come 10011. Too bad its qainst the at the Uoiversity of Southern happerr.'It was his wilL
law."
California. You have, in a way, been
Lansina. Mich.: I am not afraid to
Since that column appeared, I my mentor. I \\'l:l al3rmcd by y.lUf die. What I really feat is dying by
have been hit with an unprecedented "10lution" ID old age. The "right to inches and having my family wiped
flteiiOnD of passiOIIale responses, die" will surely bec:cilne "the dwy to out financially . That doctor in
bolh pro and coo. Here an: some die" in a society t1uu valuca only Michigan is a sa(nL
samples of what rve been getting in youth and productivity.
Edmond, Okla.: What I tbink of
the IIIIi!:
WCSidlestcr County, N.Y.: If you you, Ann, cannot be printed in a
Dear Alia: Your response to "85 want to go to hell, it's OK with me, family aewsp~pe~. You may rest
and Waiting" was terrific. It took a but why take another pcnoot along - - ' . llpwever, thM e~~e~~ if I were
lot of courage oo your pan to come with you? It's stiU suicide, whether riOt a P.oman Caholic ~I \\wid
out for a penon's right to choose. you do it yourself or get someone to lti11 cam for you and aDow you the
You an: sure to n=ceive 1 flood of help you.

GLIDER
ROCKER

Wootens to observe anniversary

Cherry with etenctl d11tgn.

How can we help?:
Woodland Centers employs a group of energetic, dedi·
cated and c~ng mental health professionals to ensure
that every client receives appropilate services. The staff
wor1t intimately as a team to provide you with the most
suitable services to meet your unique needs.

Dear Readen: A while back, I
printed a leiter from a reader who
signed bimiJclf "liS and Waitinl.• He
wrote of ap;xlllc.billg old qe witb
fear and trepidation. He bad seen

ollday
Specials

~·

because she weighed 305 pounds.
· "Anytime someone is discriminated against because of a physical
characteristic, that should fall
under the ADA." said Jim Goodmiul of the Persons with Disabili-'
ties Law Center in Atlanta. " It will
make a difference in accommodation 'of obesity. What does a movie
theater do about seating? What
does an airline do? "
He represents a Tennessee
woman who wants to bring her
own chair to movie theaters,
putting it in the wheelchair section,
because she cannot fit into the regular seats.

Ann entertains right to die responses

'

PHOTOGRAPHY
(614} 446-6700

ability," Peggy Maslroianni, direc- SO pounds overweight, for example
tor of disabilities policy for the - the Obesity must be caused by a
Equal Employment Commission, disease to be protected under the
S3ld Friday.
BCL
"That bad some verr disturbing
.But the EEOC stressed lhat any
implications - what if someone obesity complaints filed under the
became paraplegic because ther disabilities act would be considered
panicipated in a dangerous sport?'
"on a cue-by-case basis."
The EEOC, in a brief flied in a
Lawyen say the decision probaRhode Island court case, said • bly will not affect many people but
someone who is morbidly obese is still significant. Courts have
has a disability even if disease did cited the law's weight-disease
not cause the person's weight. restriction in deciding cases, most
Morbid obesity is a medical term recently last month when the Calithat means twice normal weight
fornia Supreme Court ruled against
If someone is merely obese- a woman who said shewasn'I hired

Dance Cruise
7:00-10:00 pm
$30.00
Sunday, Nov. 21
Brunch Cruise
12:30-3:00 pm
$18.95
l'lclcei
. tf o•ll.tlle Ill 111 PEOPLES NEWS OUTLETS or by Clllllng
Children'•

Profsslional Wedding Photography

Adults ranging in age
from young to elderly

Jackson
286·5075

$8.00
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Prime Rib Dinner/

oGolipollll Band Stand Throw•

I Riding or Walking U n i t - - - - - - - - - - - 1
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I

7:00-10:00 pm
1:30-3:00 pm

Polnl Plitt

Plrklnburg
Friday, Nov. 19

, I

- - .• • • - • - • • • - • • • I
I "Children's Christmas" Parade Blank 1
I
I
1 Name------------- I

$5.00
$5.00

~~n~

Individual and
Family Services
for Adults

STRAIGHT TALK FROM EX-'MR. CLEAN'- MoilvatlonaJ,
eaker
Bill Havins of Columbus, w_bo appeared in the "Mr.
1
:!lean!' television commercials in the mid-1980s, was tbe keynote
speaker for the FHA/HERO fall district meeting Friday at the Unl¥ersity of .Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College. Tbe
day-long conference drew nearly 300 students from FHA/HERO
chapters at Buckeye Hills Career Center and Gallla Academy,
River VaDey Olik Hill, Wellston and Vinton County hiKb schools.
Havins spe;t 20 years as a t~acher -and co.acb before his '?(lr.
Clean" experience and embarkmg on a speakmg career.

9:30-11:00 am
Noon-1 :30 pm

'

'FREE OIFT
W~PPiilf

· •LAYAWAY
ofREE PARKING
ofREE DELIVERY
. , •YIN iMIIIti,n:•rd oOIICOVIr

..

•·

CHESTER - "Thanks Singing,
Thanks Giving" was the title of the
program presented by Kathryn
Mora at the Nov. 4 meeting of the
Chesler United Methodist Women.
The World Thank Offering is an
opportunily for individuals to
responded to God's abundance and
grace with spontaneous gifts of
gratitude. The funds collected are
used in the total program of mission carried through the Women's
Division mission in the US and
around the world.
The group · sang the hymn,
"Great. is Thy Faithfulness with
Betty Dean as pianist.
Rev. Sharon Hausman led the
·group in prayer. The group also
sarg, "For the Beauty of the Earth"
and said a prayer in unison. ·
The organization of UMW has a
past filled with women of vision
who saw the needs of their sisters
and of society. They ministered
those needs.
Stories were told about Laura
Askew Haygood, a woman who
established a private school for
girls in 1866. In 1883, she assisted
in organizing the woman's home
miss•on work of the Methodist
Episcopal Church . In 1884, she
went to China. The McTyeire
Home and School in Shanghai
remains a visible ~·ymbol !lf her

.

Margaret Ross Miller helped
form church women's organizations in the Philippine Islands,
Panama, Costa R•ca, Mexico,
Argentina and Chile, as well as
California.
Manha Ann Drumm was a missionary in Angola and Ponuguese
West Africa.
Luisa Garcia Acosta devoled her
life to education. She founded
"Alfalit" a literacy program active
in 15 Latin American countries,
responsible for teaching over I million people who to read and write.
Thelma Stevens was committed
to racial justice, peace for the
world and inclusive church structures.
The group put their World
Thank Offering boxes (In the table
and sang, "Alleluia."
Kathryn Mora presided at the
business meeting with II members
present and 14 sick and shut-in
calls 'reported.
Mora asked for a church-wide
canned-goods-food drive for the
Meigs Cooperative Parish. Rev.
Hausman asked for a donation to
the ilarish and it was voted to give

$200.

The group decided to make pillows as Christmas gifts for the
shut-ins. Work will be done .on .
them on l)lov. 18 at 9:00a.m. at the

chutcb. '

.

SAn S90

Boggs to celebrate anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - James and
Maxine Boggs, formerly of Gal lipolis will celebrate their 5Ith
anniversary Nov. 20.
Mr. Boggs is the son of the Ia
Thomas and Renee Cotrill Boggs.
He is retired from Timken Roller
Bearing, Columbus. Mrs. Boggs is
the form.er Maxine Shato, daughter
of the late Ira and Addie Shato. She

is retired for Western Electric,
Columbus.
The Boggs's took a wedding
trip to Nashville, Tenn. They have
made their home in Hawthorne,
Fla. for the last 18 years. They
have one daughter, Jacquelin Moll
and three grandchildren, Stephen,
Rosemary and Shad.

JlCQV.ISPTIW{S
FINE JEWELRY

.·,,., ..

GALLIPOLIS • MIDDLEPORT

OPEN TODAY!
Sunday 1-4
SEE OUR GRAND NEW DISPLAY
OF CHRISTMAS JEWELRY

YOU HAVE.GIVEN
ME. ,
.
MARGARET ADKINS

Two Locetlon•:

Harrlsoi TownshiP Trustee

161 Second Ave. Galllpoll• 441-2842
·11 Mill St. Mldcl• .rt H2-8260

·I·

Pilei tor by •he candldlle,
7031ttlllln. Tnce Rd., Clown City, Ohio
'

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11 Ohio River Plaza
between Hills &amp; Big Bear
446-SAMS
Houl'l: Mon.-Fri. N, Sat. 8-6, Sun. 12-5
NO APPOINTMENT-.lUST DROP IN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE

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s.... le..n

UMW shares stories
of school founder

.work.

second ~ Gl'llpt
·In Gelllpolla

'15995

They are the parents of four
children, Joan Wooten, Long
Beach, Calif.; Daniel and Donald
K. Wooten, Albany, and Russell
Wooten, Pomeroy. They also have
two grandsons, Isaac and Zachary
Wooten.

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Tlmes-SenUnel

Four night polemic ~
discussion to be held:
. ..

Redmen
football
recalled
by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent
In the 1930s the Rio Grande College football learn had
some colorful
·
players with such
nicknames as
Punch , Thor ,
Bus, Sleepy,
Boot,
Pick,
Berry, Lum,
Bagdust, Stew,
Red, and Indian
Joe.
h seemed that as the decade pro-

gressed the nicknames got more colorful. Unfonunatcly, Redmen football went the other way.
The '30s started and ended with
winless teams. In 1930, the Red and
White lost to Muskingum, Marietta,
Morris Harvey, Concord and, most
embarrassingly, to Cedarville and
Urbana.
It was the only time in history that
either of these schools would ever
defeat Rio in football. Cedarville was
only two years away from giving up
the span entirely. The end came in
J932after WestLibeny administered
a 137-0 drubbing.
In 1931 Rio Grande had a new
president, Dr.Lewis, and anew football coach named Spooner. Spooner
wasasuccessfulhigh school coach in
Lawrence County.
For the 1931 season at Rio,
Spooner brought with him four
Lawrence County running backs
(Carey, Rapp, Kelly and Rose). By
the end of the year they had acquired
the name the "Four Lawrence County
Horsemen."
The Red and White "rode" to
victories over Marietta, Cedarville
(twice), Urbana (twice) and Morehead. They lost 10 Cincinnati and
Bluef~eld.

The 6-0 win over Marietta was the

GI).LLIPOLIS - A four night
po1etilic discussion will be held
]'fov. 15, 16,18 and 19 with Edwin
S. Harper of the United Pentecostal
Church of Huntington, W.Va. and
R. David Gibson of the Church of
Christ of the Alto, W.Va.
Tbe first two nights of the
debale will ·take place at the University of Rio Grande, Fine and
Performing Arts Center. The topic
will be trinity·versus Jesus only and
be slid at the
of

first ever victory for Rio over the
Pioneers in football. The win against
Morehead came in Ironton in what
was called the Lion's Beechwood
Bowl.
It was the Statue of Libeny play
that gave the Redmen the deciding
touchdown in a 20-12 win. The 1932
learn beat Cedarville twice and Urbana but lost close games 10 Ohio
University (19-0), Morehead (10-7),
Wilmington (7' 6) and John Marshall
(15-0).
The 1933 team, coached by Paul
Lyne, was 5·1losing only to the UC
Bearcats. They beat John Marshall,
West Libeny, Armstrong, Alfred
Holbrook and Alderson-Broaddus.
The stars of that 1933 team were
two big tackles, Moore and McGarvey, and an 128 pound halfbackfrom
Logan named Hugh Keller. Both
Moore and McGarvey later played
professional football for the Ashland
Hawks of the Midwest Pro·League.
The league lasted only one year,
1937, but tO players from the league
later played in the NFL. Besides
Ashland learnS were Cincinnati,
Dayton, St Louis and Indianapolis.
The 1934 Rio learn tied Holbrook
and lost 4 games. The 1935 team
opened with a 7-6 win at Morehead

when two Woodies,Luman and
Brothers, made long runs in the winning drive.
This team later beat West Virginia
Tech under the lights at the Gallipolis
Fall Festival and tied Bluff10n: The
Redmen lost to West Libeny, Bethany and Marshall.
The 1936 team won two and lost
five. Wins came over Holbrook and·
Potomac State. It should be noted
that throughout the 1930s Rio Grande
was a two-year school and they
competed against mostly four-year
schools.
The 1937 learn was 2-3-1 with
wins over West Virginia Tech and
Holbrook. They tied Bluffton 6-6.
The two wins came back to back and
it would be the last time Rio Grande
would do that until 1946.
The win over Tech was noteworthy too for the fact that it would be 33
games after that before the Red and
White would win another football
game.
In that33-gamespan that stretched
until 1943 Rio would be outscored
915to52. In 1940RioGrandewould
fail to score a single point.
There was one tie during the 33
game streak, that being with Alfred
Holbrook. The year was 1939 and
neither the Redmen nor the Dina-

SUNDAY
POMEROY - All Meigs area
singles are invited to a Thanksgiving dinner sponsored by SOLOS at
7 p.m. at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Bring a dish to
share. For more information or
reservation call S baron at 985·
4312.
RACINE - South.ern High
School fall sports banquet will be
held at I p.m. For more infonna·
tion call Ruth Shain at 247-4965 or
Jeannie Nease at 949-2955.
REEDSVll.LE • "Cross and the
Switchblade" will be shown at
Reedsville United Methodist
Church at 6:30 p.m. Fellowship
Y(iU follow. Pastor Phillip Scarberry;invites the public.
POMEROY - There will be a
Thanksgiving basket dinner at

Alfred United Methodist Church at
12:30 p.m. Turkey will be provided. Every one is welcome.
GALLIPOLIS • Modem Wood·
men of Atlienc:a ~1ltri]l '1230·will
have a Thanksgiving dinner at
Dale's Smorgasbord from noon 10
2 p.m. The cost is $2.50 for ages 10
and up and free for children 9 and
under. Call Mildred Ziegler at 9927770 for more informalion.
POMEROY - Hillside Baptist
Church will be celebrating its
founh anniversary at 11 a.m. Pastor
James R. Acree Sr. invites the public. Cake and refreshments will be
served. There will be special
singing.
CHESTER - There will be a
slug shoot at the Izaak Walton
Farm at I p.m. Smooth bore and
rifled barrels, no scopes.
HOBSON- Rev. Clyde Henderson will speak· at the Hobson
Church of Christ and Christian
Union at 7:30 p.m. There will also
be special singing. Everyone is
welcome.

b8ptism with ~h participant either
debating·or affirming .the ~pic. :
Thursday and Frida~ rughts the.
debate will be held m the Dotf
Morris Room of the Memorial Sill':·
dent Center, Marshall UniversitY;,
400 Hal Greer Blvd., HlmtinJ!tori,.
W.Va. The topic of debate will Iii!
do signs and miracles exist in tlu;:
church today with each participant,
affirminll: or debatinll:.
":'
For more infonnatio~ call 446:-_
1494 or (304)525-5451;

By PAUL RAEBURN
AP Science Editor
ATLANTA (AP)- The lung
cancer de,ath rate for women has
shot past that of breast cancer and
probably will increase into the next
century, ¥ears after the death rate
in men peaks and stans to fall, the
government reponed Friday.
In a sepaillte finding, the American Cancer Society reported that ·
gains in preventing heart disease
deaths in all U.S. smokers are
l;leing more than offset by the rise
in deaths from ~ cancer and
Other smoking-rei
cancers.
, Heart disease deaths have
declined in smokers as they have in
(IOnsmokers, due to factors other
than smoking, including healthier
diets apil lifestyles. Lung cancer
deaths .have increased, the cancer
society said.
· Gary Giovino of the U.S. Sur~eiln General's Office on Smoking
and Health reponed that smoking
rates continue to decline among all
groups of men and women in the
United States except white men 18. 24. Their rate of smoking hasn't
changed since 1980.
The new fmdings were reponed

saurs scored.

Ray Troth was the coach in 1938
and 1939. The 1938 football season
was noteworthy for one thing. It was
the flrst year for there to be a homecoming queen and a barbecue,
The spans writer for the yearbook
wrote "Across the clear bitey air came
floating the marked cadence of the
quarterback's voice as he shouted his
directions to his teammates; and an
aroma of stale sweat mixed with the
musty smeU of moth balls was wafted
from the field to the nostrils of the
onlookers."
By 1938 metaphors had replaced
nicknames and good football. The
star of the 1939 tie with Holbrook(O·
0) was the punter, Moorehead. The
losing of football games in 1939 did
not seem to have affected the homecoming as the Science building was
dedica,ted, there was a field hockey
game, a chalk talk, open house and
banquet.
Morris Harvey won the football
game 47-0. For the decade of the
1930s, Red and White football learns
were a combined 20-37-4.

Saturday, November 27th .
10 A.M•.til4 P.M.
LOTS OF CRAFTS &amp; GIFTS
FRESH &amp; SILK WREATHS &amp;CENnR PIECES

HALF PRICE
ON SELECTED
ITEMS
.I

RACINE - Recessed council
meeting will be held at Star Mill
Park.at 7 p.m. ""
RACINE - Christmas in the
Park organization will meet 7 p.m.
in the Racine Fire Department
Annex. AU interested people invited to attend.
CHESTER - There will be a
meeting in the Eastern High School
cafeteria at 6 p.m. to disci!Ss Eastem Local Community Education
classes for the winter session.
Everyone is welcome.
. POMEROY - Big Bend Farm
Antique Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs County Library.
TUESDAY
BURLINGHAM ·- Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Bedford Town Hall .
POMEROY - Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary #2171 will meet
at 7:30p.m. There will be nomina-

P

•

Y

~-'?

ON CARPET CLEANmC
FROM

' QUALITY
CARE
CLEANING

lions for vice president

MONDAY

GALLIPOLIS- Minnie Waters
MacKemie has been awarded the
Ohio Library Council's 1993 Su~
porti ve Staff Member of the Year
Award. She was honot'ed Oct. 29, at
the Ohio Library Conference Annual Awards Dinner in Cleveland.
The honoree is nominated by
fellow staff members and is awarded
·in recognition of significant contributions to local library development.
MacKemie has served the Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library for27
years. She was appointed ClerkTreasurer of the Gallia County District Library August I, 1966. She
)Has closely involved in two buildIng projects, including the recent
renovation.
MacKemie, a native of Wellston is a graduate of Wellston High
School and Ohio University, where
she was elected to membership in
Phi Beta Kappa National Honor
~ociety and Kappa Delta Pi EducaJional Honor Society. She was a
'teacher at Gallia Academy High
School during the late forties and
~ly ftfties.

&gt; HOLIDAY SPE·CIALSI·

James Saods b a special correspondent oft be Sunday Times-Sentinel.
His address is: 65 WiDow Drive,
Springboro OH 45066

1 100111 and Hall

JACKSON - The Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Vinton Solid Waste
Management District will meet at
• Jac. . . lixtansion·Cen~ ,on
Stand~ipe Road at 10 a.m. 10 certify rauftcation of the Solid Waste
Draft Plan.

*39.95
.r

'2.A001111,&amp; Hall
149.95

ROCK SPRINGS - Rocksprings
United Methodist Women will
have their Thanksgivin\{ dinner and
meeting at noon. This ts a carry-in
dinner and the turkey will be provided.
POMEROY - Pomeroy American Legion will hold its annual
Thanksgiving dinner at 7 p.m. A )
meeting will follow at 8 p.m.
.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- ~
port Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m. at the home of Mrs•. Wilson
Carpenter. Eileen Buck will review
Tom Saw7er. Roll call will be a
memory o a childhood friend.
POMEROY - Alzheimer's and
related disorders support group will
mee_t ~. 1 to 3 p.m. at the Meigs
Senaor Ctuzens Center. Everyone is
welcome.
·
·

3 Roo1111 &amp; Hall
169.95

4 R'ool..i &amp; Hall

'89.95

Ml~.t:

WALLACE
OWNER

r--------~.

:s10 OFF:
I

I

UPHOlStER~

.1ll f

: CLEIIIIII WITH :,
I
PURCHASE OF I
: ANY SPECIAL! :
&lt;

QUILrrYCQE

ONLY s6°0

•
••

••
•

THE PRO IMAGE

••

Join the Cap Club! The eighth cap
Is FREEl Check out the Great
Selection of T·Shlrts, Choose
from 200 on sale for ONLY '9"
Layaway for Christmas.

•
•
•

•

•

••
•

••
••
•

•

••
•
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VIDEQTOWNE

••
•

Pre-Order Free Willy for '1 goo
'5'" Down will reserve
your copy.
Release Date Nov. 16

.

.•
,

~•,

•SMALL GIFT ITEMS .... Candles, .Spiced Hot Pads,
Spiced Mug Mats and many more gift Ideas.

'

ALCOVE .BOOKSTORE

.
'&gt;''

waller •Till Nltlve AmerlOinl, An
ntuetreted · Htetory~ . "The Vampl,.
;c:hronialelr by Anne· Rice. In eddltlon to .
·ttte ovlr iiOOO blek lllllf comic• offered,
.Atcova,EIOOkt! ..-lvll-k!Y ehl~
ilf new oomloa. Rot.p~aylng gamu .fri)m
TSR, Weatend, ·Faea, Whitt Wolf end
~ . . 1110 ~VIlllbll.
'

!

.....;; '.

'

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•••

VINTON -A revival· will be held
at Morgan Center Christ Holir~ess
Church from Nov. 15 to 20 7:30
p .m. nightly with Evangelist
Dorothy WhittingiOD.

Forgive us,
Our pride is showing.
Veterans Memorial Hospilal has received accreditation for another
three years so it's no wonder we're feeling proud.
At our request, Veterans Memorial has undergone an inlensive onthe-site survey by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
(' 1nizations. The commission is made up of members from the
Au1erican College of Surgeons, the American College of Physicians, the
American Dental Association, the American Medical Association and
the American Hospital Association. Our facility was judged on a set of
criteria approved by the Commission.
Renewal of the Joint Commission accreditation is firm evidence that
Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital - is continuing to provide quality patient care in a safe and pleasant environment.
The entire healthcare staff of Veterans Memorial is proud of this
prestigious endorsement.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Po111eroy
992·2104

J.C. PENNY CATALOG

FASHION BUG

Terrific Ideas and terrific
savings. Total shopping
convenience. Phone 1-800-2226161 ANYTIME! Orders can be
picked up or delivered direct.

Big Winter Life Sale·
Ends Nov. 15th 20"k·50o/o off
Winter Merchandise
Every Dress and Coat Is on

SALE!

A.! '
,'

.....,
... ;....,

_ ____

__,"'

'
1' ....

I
.,~

·r

.,.. •·•

'

'

..

BIG BEAR
Your one stop store for all your
holiday food needs. Everything
you'll need for your
Thanksgiving Dinner, Holiday
Party or Get Together

College Logo Sweatshirts '10
Compare to '30
NOBODY BEATS TEN
BELOW

$5-$10 off Elkland
Buy rich, durable, great
looking leather Elkland Boots
and Oxfords ...
FOR AS LOW AS '24"

.~~ · ·~*~~1-.:~*~.~~~&gt; ~~._-~
. -1"'-..k--~

,.

'

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Anonymous Tri County Group will

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'

,. ..

...

The Perm Plus only 24.95. With a
Shampoo, Precision Cut, Quality
Helene Curtis Perm and Style,
It's everything you expect from
an expensive Salon, Except the
Price .

UPPER RT. 7

1

WAIIIIIM'U • U"'POUS

•

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous will meet at Woodland
Center multipurpose room at8 p.m.

10 RIVER· PLAZA

••'!;

THE SHOE
'. CAFE
r

•••

Tuesday, Nov. 16

Check out Radio Shack for
remote control cars and
toys. Ask about our 90 days
same as cash •
Free Layaway

Chrlstmaa Gift? Look No Morel
VCR'I '8• a WHk
Portable TV's 'II" a wuk.
Programable Scanners ..,.. 1 wuk
• .Microwave OVens •4• a wuk

'SlOW Wtlltz In Cedar Bend" by Robert

FOR WOMEN

' ''

•••

FANTASTIC SAM'S

Trying to find that perfect

THE LOOK THAT NEVER WEARS Out'"
•

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Commun ity
Cancer Suppon Group will meet at
2 p.m. at the New Life Lutheran
Church. For more infonnation call
446-3538, 446-4895 or 446-8657 .

RADIO SHACK

RENTAL KING

EVERY ITEM IN OUR STORE IS NOW ON SALE!

-~

•••

LOGAN - Narcotics Anony mous Courage to Change Group
will meet at First Church of Christ
at 6:30p.m.

PICWAY

'

I=

Avallablf.ln Dark Brown Chamois ·
. and Black Chamola

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - An informational meeting will be held for the
upcoming GARS band trip to
Florida at 7:30p.m . in the hi gh
school band room. All parents of
band members making the trip to
Florida should attendRevivals
MERCERVILLE - Missionary
Baptist Church will hold a revival
beginning Nov. 15 with Evangelist
Cunis Sheets and special singing
nightly at 7:30p.m.

TEN BELOW

;,'·

•LOGS OF BRASS, PEWTER, and COPPER.

~FALMOUTH~

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - The American
Legion Auxiliary 27 will hold a
regular meeting at7:30 p.m.

••

•

~~--------------~

MIDDLEPORT - A family dinner was held recently at the home
of Fred and Pauline Hoffman in
Middleport.
Those attending were ber mother,
Ellen Smith; sisters, Shirley Smith,
Rhoda Duckworth and Bessie
Taylor and husband, Larry, of
Middleport; Dolly ,Spire~ and
husband, Ted, of Defiance, and
brother, Ray Smith of Cheshire.

For the best selection of
Christmas Cards, 1993
Ornaments, Fine Leaded
Crystal, Holiday Wreaths,
and Much Morel

•
•

•CEDAR CHESTS, CURIOS, GRANDFATHER CLOCKS,
RECUNERS.
.

'

RIO GRANDE - The Area
A!\ency on Aging District 7, Inc.
wtll host the 13th Annual Senior
Citizens Art Show through Nov.
30.
The paintings will be on display
from 8 p.m . to 5 p.m . .weekdays, in
the Atrium of the Fine and Perfanning Arts Building at the University of Rio Grande, Rio Grande,
Ohio. The paintings on display represent the works of 29 senior citizens from Adams, Gallia, Jackson,
Pike, Ross and Scioto counties.
Some of the paintings may P.urchased and picked up after the
show. For more infonnation on the
Art Show call Ed Wylie at 614245-5306 or 1-800-648-2575.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Narcoti cs
Anonymous Just For Today Group
will meet at Grace United
Methodist church at 7 p.m.

CROWN CITY - The Stapleton
Family will JlCI:fOrm at Mt. Zion
Mission Bapust Church. at 6 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Miles Trout
will present the sennon at Debbie
Drive Chapel Church at the II a.m.
service with Paul Krimm in the 7
p.m. service.

Now tl;lrough Dec. 31st
Cardinal Drycleaners will
dryclean any winter coat for

I

•THROWS, TABLE RUNNERS, TAPESTRY PILLOWS,
-DOOR STOPPERS ••• many designs and colors.
I'

GALLIPOLIS - The Diabetes
Support Group will meet from 2 to
4 p.m. in the French Five Hundred
R~m at Holzer Medical Center.
Diabetes and Eyes will be the program· topic. For more infonnation
call446-5246 or 446-5313.

GALLIPOLIS • Scel\ic Hills
Nursing Center will host a craft
bazaar Dec. 11 from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.
. All local crafters are invited to
participate. Cost of a booth 10 each
craft dealer will be $15 per space.
Crafters will keep all profits from
their sales.
For more information please
contact Becky Brown, Assistant
Activity Director at Scenic Hills,
446-7150. Deadline for reservations will be Nov. 29 at4 p.m.

F-ULL HALLMARK

•

j

•••

Grafters needed .
for baza~r

Senior art show
runs through month

GALLIPOLIS • A retail mermeet at 611 Viand Street at 7:30 .
p.m.
chants luncheon will be held at the
Stowaway at noon. For more infor•••
mation caii446-0S96.
Monday, Nov. 15

Sunday, Nov. 14

CROWN CITY - Ralph Workman will present the sermon at
Good Hope Baptist Church at II
a.m. and 6 p.m.

CARDINAL DRYCLEANERS

.

•COUNTRY CROCKS ... Pottery Christmas Ornaments,
Pottery Santas,· Cookie Crocks, Specialty Crocks with
Gallipolis, Point Pleasant and Middleport on them.
Large selection.

was accepted in honor and memory ·or all persons who have been in the United States m!Htary
service.

Gallia community calendar

We Make CliQI8TMA8 EA8Y...

Ohio
~

Rolida~ Sale Now ~~~ Progress!!

..

Her husband, Bob, is a retiree of
the Centtal Trust company, and the
couple have three children, Sue Ann
Williams of Pickerington, Ohio, Beth
Vandawalker of Reynoldsburg anll
Robb MacKenzie of Richmond, Va_

-

~

-A-

1960s.
.
"'11le lung cancer de;lth rate for
men is expected to peak befote the
year 2000, then begin to decline,"
the government said. "For woOten,
the rate will probably continue to
inCIC8SC into the next century."

Sunday Tlmea Sentlnei-Page-85

•

~&gt; Whole~~~~~~~!olis,
In the
675-6610 from Pt. Pleasant

MINNIE MACKENZIE

~. .

on Quality Care Cleaning."

peaked at about 44 percent in the

Family dinner held

.
A·

GREAT GIFT IDEAS

FLAG·PRESENTATION • Paul HudSOD (left)
aDd Charles Carr of Feeney Bennett Post #ll8
or tile American Legion presented a nag to Salisbllry Elemeatary Thursday morning. '!'~~ nag

in a weekly publication of the Cent&amp;-s for Disease Control and at a
meeting on nicotine 'addiction
sponsored by the American Society
of Addiction Medicine.
In 1950, white women had a
breast cancer death rate of 26.4 per
100,000. In 1990, the rate showed
little change at 27.4.
In 1950, the _death rate from
lung cancer among white women
was 4.9, but it climbed 10 32.1 in
1990.
Lung cancer surpass.ed breast
cancer in 1986, said Scott Tomar of
the Office on Smoking and Health.
For black women, the breast
cancer death rate was 21.4 per
100,000 in 1950 and 31.7 in 1990.
During 'the same period, their lung
cancer death rate soared from 3.8
to 32, surpassing breast cancer in
1990.
''The continued increase in lung
cancer death rates prlmarily reflects
patterns of cigarette smoking
throughout th!J century," me government reponed.
Smoking among white American men, for example, peaked at
about 67 percent in the 1940s and
1950s. Smoking among women

wv

.,

I ,,...

"When Quality Counts,---------~ount

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

MacKenzie receives honors

FREE DRAWINGS &amp; REFRESHMENTS
RIO GRANDE, Ol:fiO

r.,-P',-r,

I

14,1993

Women's lung cancer death
rate surpasses breast cancer

team as· the Redmen edJed Morebead, 7-ti. In
the 19301, Rio won %0, lost 37 and tied four. The
1931 team was ti-lalld tbe 1933 squad was 5-1.

1935 REDMEN BEAT MOREHEAD. Tile
1935 Rio Grande College football teiiD 1VIS tile
last Rio 9rade sqdad to beat a major college

Meigs commul}ity calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that' event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication io tbe calen·
dar.

~veml;)er

November 14, 1993 ..

HILLS
Friday Nov. 19th- Moonlight Madness
Hours 9 pm to Midnight
• Reglater to win a '1 00" Gilt Cartlflcate
• Prizes given away every hour
*Re1nlahmenta
• WHh every $30.00 purchaM receive 1
Dlckenavale Colltctable

�Page-B&amp;-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

..

wv

November 141 199.3 ;-,
.
-"'.

.•.
.c.

Bradbu.ry church
prospers for 100 years
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
BR ADB URY - The Bradb ury
Chun:h of Christ which nex t wee kend will celebra te its . 1OOth
anni ve rsary is still enjoying th e
"good degree of spiritual prosperity" which Elder J. H. Gilmore, one
of the founders, wro te about many
years ago.
As a pa rt of prese rvin g th at
"spiri tual pros perity " which th e
church has claimed since its beginnin g, a weekend revival has been
planned as a part of the celebration.
Eva nge list Art Bush will be
conducting services Friday and Saturday nights and Sunday morning
before an old-fashioned turkey and
dress in g dinn er in th e church
social roo m.
While the church ' s hundred
years are being celebrated , history
of the congregation actually dates
back to 1868 when residents began
gathering in buildings of the com munity to worship.
It wasn't until Nov. II , 1878,
however, in an old school house
were meetings were being held that
the church was officially organized. Evangelist George Vanpelt
met with the group to bring th at
about. Gilmore called the meeong
to order, then presented Vanpelt
who presided at an election where
elders and deacons were elected.
Gilmore was elected a deacon that
night.
The church building was built in
1893 by the small group of dedicated members with assistance from
others in the community, according
to some early papers on the congregation written by Elder Gilmore.
It was originally called the
Rockville Congregation, but later
the name was changed to the Bradbury Church of Christ. Gilmore's
papers list Sherd Gilmore, Vint
King , Otho Smith , and Wilbur
Pierce among those early members
who were dedicated to buildmg the
church.

CHURCH BELL - When
the Roell v.me Church or
Christ was organized a hundred years ago, thi&lt;i bell was in
the belfry. In 1965 when the
church was moved to make
way for a highway project, the
bell was removed from the
belfry . The congregation
decided because or its weight
not to put it back in the belfry
so it's place today is on a tall
platform at the back or the
church. The bell tolls every
Sunday to make tbe beginning
or services.

Jerusalem~ .~

shrine hai: ..;:;
new shine :~
"

the belfry, and on July 20 th e
church building was moved to a
flatbed on wheels for the shan trip
down the road.
Because of, the size and weight
of the beD it was never put back in
the belfry, Instead a tall platform
adjacen\ to the back of the church
was erected for the bell. It toll s
every Sunday to mark the beginning of services.
The years have brought expansion and improvements to the
church. A full basement with classroom s and kitchen facil ities has
been added, a baptistry installed,
and a parsonage built next door.
For th e past five years Pastor
Thomas Runyon and his wife,
Lynn, have worked to increase the
membership of the church and to
offer activities to keep members
invol ved.
.
While the congregation is small,
11 still has the same qualities which
through the years have made a positive impact in the community. And
11 has retained that "good degree of
spiritual prosperity" which Elder
Gilmore wrote about a hundred
years ago.

,,,,,
••

MAI{KING A CENTURY • Th~ centennial celebration .or the
Bradbury Church or Christ will take place next weekend.

. lAdy Bug Aorll
Judge Thomu Moullan

Amyl'a Aorll FuhlDr. &amp; Mra. Daniel Whiteley
JIIIIM D. Hogen

BOSTON (AP) - They trav eled 65 million years from the late
Cretaceous reriod in China to the
Museum o Science in Boston .
Then, the largest dinosaur egg fossils ever displayed in the West
came within inches of being
crushed by a falling TV spotlight
"I don'tthink I thought. I thmk
I felt - fear," sajd museum Presi·
dent David W. Ellis, who was
standing by the eggs at Thursday's
news conference when the light
feU .

The metal-cased light had main-

Painting donated to
Holzer Medical Center
GALLIPOLIS · An ortginal oil
painting, entitled " A Passing Era,"
was gi vcn in l)lemory of Nancy
Bush, a former Operating Room
Technician, for an art collection at
Holzer Medical Center, exhibited
in the Hospital's Lobby. Making
the presentation to her daughter
Amy Bush, was Joyce Harrington,
CST, from the Hospital's OR staff.
The painting was donated as a
permanent memorial to Bush by
her co-workers in the Operating
Room, PACU, and Anesthesia, and
by Dr. and Mrs. Norman Pin-

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD .
. 4 THRU NOV. 20, 1993

2 Uter

(

schmidt.
Pinschmidt, the former Marie
Bush and aunt of Nancy Bush, is an
artist and former Gallipolis resident. She is the wife of former Gal lipolis ophthalmologist Dr. Norman
Ptnschmidt and they now reside in
Jupiter Beach, Fla.
Pinschmidt has been painting
professionally for a number of
years, in Palm Beach, Fla.
"A Passing Era" can be seen as
a part of the exhibit in the Main
Lobby of the Hospital, across from
the visitor elevators.

$

PORK BUTT

FARM FRESH CHICKEN

Breast Quarters •••~...

ML Morflll Bapllal Church -

'

LONGHORN

S169 Colb
$199
Cheese
••••••••
!~
...
.(huck Roast..............
· Y
usDA cHoicE BONELEss BEEF

And All Individual Donations During the Concert.
Your Rnanclal Contributions Made the
Central State Chorus Concert Possible.

LB.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

LB.

huck· Steak ...............

"

-ACQUISITIONS FINE JEWELRY- .
•

-•
•

It CertainlY Does Make A Difference

$ 19

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added to the museum's "The
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dinosaur science, piggybacking on
the popularity of the hit movie,
"Jurassic Park."

bunkers is too negative - they're
real cave dwellings.' '
She said park owner Henny van
der Most wants to create a "Fred
Flintstone atmosphere. ' ' The
American cartoon series " Th e
Flintstones " about a Stone Age
family has been a big hit on Dutch
television.
·
The complex is on the bank of
the Oranje Canal , a m~n - made
waterway about I 00 miles north·
east of Amsterdam.

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"Thank God, that's what took
the brunt of the fall, not the egg
itself," Ellis said.

TO THE VOTERS OF
GREEN TOWNSHIP 'FOR YOUR
VOTE AND SUPPORT.
TOM F. WOODWARD
•
•

8AM·10 PM

ly hit the rim of the display case
and there was no apparent damage.

Dutch resort to offer
cave-like dwellings
ORANJE, Netherlands (AP) A local amusement park is building
300 underground vacation villas
designed for the inodcm Stone Age
family.
The concrete bungalows o,ll a
canal complex will be completely
underground except for a picture
window facing out onto small private beaches.
"Originality .is what we ' re
after" Oranje Amusement Park
'
Harmicke Patcrs
"I think calling them
said

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Patrick &amp; Ern•tina MINidoll
The Korner
Glenn &amp; Corll11 Miller
Gene &amp; Etaln Armalrong
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Inc.

PAINTING DEDICATED· Joyce .Harrington, CST, left, from
the Holzer Medical Center Operating Room staff presents the
original oil painting, "A Passing Era", in memory of-Nancy Bush,
.,.,, ..., .orJDe~ ~atin~t Rc~c~m Tedmici\ID, nJth Bush!s daughter, Amy,
as 11 part of-the Holzer Medical tlebt•r m cOllecttofi. The painting
is by artist Marie Bush Pinschmidt.

Largest dinosaur
eggs in west unveiled

JERUSALEM ( AP) - The ·~
Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem's ·•
most famous landmark, has a new .
$1.6 mjllion halo.
•:
The dome on the mosque was ·: •
electroplated with 176 pounds of ·:
gold as pan,of an exoensive rcno.va- ·;:
tion project bankrolled by Kmg :. Hussein of Jordan.
.
·:
The king paid for the facelift by :·
selling his London villa after a ;:
reponed squabble with Saudi Ara- •:
bia's King Fahd, who wanted the :
honor for himself.
;
The shrine, known for its beauti- :.,
ful mosaics and blue exterior tiles, ;:.
was built by an Umayyad caliph in ;.:
A.D. 691 to mark the spot where •.;
Muslims believe the Prophet ::·
Mohammed made his journey to ,.;
heaven. It is the third holiest site in ::
Islam, after the Saudi cities of ::
Mecca and Medina.
.•
A 19(i4 renovation left it with a . ~
leaky roof and a 35-oon bronzc-alu- &gt;
minum simulation of its original ·~
solid gold sheen. The latest renova- ;:
lions will be completed io March. ;- ,
"(Now) it will have the original ::
color of gold. I hope it will last for .:
generations," said engineer Osama
Odch..
.

OUR SINCERE AND HEARTFELT
THANKS TO EVERYONE!

During the past 100 years the
church has undergone many
changes.
The structure itself had to be
moved in 1965 when the Route 7
by-pass and connecting roads got
under construction. The state purchased not only the land on which
the church set, but the structure
itself.
The congregation· s concern led
to an offer to buy the building back
from the state and to move it to its
present site. The land on which the
church was re-located was a part of
the farm of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Bailey right along Bradbury Road.
The work to move the church
started in mid-summer of 1965. On
July 5 the bell was removed from

MARK REED

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.'Youth Thing' begins this week
GALLIPOLIS - "That Youth
Thing" a non denominational group
weekend youth event will be held
Nov. 19 through 21.
, With,approximately 20 ~~~
andpaswrsfromMason,Galha,and
Meigs counties the event will begin
Nov. 19 at First Church of Nazarene, Gallipolis. Mark Reed a featured speaker and musician will
begin the program at 7:30p.m.
On Nov. 20 the event will be
held at Main Street Baptist Church .
in Point Pleasant beginning with a
seminar by Reed at II a.m. Lunch
wiU be served at noon followed by
games until 3 p.m. Reed will also
perfonn that night at7:30 p.m. ·
A service will be held at First
Baptist Church, Mason from 10 to.
11:30 a.m. Nov. 21.
For more infonnation call6751994 or 446-6882.

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�Entertainment

November 14, 1993

TV specials
investigate
Kennedy
murder
NEW YORK (AP) - Time
again to revisit what you've never
been able 10 fuUy escape: the assassination of Pre sident John F.
Kennedy.
Time again to ponder the sneer
of his alleged assassin, and '? consider what lay beneath 11, tn the
unholy enigma born Lee Harvey
Oswald.
Two worthwhile specials (totaling a hefty five hours) take yet
another look at the two men and
their fatal convergence 30 years
ago next week.
Friday, "CBS Reports" presents what it biDs as its sixth major
investigation into the assassination.
" Who Killed JFK, The Final
Chapter?" · is hosted by Dan
Rather, who covered Kennedy's
trip to Dallas in November 1963.
The two-hour program, which airs
at 9 p.m. EST, provides a warm
remembrance, calling on friends,
associates and critics, too.
Walter Cronkite, whose voice
choked when he rold the nation that
Kennedy was dead, now tears up
when he recollects that black weekend. "Anchormen shouldn't cry,"
he says to Rather.
But "The Final Chapter?" also
presses hard to close the book on
what Rather calls "the greatest
murder mystery of the 20th centu·
ry."

Particularly valuable is a
lengthy analysis of what happened
that day in Dealey Plaza. With the
Abraham Zapruder home movie
serving as its spine, the fatal
sequence of events is fleshed out
by computer simulations and wit·
nesses.
Helping build the case is writer
Gerald Posner, and the program's
conclusion echoes that of his recent
book "Case Closed: Lee Harvey
Oswald end the Assassination of

JFK."

Whodunit? "The facts, including much hard physical evidence,
do indicate that one man was the
assassin,'' Rather swns up.
At 9 p.m. EST Tuesday on PBS.
another l'rograrn with a question
mark in 1ts title reaches much the
same venlicL
"In the

Dolly Parton starts makeup line

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
image of River Phoenix as a quiet,
clean-cut Hollywood actor shattered with autopsy results that
revealed he died from a potent miX
of cocaine and heroin.
Toxicological tests conducted
on Phoenix showed extremely high
levels of the drugs , coroner's
spokesman Scott Carrier said Friday. Phoenix, 23, died outside a
Sunset Boulevard nightclub on Oct.
31.
The tests also found marijuana,
the prescription sedative Valiull),
and an'over-the-counter cold metlication, 'Carrier said.
The test said morphine was
found in Phoenix's blood. Carrier
said heroin shows up as morphine
as it is metabolized by the body.
Comedian John Belushi died II
years ago from the same lethal mix.
Unlilc.e Belushi, who died in 1982,
Phoenix did not inject heroin and
CQCIIine.
"There were no needle ~ ...
Curler said. "How it was 1intro·
·duced inro his body is unlcnOwn at
this time."
The coroner's office ruled the
death accidental.
The Sheriffs Department said
Friday it ha4 closed its investi!!alion into Phoenilc's death outstde
the Viper Room. a trendy West
Hollywood music club co·owned
by actor JoltMy Depp.
Viper Room P~ttrons said the
actor bid beea weaving and acting
-~ly before he went into con·
vulsJons at the club and was led
01111ide, when: he collip'ed ·
Phoenix achieved 'stardom in
rums such as "Stand By Me,"
"Running On Em~:· fo~ w~ich
he received an Oscar notrunanon,

Iiiii "My Own Private Idaho.''

or

VATICAN CITY (AP)- Pope John Paul II
returned 10 the Vatican on Friday after an overnight
hospital stay for a shoulder
fracture he suffered in a fall on

some steps.
The 73-year-old pontiff
wiD need six weeks to fully
. recover and months before
swimming and skiing again. He
will resume most activities, but
canceled audiences Friday and
Saturday as well as a visit to a
Rome parish on Sunday.
John Paul II
John Raul tripped and fell
down four steps during a Vatican audience Thursday.
He was treated for a dislocated and fracrured right
shoulder.
He has to eat with his left hand but can sign
documeniS with his righL
"He has already tried it and managed to move the
(right) hand enough 10 sign," said Dr. Luigi Candia,
medical chief at Gemelli Polyclinic. "(But) he can't
lift the fork to his mouth."
The pope's orthopedist, Dr. Gianfranco Fineschi,
said his arm must remain bandaged and immobile for
folir weeks, followed by two weeks of physical
therapy.
Vatican spokesman Joaquin Navarro said John
Paul was feeling well, was out of pain and slept
peacefully at the hospital Thursday nighL He will
make his fust public appearance from his window
overlooking S.L Peter's Square on Sunday for his
usual blessing.

--

NEW YORK (AP)- A construction wolker found
a loaded gun hidden in a bathroom at the Ed Sullivan
Theater,(1ome 10 David Letterman's ~'Late Show,"
Someone apparently stashC(\ the .38-a!iber semiauromatic in the drop ceiling, police spOkeSman Scott
Bloch said: The gun fell out Thursday night when the
worker began removing the ceiling in the continuing
renovation of ihe.theater.
Police didn'tlmow who OWDS·the gun, Bloch said.
Rosemary Keenan, a Letterman spokeswoman, said
he had no commenL

JOHN F. KENNEDY- President John F. Kennedy poses at
desk in tbe White House in Washington in 1962. Kenoedy was
assassinated 30 years ago, on Nov. 22, 1963. (AP)
Oswald," intones the somber
"Frontline" narrator, "a man who
chose his own politics, invented his
own secret life and made himself

inro an assassin."

For hard-core students of the
assassination, the series' "Who
Was Lee Harvey Oswald?" is an
exhaustive three-hour journey
through what, beyond any question,
was a life of hairpin twists and
turns.
"FronUine" examines Oswald's
troubled childhood, his mysterious
service in the Marines. his defection 10 Russia in 1959 and return to
the United States three years later,
and his puzzling, often at-odds crusades in the final year of his life.
A man of arrogance and rage,
Oswald was a rebel without a cause
- or was it so many causes you
couldn 'I sort them out?
By Nov. 22, 1963, he had
forged links with virtually every

group that had a strong motive to
eliminate KeMedy: with Fidel Castro's Cuba and anti-Castro Cubans;
with the KGB and U.S . inteUigence
agencies; with the FBI and the
Mafia.
A team of more than a dozen
"Frontline" reponers spent more
than a year on Oswald's trail.
Now the viewer trails him to
dozens of sites that proved significant in his life. But no less fascinating are the simple glimpses of
Oswald, some of them never aired
befae.
We see home movies at an
Oswald family gathering on
Thanksgiving Day 1962 - which
happened to he Nov. 22.
And, in the program's prologue,
we sec a bald, bow-tied man being
interviewed on a Dallas TV station
30 years ago. He is Abraham
Zapruder, who earlier that day
unwittingly had photographed a
kiDing.

Actress steps behind camera
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Ufe behind the camera is
more rewarding than acting for Uv Ullmann.
"Acting is somethihg I'm happy 10 say goodbye
to, • said the 54-year-old actreSs, wh~ films include
"Persona," "Cries and Whispers" and" Autumn ·
Sonata. • "I'd really lilce 10 replace it professionally
with writing and directing.•
"Sofie,n her direcrorial debut, opened recently and
received favorable reviews. 'lbC film, b;tsed on a
novel, chronicles the life of a·Jewish woman in 19th
cen1ury Copenhagen.
Besides directing, Miss Ulhrvum wrote the
screenplay.

ATHENS -The
tural Arts Center in

Bam CuiOhio,

NEW YORK (AP) - Joey
Buuafuoco may have slept with 16year-old Amy Fisher, but his gun,
shot-victim wife says he shouldn't
have tQgo to jail for it.
"It doesn't make any sense.
Joey is a productive member of
society," MarY Jo Buuafuoco told
' 'A Current Mfair'' in an interview
scheduled for broadcast Friday.
"He owns a business," she said.
•'He pays taXes. To take him out of
th.a t environment and put h•m
behind blirs, where he is now sucking from the system instead of contributing to the system, is rldiculous.u
Buttafuoco, 37, faces up to six
months in (ifi,son when he is sen·
tented Monda'y. In October, after I
1/2 years of denials, he admitted
his affair with Fisher and pleaded
guilty to third-degree rape for
sleeping with a mina. ·
Mrs. Buttafuoco, 38, who was
nearly Idlled in the May 1992 lovetriangle shooting, said the judge
should take her husband's close

Peruvian author rejects politics
BARCELONA, Spain (AP)- If Mario Vargas ·
Llosa could rewrite his life, he'd cut out the part
where !til got involved in
politics.
·~A writer can contribute
more to politics if he dedicates
himself to what he really knows
how to do- write," the
Peruvian author told the Spanish
news agency EFE in a story
Ftiday:
The 57-year-old Vargas
Llosa was granted Spanish
citizenship in July. He hasn't
been to Peru since 1991, a year
after he lost a presidential runoff to Alberto Fujimori.
He was in Ba!l:el9na to promote his latest novel,
"Utuma in,Thc Andes.n The book recently won the
Planeta ~. a.top tiwlll'd in'SpaiD. Vargas Llosa
said his next book will be about the French-Peruvian
feminist flora Tristan.

Group to protest Jackson tour

Arts center seeks works
The juror for Area Art on View

is Toni Birckhead, owner
involved in the Ohio arts industry
and currently serves on ~cveral
committees and advisory boards
throughout Ohio.
The Dairy Bam will offer more
than $2,000 in prize money.
For additional information,
please contact: Denise La Monte,
Programs Administrator Dairy
Bam Cultural Arts Center 8000
Dairy Lane (delivery address) P.O.
Box 747 (mailing address) Athens,
Ohio 45701 phone: (614)592-4981
fax: (614)592-5090

NEW DELIU, India (AP) - Artists and activists
who consider Michael Jackson vulgar said Friday
they wiU protest his "D!mgerous·~rour when it comes
to India next month.
Ten organizatiOIIS forined
· a coalition, saying they will
block Jackson's route, from the
airport, encircle his hotel and
picket the spms stadium where
he's 10 perform.
"Michael Jackson symbolizes vulgarity which is explicit
: when be is Ol),tllt stage dOing .
:!!!~!!i=;J'~~=i~wbldl~
. . ate..obloilllie IUid
"said Swami Agnivesh, a social worker
the coalition,
dubbed the Indian Culture MovemenL
I

----------Concerts---------TODD RUNDGREN
Todd Rundgren will 'oerform at
'1/aneydale Dec. 8 at 7:~0 p.m. to
promote his latest album No World
Order. Tickets are available at all
TicketMaster locations or &amp;barge
by phone at 431-3600. For more
information contact Dan Kerner.
DOUG STONE
Doug Stone will perform at
Capitol Music Hall Nov. 21 at 2
p.m. and 6 p.m. to promole his latest album From ~~ Heart. Tickets
are available at the Capiro! Music

Hall box office, 1015,Main St. or at
(304)234-0050, 1-800-624-5456 or
at any TicketMaster location.

November 14, 1~

ADMISSION ,12.00
AND
SHOWING AT 8:30
FRI., SAT., SUN.

un~

BRUCE WIWS IN

PIIOTiUCiiRN'IIY

Senior Portrait SpecfaHsts
(lt4} " " 1100

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
....

7

. Amr;~
''

STRIKING DISTANCE R
ONE EVENIGN SHOW 1:30
ADMISSION $2.00
446'0123

' IIAIICIA.. NIGHT TUESOA V

ern

Cll'rirJCAt'D o\YAli.ABLII

Holiday Concert

Sat., Dtc. 4, 8:00p.m.
C•II44&amp;-ARTS to get your
1'8HfV118418tUckeL
llorrta and Dorothy Haaldna

Ariel T1laltlw

.

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SIMON AND GARft!NKEL - Pop ,muik: legendl Slmoa and
Garfunkel perform at tlie SkyDome In' Toronto Friday eveolng.
Tbe concert was
a beaent for the United. Way. (AP)
.
.

\

I,

3.

'

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The Buckeyes can clinch their
fii'St trip 10 the Rose Bowl since the
19&amp;4 season with a victory at rival
Michigan Saturday.
Ohio State outgained Indiana
154-31 on the ground, but it was
one of the Buckeyes' shortest gains
of the day that locked up the victory.
Faced with a fourth and inches
at its own 48 with 35 seconds left
and Indiaila ·Out of timeouts, Ohio
State coach John Cooper elected to
go for the first down instead of
punt. Backup quarterback Bret
Powers kept up the middle, making
the first down by the tip of the ball.
Ohio State expanded a 17-10
lead at the half to 23-10 heading

.to

into the fourth quarter on field
goals of 23 and 22 yards.
After a 44-yard kickoff return
by Jermaine Chaney gave the
Hoosiers the baD at the Ohio State
49, Indiana drove to a third-and-2
situation at the OSU 9. But Chaney
was knocked for a 2-yard loss by
defensive end Jayson Gwinn.
The Hoosiers then were called
for delay of game as Bill
Manolopoulos set up for a 28-yard
field goal. Now faced with fourth
and 9 at the 16, Indiana faked the
field goal, and holder Chris Dyer's
abortive pass for Mal101opoulos fell
incoliljilete.
Indiana came right back after an
Ohio State punt, moving 63 yards
in seven plays capped by Chaney's
21-yard touchdown run off right
tackle that cut the lead 10 23-17.
Ohio State drove to the Hoosier
19 with 2:38 left, but Williams' 37yard field goal that would have
clinched it was wide lefL
The Hoosiers rook over for the
final time at their own 20. But,
Gwinn, who had five of Ohio
State's 11 tackles for a loss, sacked
Indiana quarterback Chris Ditroe
for a 7-yard loss and also forced an
incompletion.
The Hoosiers punted, but Ohio
State was able to run out the clock
after picking up the late fll'st down
on Powers' run.
Ohio State built its 17-10 advantage on a 4-yard touchdown pass

from Bob Hoying to Joey Galloway, a 36-yard field goal by
Williams, and Buster Tillman's 5yard scoring pass from Powers.
Powers completed 9 of 15 passes for 124 yards and one score,
while the starter, Hoying, hit. 10 of
14 for 141 yards and a score.
Indiana's points came on a 31yard Manolo,P?ulos field goal and
Thomas LewiS' 28-yard touchdown
pass from Chris Dittoe.
Dittoe, a redshirt freshman
whose parents are both Ohio State
grads, slarted in place of John Paci,
who missed the game with a
jammed shoulder. Dittoc completed
16 of 30 passes for 207 yards.
Harris picked up his 162 yards
on 34 carries, giving him 1,044
yards rushing for the season. He is
only the second Buckeye to top
1,000 yards in the last seven years.
Iowa 23,
Northwestern 19
EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) - Paul
Burmeister passed for one touchdown and ran for another Saturday.
leading Iowa to a 23-19 victory
over Northwestern.
The Big Ten win was the third
straight for the Hawkeyes (5-5, '2-5
conference) and the !99th victory
in Hayden Fry's coaching career.
Northwestern (2-8, 0-7) was
defeated by Iowa for the 20th
straight season, 16 coming under

F9'.

~ign

upl

The tournament, which started
in 1983, is named for Clarence
"Bevo" Francis, the basketball
player who established new scoring
records, some of which have pever
been broken, between 1952 and
1954 as a member of the famed
Redmen team ~oached by Newt
Oliver.
Francis and Oliver have regularly attended the tournament and are
expected to be on hand for this
year's event, which marks Rio
Grande's continuing observation of
the 40th anniversary of the accomplishments made by Francis and the
team. Francis, Oliver and other surviving members or the team wiD be
honored at tbe halftime of Saturday's last game.
The rournament opens Friday at
2 p.m . with a women's game
between Tusculum (Tenn.) and
West Virginia Tech, while a men~s
contest pitting Milligan (Tenn.)
against Montclair State (N.J.)
begins at'4 p.m.
The Rio Grande Redwomen,
coached by David Smalley, compete against West Virginia Wesleyan at 6 p.m., and John
Lawhorn's Redmen batde Daemen
(N.Y.) at 8.
On Saturday, the Red women
will play at 6 p.m., regardless if it
is the championship or consolation

game, while the other two women's
teams wiU play at 2. Similarly, the
Redmen take the floor again at 8
for either the title or consolation
game, and the other teams compete
at4.
The Redwomen opened their
regular season this weekend against
Cumberland (Ky.) and will travel
to Wilberforce on Tuesday prior to
the tournament. The Redmen open
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lyne C~n­
ter against Wilberforce's Bulldogs.
The only other teams that will
enter the tournament with some

games behind them will be in the
men's division, l'v!illigan with three
and Daemen with one. Montclair
State opens its schedule at Rio
Grande, as will all of the other
women's teams.
AdmissiOn to the tournament is
$3 for adults and SI for non-Rio
Grande students. Rio Grande students, faculty and staff are admitted
free with !D.
Concurrent with the tournament
on Saturday will be the annual Athletic Hall of Fame Banquet, set for
5:30 p.m. in the James A. Rhodes

,. .

.

bears down oo the passer during first period
action at Soutb Bend Saturday. (AP)

Michigan 58,
Minnesota 7
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Tyrone Wheatley returned to the
Michigan lineup to score three
touchdowns and the Wolverines
capitalized on mistakes in roDing to
a 58-7 Big Ten victory over Minnesota on Sarurday.
Wheatley, sidelined for two
games by a shoulder injury, scored
on runs of 13, I and 3 yards. He
carried 21 times for 72 yards in the
Wolverines' most dominating performance since a 63- 13 victory
over Minnesota last season.
Michigan (6-4, 4-3 Big Ten) has
already lost more games than in the

last two seasons combined. A rejuvenated running game scored six
times afler Michigan managed just
three rushing touchdowns in five
previous games.
The Wolverines also effectively
stymied the Gophers' high-octane
offense, which averages 414 yards
a game, with four interceptions and
three sacks. Minnesota (4-6, 3-4)
had only 2 yards rushing in the first
half.
Todd Collins was 7-of-11 for
164 yards without an interception
for Michigan before sitting out the
fourth quarter.
The Wolverines had to ,punt
only once in the first half while
taking advantage of three botched
Gophers punts to build a 41-0 halftime lead.
Michigan St. 27,
Purdue 24
WEST LAFA YEITE, Ind. (AP)
- Jim Miller moved Michigan
State 93 yards in II plays Saturday, including a 5-yard touchdown
pass that gave the Spartans a 27-24
comeback victory over Purdue.
Scott Greene caught the wiMing
pass with just over two minutes to
play and Stan Callender then came
up with Michigan State's thud
interception of a Rick Trefzger
pass at the Michigan Stale 30 with
1:59to play.
But the upset-minded Boilermakers got the ball back once more
with 57 seconds left at the Purdue

Student Center. This year's
inductees will be Darren Miller and
Mark Pierson, 1987 graduates of
Rio Grande who distinguished
themselves over a four-year period
in cross country and track. Also
scheduled to attend the banquet is
Howard Blanchard, a 1954 Rio
Grande graduate who started the
Hall of Fame in 1973.
The banquet's cost is $13 per
person and reservations are due by
Wednesday, Nov. 17. Reservations
can be made by calling Susan
Petrie Haftat 245-743 I.

'

TOURNAMENT COMPETITOR - The
Mllll1an College (Teon.) Burfaloes, coached by
Tooy Walllaarord, will lllayMontclalr State.
(N.J.) on Friday, Nov. 19 at 4 p.m • .lo the-Open~
lilg round or men's •ctlon· lll the Un!verslt)' or
Rio Grande's Bevo Ftancls Classic at Lyoe Cen·
ter. The two-day eveat; named ror. Rio .Grande's

.

.

most ramous athl~, will reature tbe Rio Grande
Redmen and Daemen (N.Y.) as tbe other teams
in tbe men's division, while the Rio Grande Redwomen, Tusculum (Tenn.), West VIrginia Tech
and West VIrginia. Wesleyan coastltute the
women's division.

~

28 when Michigan State punted.
Trefzger hit Hill and Ross with
passes of 11 and 23 yards as Purdue moved to the Spartans' 38.
Alstott went wide for six more
yards on second down. Two incom- .
plete passes followed and Brad
Bobich 's 49-yard field goal auempt
went wide right.
MiDer completed 21 of 27 passes for 200 yards as Michigan State
(6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) came from
behind twice against Purdue (1-9,
0-7).
The Boilermakers had four
turnovers, including a costly fum.
ble by Jeff HiD that was recovered
at the Michigan State 7-yard line
by Howard Triplett. The fumble by
the wide receiver, which some
thought came after Hill was down
when he was hit by Myron Bell
culminated a 38-yard pass play
from Trefzger.
Reggie Garnett had two interceptions for the Spartans. The fii'St
came at the Michigan State 44
when Tefzger's pass was deflected
off a teammate's helmet and
popped into the air. Garnett
returned the ball 43 yards to the
Purdue 13 and on the next play,
Cra1g Thomas ran for the game's
first touchdown.
(EDITOR'S NOTE: In anoth·
er game from Saturday of area
interest, Marshall lost to Furman
17-3.)

Miami downs Kent
23-14 in MAC tilt
KENT (AP) - Deland McCullough ran for 130 yards and two
touchdowns Saturday as Miami of
Ohio came from behind in the
fourth quarter to win 23-l4 and
extend Kent's losing streak to 15
games.
Miami (3-7, 2·6 in the MidAmerican Conference) went ahead
16-14 with 11:28 remaining when
Chad Seitz made his third field
goal, a 20-yarder.
The first Redskins touchdown.
in the se£ond quarter, was set up
when Mike McCreanor recovered a
fumble on the Kent 26. McCullough capped a 4-play drive with a
1-yard run.
The Golden Flashes responded
with a 10-play, 67·yard drive as
Mike Acie came in to replace
Lance Reisland at quarterback.
Acie hit Steve Koproslci on a 14 yard gain to set up Raeshaun Jerni gan's 17-yard rouchdown run.

f

.••

The Hawkeyes can earn a win ning season and give Fry his 200th
vicrory if they can defeat Minnesota Saturday.
Ahead 13-6 at halftime, Iowa
made it 20-6 by driving 68 yards
for a touchdown with Burmeister
scoring on a 1-yard sneak on its
first possession in the third quarter.
Northwestern drew within a
touchdown, 20-13, when the Wildcats scored on a 3-yard run by Dennis Lundy. Lundy rushed for all 54
yards on nine carries in the drive
after Chris Martin had intercepted a
Burmeis1er pass.
Any hopes of a comeback victory faded when Todd Romano
kicked a 37-yard field goal against
a 25-mile wind with 5:25 lefL

Rio Grande to host annual
Bevo Francis Classic Nov. 19, 20·
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande men's and
women's basketball teams will
sponsor the Bevo Francis Classic,
Rio Grande's annual basketball
tournament, Friday, Nov. 19 and
Saturday, Nov. 20 in Lyne Center.

.
.
Call ·1·800·

LOOKS FOR RECEIVER • Florida State
quarterback Cbarlle Ward (17) looks for a
receiver as Notre Dame tackle Jim Flanigan (44)

UIIGAIN MATINIII SAT. II SUN.

Ohlo,Vall•y
Symphony

family ties into consideratiOn.
"He has a 13-year-old son who
loves him v~ry much and needs
him," she said. "He has a tO-yearold daughter who just worships the
ground he wallcs on; And he's got
me, who loves him."

COLUMBUS - Raymont Harris ran for 162 yards and became
the 15th Ohio State player to rush
for more than 1,000 yards in a season, but the fifth-ranked Buckeyes
still needed a last-minute first
down to hold off No.l9 Indiana 2317 Saturday and clinch a share of
their fii'St Big Ten title since 1986.
Thousands of fans rushed the
field after the game, with state and
university police using a chemical
spray to prevent fans from tearing
down the goal posts.
Ohio State advanced to 9-0·1
overall and 6-0-1 in ihe Big Ten,
wline· Jnlliana, wlllth "has 1\0W 1osr
its last 12 regular-season games on
natural turf, dropped to 7-3 and, 4-

FRI. 'OAJ 'JliURS.
TOM HANKS, MEG RYAN IN

SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE PG

.

Ohio State holds off Indiana to remain undefeated on season

COLONY THEATRE

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

446·4524

Buttafuoco

ranked West Virginia roDed over
Miami' in the Orange Bowl.
By lUCK WARNER
Temple
49-7.
·
.
Iowa
State
(3-7,
2-7)
saw
its
AP Football Writer
Two
of
Studstill's
passes
went
chances
fa
an
upset
dim
in
the
first
SOUTii BEND, Ind. - florida
to Ed llill, who had four catches
three minutes.
State didn't believe in the magic
for
111 yards. Studstill, who started
The
Cyclones,
who
beat
NU
19·
and mystique of Notre Dame .
for
injured
Jake Kelchner, complet10
in
Ames,
Iowa,
last
year,
handDidn't believe that the specter of
ed
17
of
28
passes.
ed
Nebraska
a
couple
of
easy
the past could get in the way of its
Robert
Walker
led the Mounscores
when
NU's
Tyrone
perrect season.
taineers'
rushinJ
attack
with 130
Williams
recovered
two
fumbles,
It does now.
up
two
1-yard
touchdown
yards
on
14
cames
and
two
rouchsetting
On the same field where Rockne
downs
10
give
coach
Don
Nehlen
runs.
coached, Hornung. ran and Monhis IOlst vicrory in 14 seasons at
tana threw, the second-ranked
West
Virginia·
No.
7
Auburn
42,
Fighting Irish added another chapThe
Mountaineers (9-0) remain
Georgia
28
ter to their football lore by beating
in
the
hunt
for the national title,
ATHENS,
Ga.
(AP)
-James
a team many considered unbeatBostic
ran
for
183
yards
and
three
with
a
showdown
comin~ up next
able.
wee)c
against
No.3
Miarnt.
touchdowns
as
(llo.
7
Auburn
went
Powered by a rugged rushing
Temple
(1-9)
continued
on a
to
10-0
for
only
the
second
time
in
attack, Notre Dame ran out roa 17school
hisrory
with
a
42-28
victory
point lead and hung on to beat toppace to set a Division I record for
ranked florida State 31-24 Satur- Saturday ov.er Georgia.most points allowed in a season.
Chris Shelling returned a tipped The Owls are allowing nearly 50
day, bocoming a favorite to win a
interception
73 yards for another pomts a game.
ninth national championship when
score.
The
Tigers
are bidding to
Charlie Ward's desperation pass
stay
in
the
national
championship No. 8 Florida 37,
was knocked down on the goal line
race
despite
being
on
NCAA pro- S.Carolina 26
as time expired.
bation.
COLUMBIA, S .C. (AP)
The only other time Auburn Eighrh-ranked Florida, riding
No. 4 Nebraska 49',
went 10·0 was in 1957. That team Danny Wuerffel's 333 passing
Iowa St.17
won
the school's only national yards and Errict Rhett's recordLINCOLN, Neb. (AP) crown
and it, too, was on proba- breaking rushing, rebounded from
Nebraska clinched its third straight
a 17-point first-half deficit and beat
trip to the Orange Bow I and went tion.
Auburn improved to 7-0 in the South Carolina 37-26 on Saturday.
to 10-0 for the first time in a
Wuerffel passed for two !Ouchdecade by beating Iowa State 49-17 Southeastern Conference with one
game
remaining
against
archdowns
and ran for one in the secSaturday.
Tommie Frazier ran for 125 rival Alabama at Auburn next Sat- ond quarter and Rhett, the Southeastern Conference's leading rushyards and three touchdowns and urday.
er,
put the Gators (8-1, 6-1 SEC)
Calvin Jones ran for 208 yards and
No.9
W.
Virgioia
49,
ahead
to stay in the final quarter
aTD ..
Temple
7
with
two
TDs.
The Huskers, 6-0 in the confer- ·
PHILADELPHIA
(AP)
South
Carolina (4-6, 2-6) led
ence, face Oklal)oma to clos~ out
Backup
Darren
Studstill
threw
for
26-23
but
that changed on the frrst
the regular season. Nebraslta ts off
274
yards
and
three
touchdowns
play
of
the
fourth period, an 8-yard
to its best start since the 1983 team
Saturday
as
unbeaten
and
ninthtouchdown
run by Rhett.
started 12-0 before losing 31 -30 to

Pope returns to Vatican Friday

Gun found In host's bathroom

C

Notre Dame upsets top-ranked Florida State 31-24

Jackson's gyrations and dance routines were
popularized here by MTV long befon: the rour.
"This is demonic culture propagated by the seDers
ota new dream individualistic consumerism," said
another protest organizer, ~v Vobra.
Sponsors scheduled .a second Jackson concen in
New Delhi when tickets wcte bouglll up, but the
dales of the shows repeatedly have been changed.

PIGEON FoRGE, Tenn. (AP) - . Dolly J&gt;Qnon,
who catainly likes wearing makeup, is starting a oew
line of cosmelil:s.
"Next ro music, makeup is
my first love. If I hadn't been a
musician; I would've been a
beautician," she said Thursday.
She calls her 12-il.em ~
for Rcvlon the Dolly Parton's
Beauty Confidence Collection.
It goes on sale in January, when
an infomercial will be broadcast
and people can callro buy the
set fa $100.
"It mala:s me feel better about myself and that's
why I call it Dolly Patton Confidence,• the bighaired. glitter queen of country music said at a
makeup pany she had at her theme p8rk, DollyWI.XJd.

Buttafuoco's wife: Free Joey

Coroner:
Actor died
of overdose

Section

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Area Art on View is a regional,
all-media juried art competition to
be featured at the Dairy Bam Cultural Arts Cenler March 26, 1994
through May 8, 1994. The exhibi·
tion is open to residents within a
!50-mile radius of Athens. Ohio.
For an ~ntry form, please send a
self-addressed, stamped businesssize envelope to Area Art on View,
P.O . Box 747, Athens, Ohio,
45701. The entry deadline is January 15, 1994 and the entry fee is
$20 with a maximum of three
entries.

Phoenix .

1rimts- ~entin.el

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel !B8

Mount Union SO
Hiram 0
ALLIANCE (AP) - Jim Bal·
lard threw three touchdown passes
and broke a conference record for
completions as Mount Union won
the Ohio Conference title and fin ished th e reg ular season unbeaten
wi th a 50-0 victory Saturday over
Hiram.
Ballard completed 13 of 14 pass
aLtcmpts for 186 yards for the Purple Raiders (10-0 overall, 9-0 conferenc e) and threw touchdown
passes of 19 yards to Ed Bubonics,
23 yards to Sean Lyons and 4 yards
to Mike Sirianni.
Ballard finished the season with
229 completion s. breaking the
OAC mark or 222 set by Shane
Fulton of Heidelberg in 1985.
Jim Gresko scored two touchdowns and rushed for !54 yards in
12 carries for Mount Union. His
first touchdown came on a 79-yard
run in the first quarter.

Saturday's grid scores

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Notre Dame 31 Florida State 24
Ohio State 23 Indiana 17
Nebraska 48 Iowa State 17
Mianli 24 Rutgers 17
Olclehoma 31 Oldahoma State 0
Kansas Stale 31 Missouri 21
Boston 33 Pittsbwgh 0
USC 22 Washington 17
Penn State 28 Illinois 14
Califomia24 Arizbna20
Alabama 36 Mississippi State 25
West Virginia 49 Temple 7
Texas 24, Texas Christian 3
Bait St. 31,
9
Cent. Michigan 17, Bowling Green 15
Miam~ Ohio 23, Kent 14

Akron

..

I

Michigan 58, Minnesota 7
Michigan St. 27, Purdue 24
Ohio U. 12, E. Michigan 10
W. Michigan 39, Toledo 26
Auburn 42, Georgia 28
Clemson 23, Virginia 14
florida 37. South Carolina 26
Georgia Tech 38, Wake Forest 28
Kentucky 6, East Carolina 3
N. Carolina St. 44, Maryland 21
Vanderbilt41 , Navy 7
Virginia Tech 45, Syracuse 24
New Mexico 10 Wyoming 7
Baldwin·Wallace 28, John Carrolll3
Artny 35, Lafayette 12
Boston College 33, Pittsburgh 0
·

�Page-C2 Sunday 11mes Sentinel

November 14, 1993

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

•

In today's matchup,
Houston, a preseasoo ravorite to
win the AFC Central, be&lt;:ame the
league's biggest underachiever·during a 1-4 opening skid. Moon got
benched, rumors had defensive
coordinator Buddy Ryan r~y to
replace head coach Jack
ec,
and the team became a soci issue
when tackle David Willlams
missed a game to stay with his wife
and newborn.
·'Going into the season, there
were so many good things being
thought as far as making the playoffs, making the Super Bowl. Slart·
ing 1-4, that's the lowest thing I've
ever been involved in as far as
sports," Childless said.
The Oilers' schedule has given
them a second chance. A run of
four consecutive games against
weak teams, concluding today at
Riverfront Stadium, has allowed
them to regroup.
They're only a game behind
AFC Central leaders Cleveland and
Pittsburgh, neither of whom
they've played yel A solid victory
today over the Bengals would send

TWO TO JOIN HALL OF FAME- Seen ia
this University or Rio Grande file photo is the
1985 Redmen track team. Two or its members
-Mark Pierson (kDeeling, fourth from left) and
Darren Miller (standing, second from right) will
be inducted into the Rio Grande Athletic Hall of
Fame on Nov. 20. Flanking Pierson, from left,
are. Devron Steele, Jeff Rowley, Bill.. Mangus,
.

the Oilers into the decisive Stretch
of their schedule - four of their
next five games are against Cleveland and Pittsburgh - with a real·
istic hope of being a champion ·
after all.
"I certainly feel beuer," Pardee
said. "This game this week is so
im~nant to us. Mathematically.
we re still in the hunl
. "We haven't had· anybody
accuse us of playing real good yel
we:ve played beller. I think we
have made progress. We've dug a
big hole and we're still trying to
dig out of iL"
The Bengals are one loss away
from the deepest hole in the franchise's 26-year history. No Bengals
team has opened the season 0-9 only two others have lost the fust
eight.
Cincinnati had a chance to break
the winless streak two games ago at
the Astrodome. The Bengals stayed
with the still-struggling Oilers and
took a 12-7 lead midway through
the third quarter.
But the Bengals became bun-

Joba Ranegar, Terry SchwaUie and llrian Conley, while Miller is 11anked by, from left, then·
Coach Kevin Purcell, Mark Davidson, Ray
Perry, Kev.in Smith, Rick Blakesley and Paul
McAllister. MiUer and Pierson, who both gradu·
ated in 1987, are among the fast NAIA Academic All-Americans in the history of Rio Grande's
track and cross country programs.

~

Miller, Pierson to be inducted
into RG Athletic Hall of Fame
iUO"a~·.::"'Th;:;;~·.o d~~r;;;t~el:p~opl~ '(ha~e · ev~r

' ·..r feel

it's~ihe highest hoiior a

leteS credited by one of their coach· coached, W1Uey. w.~ m ~1s noml- school can bestow upon its outes with reviving the cross countty natiOn of the pa•~- He IS a hard standing athletes to 10duct them
and track programs at the Universi- worker, '!ery dedicated and has a into the Hall of Fame," Willey
ty of Rio Grande in the 1980s will great atlltude. Mark served as ~n observed recently. "In the four
be inducted into the AthletiC Hall BSSIStant to me for one rear a~d did years Darren and Mark were here,
of Fame in a ceremony set for Sat· an outstandmg JOb. He s a w!"ncr, they were really the foundation of
urday. Nov. 20.
a hard worker, and a very dedicated gelling the cross country and track
back on their feet again.
u s Army Capt. Darren MiUer person. It has been a great pleasure programs
"Both
are fine young men and
and Ji.furk Pierson, wlto both gradu- t~? ~ow Mark and to work with
I'm
verr,
proud
of them," the coach
ated in 1987, will be honored dur- b1m..
.
.
added.
'They
contributed
much to
ing the annual banquet in. the Stu·
S10ce graduat!on, Mtller has
Rio
Grande,
in
all
walks
of
campus
dent Center which begins at 5 p.m. served the Army ~n Germany and
life.
I'm
very
excited
for
them.".
with a reception. Dinner is at 5:30.
has been ·':he rectpl~nt of numero~s
The cost of the banquet is $13
The pair are to be inuoduced by awards. Pierson 1~ 10 charge of hJS
per
person. For more information,
two Rio Grande runniDg greats of Army Reserve w;t•~ bas spoken at a
the 1970s, Jack Finch and Bernie !'umbe! and .chmcs an,d camps, or to make reservations, contact
Tilley, who arc also members of mcludmg RIO Gr~nde ~ a~nu~l Susan Petrie Haft, director of
the Hall of Fame.
summer camp, and 1S ~.u.vc m hJS Alumni Relations, at (614) 2457431 by Wednesday, Nov. 17.
Over a four-year period, Miller church youth group acuv1ues.
and Pierson not only established
Mid-Ohio Conference and N AlA
District 22 records that have yet to
be matched, but made it to national
competition.
·
.
Miller, a Georgetown natt ve
who was enrolled in the ROTC
program during his student days,
now resides in Fayetteville, N.C.
He holds the school record in track
for the 5000 meter at 14:23.9 and
the district record in the same event
at 14:49.54 .. He was co-captain of
the cross country team for tllrcc
years and served as co-captain .for
two years in track. He w~ twice
named an NAIA Academ1c All·
American.
In addition, he was Ali-MOC
three years in cross c:ountry and
track, All-District three years in
cross country and two in track, and
was a national qualifier for three
FIRST DEER • Jay .leakins, 14, son' or Jimmy aad ttoietta
years in cross country and track.
Jeakias, Dillon Rd., Gallipolis, captured his first deer Friday
His highest finish was S2nd nationevening, an eight-point buck, as the 1993 bow season gpt underally and in his junior year the Red·
·
way.
were 12111 nationally iii track.
Pierson is currently a teacher
and coech at Lynchburg-Clay High
School in Highland County and
resides in his hometown of Lynch·
burg. His records include a sc~l
record in cross country's fivc-m1le .
'
.
.
(24:24), the 3000 meter
steeplechase in 9:02.93, ~Is~ a
school record, and th~ d1stnct
record in the same event m 9:13.64.
Lilce Miller, he was co-captain
of cross country for three YC8!S and
two in tratlt and alsO attended Rio
.· ·orande on an ROTC sc:hol!~fShip.
Pd. tor by R1Gb11n1 L 1..... 1t1 Fiogop..... AIL, l'lllrlol, OIL 41111
; He was an NAIA AcadeJ!liC All·
' Americ:an for two years m cross
country and track ~nd was All·
MOC for four years m cross country and three in track, culminating
- in his ·being chosen the conference
': champion as a senior. He also
• received the Ne'rl Oliver Athlele
· ..
' of the Year Aw~.
Mlller and P1ersop started m
both sports in 1983-84 under .the
directiolt of Kevin Purt:ell and then
under BOO Willey Star;ting in 1985.
Following ·graduation, fierson
served one. year.as WiUcy's assisPd. for by canctldlt•~ P.O. Box 307, Pomeroy, Oh.
tant
"Darren is one of the most

glcrs again, fumbling the ball away
near the Oilers' goal line with a
chance to go ahead in the fourth
quarter. ijouston pulled away 2812, but looked shaky in' the process.
For the rematch. the Oilers are
coming off their best game of the
season. Moon threw for 369 yards
- his best total in two years - in
a 24-14 victory over Seattle last
week.
Coach Dave Shula agrees with
Pardee that the Oilers look much
beUer this time around. Moon, who
has more completions, yards and
touchdowns against Cincmnati than
any other team, looks like he's out

SEATTLE -If Bernie Kosar
was still with Cleveland and Vinny
Testa verde was healthy, Todd
Philcox would have been Rick
Mirer as the Browns' scout team
quarterback this week.
Instead, Philcox gets to be him·
self because the Browns cut Kosar
on Monday and Testaverde has
been sidelined since Oct. 24 with a
separaled shoulder.
Philcox, 27, will malce his second career start at quarterback for
the Browns (5·3) against the Mirerled Seattle Seahawks (4-5) Sunday
in the Kingdome.
Mirer, a rookie, will be making
his I Oth carec:r start.
Philcox,'s only previous start
came last season against the Los
Angeles Raiders in place of an
injured Kosar. He played more than
half the game with a fractured right
thumb.
Kosar, 29, was released by the
Browns one day after he slarted in
a 29-14 loss to Denver. Kosar
signed Wednesday with Super
Bowl champion Dallas.
1 With Testaverde out indefinitely, Philcox has the starting job. The
6-foot-4, 225-pound veteran has
only seven games experience in
five seasons in Cincinnati and
Cleveland. He's thrown only 37
passes.
Undrafted afler playing at Syracuse, Philcox came into the league
as a member of Cincinnati's developmental squad in 1989. He went
to Cleveland in 1991 under Plan B.
Philcox feels ready to be a
starter.
"I've been around this offense
and this game long enough to know
what I've got to do and what we
have to do to be successful," he
said. "That's move the football.
.''Wc~ve-gotto work bn thal We
haven't been as successful offensively. as we need to be. We've just
got to work on moving the ball and
taking the pressure off our offense.
We've got to try to control the
game.''
If there was a good week for
Cleveland to get rid of Kosar and
start the inexperienced Philcox,
coach Bill Belichick seemingly
picked the right one. The Sea-

A&amp;r a roller CONt.er season for
the 1993 Wahama White Falcons
football team, the filial statistics
show that lhe White Falcons and
their opponents were evenly
matched at least Slalistically spealcing. That may explain why the Falcons finished the season near the
.500 mark, at 4-6.
Wabima averaged around half a
point more per game than their opponents. but also threw three more
mte~teptions and lost six more
fumbles lhan the opposition.
Tommy Mayes led Wahama in
scoring with seven touchdowns,
five PAT's and six field goals. Dale

hawks' pass rush bas been ineffective all season and will be hampered by the sidelining of end
Michael Sinclair and linebacker
Rufus Porter for the season. Both
were injured in a 24,14 loss last
Sunday against Houston.
·
Sinclair, who leads the Sea-

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ninth hole during second .rouad play or the
World Cub at Lake Nona iD Orlaado, F1a, Friday. (AP)

BLAST OUT OF BUNKER • Americaa
Fred Couples blasts from th.e bunker on the

aW' tiL--..

Redmen open 1993-94 season WVAprep
•Thesday against Wilberforce playoff result.s

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PA.YTO

THE

OROEfl
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HOME o\fv'NER
For purc11aSEI of

--

RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande Redmen basketball team opens the 1993-94 season
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in Lyne Cen. ter against the Bulldogs of Wilber·
· foree University.
The game marks the beginning
of the 14th season for Coach John
. Lawhorn, who is t()ree victories
away from a career record of 600
wins divided between his Rio
Grande experience and 18 years as
. a high scho.ol basketball coach.
The Bulldogs, coached by
: Moses Griffin, have begun their
: season with two losses, in their
' home opener with Union (Ky.) and
with Walsh, defending champion
: of the Mid-Ohio Conference. The
; Redmen were 25·8 overall in 1992: 93 and 9-5 in the MOC to tie for

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third place with Cedarville.
Lawhorn's ch1b defeated Wilberforce 122-87 in their only game
with the Bulldogs last season.
The game is the firsttq be
played by the Redrnen on the new
hardwood surface in Lyne Center's
main gymnasium. installed during
the year-long expansion of the 23year-old facility completed last
May.
Admission for the game is $3
fQr a&lt;!ults and $1 for P911·Rio
Grande students. Rio Grande students, faeulty and staff are admitted
free with ID. A concession stand is
being operated by the University
Women's Club in th~ new lobby, in
addition to fight music provided by
the Rio Grande Pep Band under the
direction of Qavid Phillips.

S co i'"elJoard

•

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180144

129154
126111
99206

183154
210 ll8
171 222
131192

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9 6 3 21
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992-~1

·

1993 WAHAMA GRID STATISTICS
Wallaa ()ppGMall
112
385-m'
471

445

2202

34-102
12
47-472
33-36.1

]5-114

Zimbabwe World Cup
leader at halfway point

4)

GA
38
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47
l4

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PRINCETON, W.Va. (AP) Brett Browning rushed for 116
yards Friday, including a Class A
playoffs record 99-yard touchdown
run, to lead Gilbert to a 39-20 win
over Athens.
Teammate Wes Ellis added 72
yards and two scores on eight carries, while quarterback Brian Gib·
son was 5 of 11 for 98 yards and
two scores for Gilbert (8-3).
Jason Conner, the state's regular. season scoring champion, finished
with 179 yards and a touchdown on
31 carries for Athens (8-3).
The previous record for a Class
A touchdown run was 84 yards by
Malewan's Ron Joplin in 1987.

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Zimbabwe made up three shots and
dodged another while closing in on
the leading Americans at the
~alfway point in the World Cup of
Golf.
"We kept the team lead and
that's the important thing," Fred
Couples said Friday after he and
Davis Love Ill had salvaged a oneshot lead in defense of the title they
won a year ago in Madrid.
But Nick Price and Mark
McNulty were clearly delighted
with their advance, beating Couples and Love 137-140 in secondround play at the 7,011-yard, par72 Lake Nona Golf Club.
They were less enchanted about
the tee shot they had to dodge
when Couples' blind drive over
treeS on the 309-yard 14th hole hit

the green and missed Price by only
a few feet·while he was lining up a
short pull.
"Fred almost took us both out,"
McNulty said. .
"If I was in the address posilion, I think it would have hit my
foot," Price said.
The Americans apologized for
the incident, and both said they had
no indication McNulty and Price
were still on the green.
The Zimbabweans dismissed the
apologies as unnecessary.
"I know Freddie wouldn' t do
something li~e that on purpose,"
Price said.
But McNulty jokingly suggested
he and Price would wear hard-hats
today for third-round play - when
they will be paired with the Ameri ·
cans.

Karr advances in
PPK competition

ATHENS • Several area youth
traveled to Athens Hi~h Stadium
where they competed 10 the NFL
Gatorade Punt, Pass, and Kick sectional tournament on Monday,
November 8. One Meigs Countian,
Garrell Karr claimed frrst place in
the nine-year old division and thus
will advance to the regional at
Cincinnati.
The youngsters had to win ftrst
place in their respective age group
during the Meigts Area PPK in
order to ad vance to the Sectional.
The Meigs County Park Districk
sponsored the local competition at
the Roger Lee Adams Memorial
Field in Racine this past fall.
Local winners competing at the
MIDDLEBOURNE, W.Va. (AP) Athens Sectional were Adam Ball,
- Mau Fletcher rushed ·for 109 Racine, 8ys; Garrett Karr,
yards to lead Tyler Consolidated to Pomeroy, 9yrs; Amber Vining.
a 27-0 win over Bridgeport in the Middleport, !Oyrs; Jamie Buskirk,
first round of the Class AA Syracuse, 12 yrs; and Franco
playoffs.
Romano, Pomeroy, 13 yrs.
Jeff Hunt added 76 yards, includ·
NFL Gaf.Orllde's Punt, Pass, and
ing a 73-yard touchdown run for Kick contest is a football competi •
the first score of the game, for Tyler tion that allows youngsters to
Consolidated (9-2) on F~day night. showcase their talents in punting,
passing, and place kicking with
Eric Stoneking rushed for 85 scores based on distance and accuyards to lead Bridgeport (6-5), racy. The event is free to particiwhich finished with just 78 yards pants.
lotal offense.

Couples' big drive finished
within three feet of the cup, and he
made the pull for an cagle-2, the
highlight of a round of 71 was
marred by three three-putt bogeys.
Love had a 69 that inc:luded a
birdie-birdie-eagle burst beginning
on the ninth hole.
But Price, winner of four titles
and the leading money-winner on
the American tour this year, and
McNulty played made an even better move starting from the ninth.
One or the other birdied six consecutive holes, Price finishing with
a 69 and McNulty with a bogeyfree 68. That left them just shot
behond the Americans' leading 11undet-par 277 total.
"Everything just seemed to
jell," McNulty said. "We're playing well and we're playing Jogether
well. It's a nice, comfortable feeling.''
The Australian pair of Rodger
Davis and Robert Allenby held
third in the team standings at 280.
They were followed by Scotland
at 282 and Ireland at 283

Several Meigs area youth cap·
tured honors in the NFL Gatorade
Punt, Pass,' and Kick sectional at
Athens. Medals won in the respective age groups included Adam
Ball, second; Garrett Karr, first;
Amber Vining, third; and Jamie
Buskirk, third.
Garrett Karr placed frrst in the
nine-year old class and received a
~old medal and a qualifying berth
10 the team championship game in
Cincinnati, when the Bengals host
the Los Angelos Raiders.
Garrett and his parents will
receive tickets to attend the game
and the PPK competition. Team
champions will be crowned in each
age group. The top scorers in each
age group from the pool of Team
Champions will advance Ill the
National finals at the Pro Bowl in
Hawaii in February.
Garrett is the first Meigs Couny
youth to advance to the Team
Championship.

II . . . . . . . .;

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CHARLES10N, W.Va. (AP)Junior tailback Emmitt Cunningham rushed for 103 yards and two
touchdowns, including an 86yarder in the third quarter, as
Capital squashed Princeton 28-6
Friday night in the first round of the
Class AAA playoffs.
Capital (9-2) led 21 -0 at the half.
Princeton (9·2) scored its only
touchdown on Kevin Six's !-yard
run with 10:321eft_in the g_ame.

so
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60

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Meigs ·Locai.Votersl,
I Appreciate Your Support. ,
SCOnWALION
County L~ell. Schoolloaril

ALL VEHICLES
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SCORE BY QUARTERS:
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Wlhama 57 22 33 SS
161
OppcmOIII 20 20 49 1l
16t

Nelsonville · · The Plains

753-1955

101
390-1757

. 2226

Anniversary Sale Continued!

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¥ards for every catch. IIX!d Roach
Sliields had one rush for four yards. caught five pasSes for 86 yards.
Tommy Mayes also paced U.. Mike VanMatre also snagged five
wahama .JUIIIIB auack. ·,Mayes pas~. His went for 76 yards and
threw for 334 yards on 22-6l pass- one touchdown. J.C. Albright
ing. He threw three touchdown pas- caught seven passes for 65 yards
scs and was picked off eight times. and one touchdown. Dale Johnson
Jason KiDg passed for 103 yards. grabbed three for 34 yards. Gabe
while comjlleting nine of 32 tosses. Scott had one catch for a 21 yard
He had two touchdown passes and touchdown. Tommy VanMeter
three intetteptions. LyM ~lack was caught one for five yards and a

touchdown, Joey Maya had one
catdt, rot four,llld ems Roech had
one mce"'i.ln fot 12 ytnls.
Defelllively,
interception !:OMs were Juon King, Mike
VanMatre, Tommy Mayes. end
Todd Roach with two llpiCCC. Joey
Mayea rounded out the """"'
swipca with one intercqllion.
John Smithson led lhe White
Falcons in fumble recoveries. He
pounced on four &lt;lPJlOSition miscues. Craig Weaver added three
fumble recoveries. Todd Roach,
Chris Roach, Dale Johnson, Shane
Scott, Tun Miller, Tommy Mayes,
Mike Vai!Matre, and Mark Hickel
each recovered one fumble.
The White Faloons finished the

•

•N.Y. Jcu

Athens

avet~~~e per aucmpt, and Kcvm

. ··~:.,:.,.&gt;.·; •.;.&lt;':~-~ • ~·:.

•Buffalo

Marietta

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ball fot :282 yards on S2 triel, JDOd 2-8 on the yeilr, while passing for
for • 5.4 )'lid·~ Joey Mayes 21 yards and one inlelteption, and
'nqtched 146 yards on 48 ~. Dale Joilllsqt was 1-1 for 13 yards
and one~.
1 for 3 ,.Ids a carry. Juon KiD1 car·
ried 53 times for 129 yards on the
Jason King led the Wahama
yw•. whic:h was
for 2.4 yards receiving corps by hauling in 10
' 80 toS8CS for 168 yards and two
a eaay. J.C. AI ·ght llri .or
yards on 21 carrics, ,ror a 3.8 y~ touchdowns. King averaged 16.~

hawks with eight sacks this season,
and Porter with 36 career sacks,
were Seattle's top two outside pass
rushers.
"Hopefully. we can get to the
new Cleveland quarterback," 1992
Defensive Player of the Year
Cortez Kennedy said. "We just
need a win."

AtAG&amp;...
ByTbo-lldPmo
A.U ThMI EST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

~

Johnson followed with five
touchdOwns and two PAT's. Jason
King had four toucbdowns and two
PAT's. Joey Mayes added two
touchdowns. J.C. Albright scored
one uiuchdown and had four PAT's.
Mike VanMatre ,....,.....,
---'·A one
touchdown and two PAT's, Chris
Roach had one touchdown and two
PAT's, and Tommy VanMeter, Gabe
Scou, and Lynn Black each scoitd
one~.
Tommy Mayes also led the team
in rushing. The .Wahama senior ran
for 772 yards on 140 c:arries for a
yard per carry~ve. ~
on 56
Johnson mn fll' 375
tarries and main ·
.a 6.6
average. Cbris Roach
the

!l;)i!,(,,•···.···

!iollaul FootboU ........

Thank You,·
To the Voters of Walnut
Township for Y•urJSupport .
in the Nov. 2 ·Election.
RICHARD L~' INGLES
j

By Gery Clark
SpOrts COI'ftSpOIIdent

Schroeder at quarterbaCk for one
more week before, reinstating
David Klingler. Schroeder led the
Bengals to 346 net yards in the
Astrodome, ·their second•highest
total of the season, so he gets to
Start against them again.
A sign of how bad the Bengals
are: Shu Ia 's quarterback flip-flop
has been met with shrugs.
"It doesn't matter who's under
center the way we're playing right
now, and I don't know that it will
matler for a while," Klingler said.
"Clark Kent.could play quarterb.aclc, and it wouldn't make a difference.''

Philcox will start at QB today for Browns .

men

"

of his slump. ·
"It loolcs like they' ve found
their rhythm," Shulll said. "Prior
to our game, they wen; not proteCt·
ing him as well. As a result, they
were turning the ball over and not
having as many completions as
they're used to.
"Since then. he's played very
well and his receivers are catching
the ball well. They've been able to
put together, long drives. They bad
a 17 -play drive against Sea\tle last
week. When you're throwmg the
ball nearly every step , that's
impressive.''
The Bengals will stay with Jay

Sunday 11mea Sentinel Page C3

Wahama Falcons Onish year 4-1 at home, 0-5 on the road

.

-First place in sight for·Oilers as they face Bengals in Cincy
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI
(AP)
Nobody's expecting a baby this,
weekend. Warren Moon is throwing touchdowns again. And for the
first time all season, fii'St place is in
sighl
Everylhing fmally appears to be
coming together for the Houston
Oilers, the NFL's most disappointing team for half of a season. But
there's still a lot of uneasiness as
they get ready to play the NFL 's
most abysmal team today.
"I wouldn't say it's gone away.
I'd say it's just cooled down a little
bit," said defensive lineman Ray
Childress. "There's still plenty of
disappointment and questions.
"We've won three in a row, but
they were against New En~land,
Cincinnati and Sea11le. Let s see
what happens from here."
Tbc.ir rematch today with the 08 Bengals, the league's only win·
less team, will tell a lot about how
far the 4-4 Oilers have come and whether they have a chance of
going anywhere.

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

November 14, 1993

\

''

CrosBWonl Puzzle on Page D-2

SPECIAL HOURS:.

.-nd

10-5

�•
•

•

Plgt C4

Sunt;t~~y Tlmes '

•

.

.

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH-Polnt PleaNnt, WV

November 14,1993'
I

:

Long char_ges.,~teroid. use ·.
endorsed by NFL te.ams :·
'

PITISBURGH (AP) _ Steroid
tise is endorsed by NFL teams and
rampant among players, but it is
arbitrarily ppliced by the league
former Ptttsburgh Steelers g~ard
Terry Long charges in a lawsuit
Long's ,POsitive steroid test in
1991led him to est rat poison in a
suicide attempt. He cliitrged in a
lawsuit filed Friday against the
league and tile, S.~lers thai the
NFL's steroid test is arbitrary and
shortened his ·career by branding
hiin a steroid user.
The Steelers let Long's contract
expire aftec the 199I ,season, during
which a positive test led to an
NFL-imposed four-game suspen. sion.
Long also said the test results
were wrong, as hospital tests performed lifter the suioid~ atlempt
indicated. There were traces of
codeine and an antihistamiqe, but
no evidence of the ·performanceenhancing steroids the NFL
charged were in his blood.
Long is seeking more than
SSO,OOO in damages for defamation
and infliction of emolional distress,

among either allegations.
.
. In the lawsuit. ~ed. in U.S. Distnct Court, Long s. attor~ey
charged that "anabohc sterotds
have been _tr_adi~on.ally used. by
players -paructpaUng m tl)e National Football Lcag11e,. and that the
NFL, its 9ffici3ls:an,d -team piuticipants .. ; have ~. or have been
aware of this said, use, atid have
condoned. this. activity: ~ut instead
acted arbttranly, capnclously and
maliciously ~ · 10ward Long.

.

In the complaint, Long sauJo.,
m~y ~tee~rs were ordered to sub:~
rna unne m July 1991, but onlk
Long's and Pro Bowl co~~bac
Rod .Woodson:s were tes~.h'
The laws uti charactenz~ t ~
test as a random se!ll'ch .wtthout
probab!e. c~use, whtch is barre~
under ctvtl nghts laws.
.
~teelers spokesiJ!aJl ~an
Edwards said the team did not ve
any _comment A call to the NFL
receiVed no response.

.

McMillian tiiay ·
see action
RICE FOULED·
Heat fonW'CIGien
Rice (41) grimaces as be gets fouled by Orlando

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Browns defense has
been beaten often on third ·down.
Coach Bill Belichick hopes newly
acquired safety Erik McMillan can
help.
McMillan may see action on
third-down passing situations Sunday, when. the Browns (5-3) play
the Seattle Seahawks (4-5).

Magic center Sbaquille O'Neal
drive to the basket during Friday's
in Orlando, Fla. (AP)

Nuggets rout Lakers;
Charlotte d·umps Boston

EHS ATIILETES OF THE MONTH • Seniors Randy Kaylor
an!l Jailile Wilsol) were nalDed the Eastern High School Athletes of ..
the Mlinlb for October. Kaylor earned the honors as a member of •
the 1~3 Eastern KJ:id squad which finished third in the Hocki_ng
Division of the Tri;Valley Conferace. Eastern bad been a COD• .
tender right down to tlie final game before dropping a bout to "
Alexander: ·Kaylor bas played.football three years, baseball four ,
years, bisketball three years, weigbtlifting three years, Is a mem- .
ber of the Varsity ''W' Club, and a B. M. R. craduate. Wilson was .
a member of the 1993 EHS vo,Ueyball _squad, eami~g AD-District ·
13 and AII;TVC rii'St team honors. She was a DistriC~ 13 All-Star
Representative, baa played volleyb~ll, basketball, and softball four ,
years, and has been a member ot the Varsity ''E" Club for four' .
years. ,Wil!ion is Natloi).BI Honor S"ociety president, Student Coun- ·
.cU Vice President, and (!a&amp; "'en an office aid, Buckeye Girls' State
Representative, a Danforth Foundation Leadership A Wllrd Recipi·
ent, is Sr. Class Secr~tar}', and bas won the DAR Good Citizen
. Award. Wilson is ·also listed in Who's Who Among American
High School Stud~nts.

"Obviously, we haven't been
very productive on third· down,"
Belichick said. "We need to
improve in that area.''
McMillan, Jl former Pro Bowl
safety, was waived last week by
Philadelphia. Former Cleveland
coach Bud Carson is Philadelphia's
defensive coordinaior.

By The Associated Press
the second time in five games. with 17 points ancJ 18 rebounds.
These were games the Denver pulled away from the Warriors in Joe Dumars was held to 14 points
Nuggets and Sacramento Kings the third quarter.
on 6-for-18 shooting.
used to lose.
Brad Daugherty had 17 points Hornets 110, Celtics 107
Playing at the Great Westem and 13 rebounds for Cleveland,
Alonzo Mourning had 23 poiniS
Forum, where they lost 14 of their while Lalrell Sprcwellled the War- and personally outscored Boston
previous 16 games and 10 straight, riors with 20 points. .
13-12 from the foul line, helping
the Nuggets routed the Los Ange- Trail Blazers 94, Hawks 84
Charlotte come back from a late
Ies Lakers 113-84 Friday night
Clifford Robinson scored 28 12-pointdeficitatBostonGarden.
behind Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf's 25 points and Rod Saickland had 10
Dino Radja led Boston with 21
points and Dikembe Mutombo's of his 18 in the fourth quarter as poiniS and 11 rebounds.
career-high 24 rebounds and seven Portland pulled away from visiting Heat 115, Magic 100
bioeked sboiS.
Atlanta.
'
Glen Rice hit his first six shoiS
The Kings, who ~ven't won 30
Strickland had six points during of the third quarter and finished
games in a season since 1985-86, a IS-4 run that pvc the Trail Bla;z- with 30 points on .II of 14 shootOUISCOlCd San Anlllllio.24""13 in 11\e· · en m 89-821elld,~!l\1:®.10 plAy.-- • ing;· ~r~hil•. ~:l.leld4haq!llUe
fourth quarter and ran their record Portland outscored 'illc Hawks "Ul-6 O'Neal to three. 'ou~tb:.quarter
to 3·1 w~ Mitch Richmond hi~ a in the last6 1/2 minutes.
poiru_s and won at Orlando.
·.
Dominique Wilkins scored 30
Nte!t And~n ICC! Orlan&lt;Jo w•th
jumper with 3.7 seronds left to beat
the Spurs 93-91.
·
points, 24 Of them in the fllSI half, 29 pomts,. while 0.. Ne~l had~ I
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was for Atlanta. He was 7-for-24 from after SCO';'ng 42 agams~ Mia~t m
~ 1.10,-,Boafeo to:z.,1Waalh··· tbc.f1Clcl. •. ,, .....
last weeks season-ope";;Dg vtctory
iilgton iOS 'Piillidctpliia93· Miiuni Knlcks 10.3, Pacen 84
over the HeaL Scott Skiles had 20
liS, Orlando 100; New Y~· 103,
By the end of the game. ag~l points~ 14 assis!Sfor the Magic.
Indiana '84· Dailas liS Minlicsota Indiana, New York was playmg Mavert~ 115, Ttmberw61ves 99
99; Utah i09, Detroii'89; Cleve- with'out Patrick Ewinf and John
Roolcie JB!"~ Mas~bum scored
land 102 Golden State -93· and Starks but that dido 1 stop the 36 pomts, giVIng Qumn Buckner
Portland 94, Atlanta 84. ·
\
Knick; from winning their fifth his ftrst c~ing vic!Ory and helpThe Lakers shot 31.1 percent consecutive game.
mg Dallas wm at. Minnesota, now
from the field, their worst cffon
Ewing scored 19 points despite the NBA:'s &lt;?DIY wmless team; .
since the team moyed 10 Los Altfe- sitli!!g out the fmal 20 minutes of
By wmntng for the _first lllll.e m
les. Their previous low was 3 .6 the game with a strained neck, foil! games, the Mavencks avoided
percent on Nov. 8, 1991 · at while Starks was ejec,t ¢ late in the thetr worst start ever.
Phoenix, the night after Ma$iC game with two teChnical fouls.
BullelllOS, 71iers 93
Johnson announced he was retinng
Reggie Miller led all scorers
ReJt . Ch~man scored 20 points,
because of the AIDS virus.
with 24 points for lndiarla.
including eight in the decisive third
CavaUers 102, Warrlon·93
Jazz 109', ~0119
period, as Washington ·extenlled
John Williams scored 18 points . Karl Malone had 28 poiniS and · Philadclpbia's losing strealt 10 four.
aild Mark Price had 16 poinrs and IS rebounds arid John Stockton had
~om Guglioua"had 22 J]OiniS for
14 assists for Cleveland at Golden 19 assists a5 Utah beat Detroit for the Bullets;.\vho never trail.ed in the
State. _
..
its fourth victory in ftve games.
second !Wf en route to their ftrst
The Cavaliers, winning for only
Olden Polynice led the Pisrons home win in three,aies this season.

_·_

~No=v=em=ber=1~4=,1=99=3=======~==~===P;om;;;;er;;o:;v=·~M~Id~d;,;;litport

Lenlieux, Lind.ros
out with injuries
PITISBURGH (AP) - 11\e bad went a magnetic resonance imaging
·' news carne 10 the NHL in a flurry test Friday to fully determine the
: qJiicker than a Mario Lemieux extent of the injury.
· breakaway: Lemieux and Eric Lin·
The estimated retum date for
' dros are down with injuries, return Lemieux, the $42 million mlm: mid
uncertain. Two stars, two bad to late January. The estimated
· injuries, too much bad luck for a return date for Lindros, the $21
· ' star-crossed IeaKue.
.
million lcid: early December. ·
·' 1ust when die NHL thought it
The NHL had hoped to clqse
. c9uld compete with the superstar· · that huge gap this season, with bas. depleted NBA, two of its three big ketball megastars Michael Jordan,
names are down and out for weeks, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird
maybe mon!hs. So much for thp retired, Gretzlty and Lemieux still
marquee matchup in Pittsburj!h in their prime and Lindros on the
next Tuesday of Lemieux vs. Lm- rise.
MARIO l'$Mmux
dros, superstar of·loday vs. super"We're going to get by onemo. star of tomorrow.
tion ... grit and determination, "
l..indros missed a quarter of the
"
"This franchise, I think, is Flyers C!IPtain ~vin Dineen said
1992-93 season with a succession
. snakebiaen by Injuries," PhiladelLemieux not only carries the of left knee injuries and rtow will
phia Flyers owner Ed Snicjer said weight of their Sianley Cup miss a subsiantial portion of this
; after Lmdros was lost fdr 3 to 6 chances upon his fragile back, but season. Lemieux has missed more
weeks with a tool right medial col· also the future of their franchise. than 100 games the last four ses·
lateral ligament. "It's like a bad They built 1,500 new seats in the sons with various back problems,
nightmare.''
Civic Arena, new luxury boxes and plus his in-season battle with
NHL · commissioner Gary raised their alrelldy hefty ticket Hodldtin's disease last'season.
Bettman probably couldn't have prices as mu~h as ,$12 apiece this · "1 feel lilce I've made a lot of
.· experienced a worse Thursday season in preparatiOn for a run at progress, but I'm still not nearly
·~ night unless Los Angeles Kings
their third Stanley Cup in four I 00 percent, and that is where I
:· star Wayne Gretzky had been hun,
need to be fOJ myself and to help
·· roo.
Y~en before the official my team," Leniieux said in a pre:• First, the news leaked out of announcement Friday that Lemieux pared statement issued by the Pen:: Pittsburgh that Lemieux still hadil't was out indefinitely, unhappy sea- guins.
..
·: fully recuperated from offseason son ticket holders called radio talk
General manager Craig Patrick
:• back surgery and would sit down Shows 10 ask about ticket refunds.
acknowledged Lcinieux rushed his
? indefmite)y.
"It's going to be rough without · recovery from off-season arthro·: · Then, only an hour later, Lin- the big gu~," teammate Rick Toc- scopic ba!:lc surgery. When he ftrSt
. dros' knee was hurt in the first chet said. 'You can go on only so ·underwent back surgery before the
period of the Flyers· 5-3 loss to the long without missing him. He is the 1990-91 season, Lemieux didn't
New,Jersey Devils. Lindros IInder- best hockey plllyer in the world.' '
retum to the lineup until late Jan-

&lt;

...

a..-

R•ullr '- :
:lll, a.. Eaoll4

NBA
At A Clanct

o.r.....m.69.Rov...,SBlS

EASTERN CONFERENCE

ToL SL Fianc:illO, T ol. Catbolic 0

Atl1111tlt Dl¥tslon

W

New Yai:
Miani
Boaton

....... 5
3
3
l

Oiloodo
New Jeaey

L

Pet.

YOW1J. Howland IS, Youaa. Wilam

CB

12

0 1.000
I
.150 I l fl
2 .600
Z
2 .600
2

w......,.. . ..

OU..,o

l

I

.7S&lt;l

•'

O.•rlgne
3 l .600
CI...W.d ........ 2 l
.400
"llobW
........... 2 l
.400
Allanll
........... I l
.2.50
India~
.......... 1 4 .200
Mllwau.k.
1 4 .200
WUI'I!RN CONFERENCE
Mldwll!lt DlvilkNt

•

Houltan.
IJuh

•

•

W L
4

National Hockey League

4
Den'f'U
.....••... 2
s.. AnlOIIio ·-··· 2
Dallu
....... ... I

•
•

•

Minnelota

0

Sacnmento
LA Clippen ......
PonloM
..........

I 112
I 1/2
2
2 1}7

2111

GB
-

I
2
l
l

.100 1/2
JOO
2:
.400 2 1/2
.2.50
l

'

.000 4 1/2

•

0 1.000

Sunday'JGall'ttl
Qul!ibec Jt:Fiorid.l, 6:QS p.m .
Sul01CatN.Y . .Rqea,7:3S p.m.

Dallu atOUca.ao,I:3S p.m.
Anahtam at Vancou"VV,IO:QS p.m.

NFL scheduule

,.,

' SuDday's games

l
I : .?SO
3 I .750
2 2 ~00
2 2 -JOO

I
I
2
2

3

Goldon S1111 •.•.... I

l

.2.50

LA l..akea

4

.200 3 Ill

1

Buftalo at Pbiladclphia, 1:OS p.m.
S111.JD1CatNew Jersey, l ~lS p.m.
S.tcmatN.Y.&amp;luldcn, 7;0.5 p.m.
Edmonton at Hud'ord, 7:35 p.m.
'Daroi11t Pialburp,7:3.5 p.m .
N.Y. Rat~Je:t u w..hin&amp;ton, 7 :35
pm.
Qucbo:: 1t Tampa B'l' 7:35 p.m.
Ottawa at Monti'Ul, :OS p.m.
Oicaao n Tommo, I :OS p.m.
Dallu It w~. B:OS p.m .
Vancouver at Calluy, 8:05 p.m.
St.Louia •tl.OIAnpJ... I;OS p.m.

-

Pet.

Ptdi!&lt;DI~

...•.•~... •

SeaalO

Saturday't G.....

1!2

0 1.000

Green Bay at New Orlean~ , I p.m.
Hou.aoa al Clncinnlci, I p.m.
Su.Fanc:*o 1t'Iampa Bay, 1 p.m.
~~~~.I p.m. ;'
Wubinaton at New York Oianu, I

p.m.

Phoenix It o.nu, 4 p.m.
KanJU City at La. Anplm Jlaidm,

FI"IUJ11 GI.IMI

Cbuloa.UO, BCJ\Cin 107
W""-")Ol,l'bllldolpbU 9l
Milmi n.s, Odllldo too
New Yoot 103, lndioou 114

4p.m.

Nc.w Yt'lk Jcu atlndilftapolil, 4 p.m.
Olicaao at San Oiq,o, I p.m.
Opm Doo"" Doaoil, New Eqlaod

Cleveland 102, Goldat State 93
S&amp;cnmcmo 93, San AniOftio 91
. Portland 94, Atlant~M
S.lurday's C.mt11

r

.

f4

San

~

,.r

st LA llippetl, 10:30 p.m.

Cieeartlla, ·Gar Finnvald, Rab Hmkd and
Tim Vancpond, phchm; Scou H~tlO­
baJ. catdJcr; and J01e Malave, oudieldcr,
from Pawtocket of thor International

~atULUoa.10p.m .

'I

Loa~XAS

Ohio Higb School Football

~

~am~

B)' The Allol:lated Preu
Realon.ll Stmlnnall
.
FrkliJ11 Cam•

t

•

.... frccn

Col. Eaamoo&lt; )4, Foo...U 24
FnnkliD. 15, Hamilton Roa 6
OteenlburaGrea, 14, Panni Padua 0
Plqual2,l:.cm....Mooroe 16
Muys ~ 21. Col w.....
.... J.
Unicntown Lib 48, I..ruiiYille ll
DIVISION IV •
Amaftda·Cloutrcck 20, Hannibal
Ri=I4,20T
Cin. CAPE li,Jmolhm Ale 21
CNCibvillc 21, Pai.n' Van. 0
Gatu: Mile• Hawken 21, Akron
Manchsterl
Hwool4.C...yll

BA.SKI:TIIALL ·

N•tloftll Bt1kdblll Mad1tlon
DALLAS MAVEIUCKS-Siancd
Chudy Browa, forward, to a ont·ycar
c:onttaca. Placed Randy Whi" farward,
on lhe injured 1ill.

,

FOOTBALL
Natklnll FDCI&amp;balllAN:ut

~o~ontpeUa27,0...S••·

LOS ANOELBS"IIAMS-Slp.od

Wamn Kennedy 38, New Middle·
10wn Sprilllfidd 2l

..

'·

·NEW 94 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE

S.aa Lladata. pWiter. W~ivad Pa\&amp;l
Mdulia&gt;.-.
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTSWaived Mike Fur, wida Jteiew:r, off ia·

DIVISJOPI"V
·
·
C..ilme 15, Stnduoky St. Ma')S 14

4 cyl •. •~g., P. stMr., p; b111k11, aiito.
-;,.
.trans., AM/FM ' atereo radio; · tl.lt ~~
1t11rlng whMI and crul11 control, · ·
~'
111ar defrOster, new tlrea, extra clqn,
, ·A-1 conc:liaon, illr cond.
~
• w~s $4,1185

'

Best 11lllng new model I!' 1,11831 f'OW
WITH.STANDARD DUAL AIR BAGS.

•l

t

NEW94DODGE

lOW

.. • .
4,2 ..

1111 Ji'DRD .

I

'

.

LiiNzty ea... 4l, M&lt;Comb 2l
'
Lorain Cleuviow l4, Tu1carawu
Cath. 15
Newut C.lh. ll, FL1Mr"Ca1h. 6

rrot:nr

Nallooal HoctoyiM...
LOS ANGELES kiNGS-Recalled
1chn Dnlc. and Phil Czowe, forwards ,

Sidney Ldunan 41, Loclt.land IS
SL lfauy ll, Marim Local 7
Swubenvillo CtUt. 20, E. Knox 14
Woodlfieldlli,Mari&lt;onPlouuul7

from Phocni1 mthe ln\emltional Hockey
l a p .......... o... '11tonWnaoo! aad
llob Munlhy,1orwudl.t~? Phoenix.

.ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

that iJ ~ way we ba-.e 10 JO."
The on-ice off'ICia!J' previous
agreement -Mth the lelpc eJtJ)ired
last Aug. 3 L They lTC in a lecal
strike position.
A lllrikc would be the tint mid·
seasoa wart stoppage by .eferecs
and linesmen in league history.
NHL referees struck for one game
durin~~ 1988 playoffs o- a dispute tnvolvingJim Schoenfeld,
then the New Jersey Devils coach.
The NHL brought in substitute
officials for the game between the
Devils and the Boston Bruins.
Plar::..walked off the job during a ·
dispute in April 1992,
interrupting the schedule for 10
days.
The main issue is salarica. Referees get a first-season wage of
$SO,OOO while rookie lineamen
earn $33,000.
·The refeRCS originally demanded a 100 percent salary inerease,
but later reduced it to "60 percent.
The NHL's final offer called for an
immediate 29 percent
The NHLOA presented a
counter-offer on Fnday, but that
was quickly dismissed by the NHL.
"We submitted to the league a
modification on ~ salary proposa!, and I think greater emphasis
was placed on other benefits in
relatton to pensions, voluntary
retirement, severance benefits,
playoffs remuneration,·· Meehan
said

rase.

WVAprep
playoff results
FARMINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Chris Enochs threw for 204 yards
to lesd Oak Glen 10 a 34-1 S win
over North Marion on Friday night
in the.first round of the Class AAA
playoffs.
Enochs, second in the state in
touchdown passes during the
regular season with 21, was 18 of
27 for three scores.
Chad Mcintyre iushed for 112
yards and a score for North Marion
(8-3), which managed just 182
yards total offense. Oak Glen (9-2)
was making iiS first-ever playoffs
appearance since it was founded in
the early 1960s.

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP
"We De~ and Spread UlilletltoJae"

•Top Soli
•Mason Sand
•Fill Dirt
.Concrete Sand
•Shredded
•Pit Run
•Drainage Gravel Top Soil
•Pea Gravel
•Straw
•Drainage Tile
•Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

9.

PITTSBURGH (AP) -PiUsburgh . Penguins star Mario
Lemieux conf1p11ed he will be out
indefmitely as he continues to rehabilitate his surgically repaired·back.
After it was learned that
Lemieux wouldn't play agitin for
weeks, possibly months, there was
SJieculation his back condition had
deteriorated to the point he might
not play again.
Lemieux; in a statement issued
by the team, said his back has
improved since July 28 surgery tp
repair a damaged lower back muscle.

·

HOLZER

R£Al.TB
BOTUNE
•'

... of .... latamabonal ·

FLORIDA MARLINS-Plm:b110d
the contnct of (hq O'Hallomn, catdlcrfint b.ueman., from th6 Toroato Bluo
layl.
PmSBUROH PIRATES-Sianed
1off Bollaol, ........ ,

Vcniilla 34, De1pbOI Jdfenon 14

.f1 11lllng Import truck In Southeaatem
Ohio 8 yelll'S NMingl You M afford the
best.

s~

TORONTO (AP) ..:.. Now that ready to start work MoncJay night
NHL officials have rejected the when games are 1cheduled in
league's final salary offer, their Toronto, Ottawa and CaJpry.
chief negotiator says they will
Bettnlan say• ibe league "we
strike Monday unless their IS fur. will have a cOmpeiCIIt slltf or offi· ·
!her discussion.
ciala and we will be widied with
"Our membership has left on the way games 1re off'ICi"ed " He"
the buis that they will fulftll all said lOIRe of them " have world~
assignments in an honorable and clau ex~.' '
professional wliy until Monday,"
Bettmin said the replacement
said Don Mecluu), the player agent officials will "wear an earpiece·
who is the officials' chief negotia- commu~icatioliJ device," which
tor.
will enable them to "speak to
Meehan said he held out hope of supervison during whistle ltopS."
getting back to the bargaining table
''We are just coing ·to have 10
with the NHL this weekend to live with the replacements," said
avoid a walkout by the on-ice offi· defenseman Charlie Huddy of the
cials. But NHL commissioner Gary Los Angdea Kinp.
Bettman did DOL
"Some of diCie guys are used 10
"Sometimes you get 10 a point games in front of S,OOO or 6,000
where you have no more 10 gtve," people. All of 1 sudden, they are
Dettman said Friday.
thrown in places like New York in
Dettman made the remark dur- front of 16,000 people. I hope they
ing a news conference from New won't be nervous and inumidatYork following disclosure that the ed.''
S8 m~mbers of the NHL OffiCials
The league sent a le!IQ to each
Association unanimously rejected of its on-ice officials whco negotiawhat the league called its final tions broke down Wednesday
offer.
night, saying it could not guarantee
Dettman said the officials had jo6s aftec any saikc was settled.
left no room to negotiate with their
Terry Gregson, president of the
demand for an additional $1.5 mil· NHLOA, said the officials realize
lion a year in a four-year package.
their jobs are at stake.
"We told the!D they made our
" We have all -talked about
position easy because another Sl.S that," he said. "We have loolced at
million is not in .the cards," things and we have all said if this is
Bettman said.
what it takes, maybe it is time for a
The league has taken a hard line career change. A lot or people have
in negotiations. Approximately 70 two or three careers, imd maybe
fill-in officials, picked up from
minor pro, major junior and amateur ranks, have been hired and are

HOCKEY
PHILADELPIDA (AI') - Medical tests showed that Plliladelphia
center Eric Lindros has a partial
ligament tear in his right knee that
will keep him sidelined three to six
BUCKHANNON, W.Va. (AP)
weeks. ·
Craig Eddy hit Ic:remy lngtli!D
Lindro( tied for second in the
for
a 23-yard score wtth 3:47 left m
NHL with 15 goals, was injured
the
game to give St. M~s a 20-13
during the first period of the
Philadephia Flyers' 5-3 loss to the win over South Harrison m the first
New Jersey Devils on· Thursday round·of the Class-AA playoffs. ·
Rob Wilson rushed for 83 yards
night.
to
lead SL Marys (8·3). Josh
He missed 23 games after his
Jenkins
had 56 yards rushing to
injury last season, and Philadelphia
was 7-14-2 in those games. With lead South Harrison (6-4·1 ).
him in the lineup, they were 29-23·

Si.pod Tun MeNam an,

:.:c.Loope

s..

•

-Sports briefs-

TOR.O~BLUE' JAYS-PIIrohuool " ' " - olDomy eo•• ~­

Bollowo 7. W. ilo1meo 6

Sto=k 14.115

Wifl,·Our extended road trip, the
rigors of playing and the unexpect"ed bout with the flu exposed his
lack of strength and conditioning,'·
Paaick said "We were all anxious
· for his return, but we realize now
that he came back too soon. We are
determined to not let this happen
again."
·
"We all look forward to
Mario's return,,. teammate Kevin
Stevens said.

e~~tchcl', to i: ~&amp;e.~ CGDtrld and inntod bim 10 • ........_

Clwdon 21, Mallil&lt;ll21

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clean.

JIANOERS-A$.-..d to
wish Mm WJW.ide. pilch•, on a

~,_. cadniCt.

DI\11510ND

.

.

BJnf and Cbco Oatcil, infielden, top. ...
tuck« r:if lhe lnwnalional League. Pw-chaled ~ contractl: of Joo Caru10, Joe

Sacnmento at New Jeney,7 p.m.
· Darair. at PGidand. 10 p.m.

~

'13'• •

An.

BJ The .U.Ialed Pr•
BASEBALL

Amerimn Ltaaue
BOSTON RED SOX--Anigncd fun

su.-J'IC...

i"

Stock 14~':a:IIL

•

-- AtlunaatSeaule.ll!P.m·

f"

.

Transactions

Alomix atQou.uon, 8:30p.m.
'Golden Sutc It Denver, 9 p.m.

~

·

Bu.ffalo at PiltlbwJit, 9 p.m.

Pbiladelphiut New Jmey, 7:30 p.m.
BCIItan at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
U&amp;.ah atDallu, 8:30p.m.

,~

po-r-t

M&lt;Mufar'• G..,.

Milwao&amp;oo at New York. 7:30p.m.

~

'.

Clewlll'ld at Seanlo.. p.m.
Minnclc:u at Omw:r, .f p.m.

IJuh 109, o.u.u 19
Da!Yer Ill, LA Ukcn 114

1

•

Aduolo a Loo AnJO)oiRoml. • p.m.

·

O..U..ll5, )1imlllllac&amp;'99

f

'

Frld.IJ'• Gam•
No JUTI.~ ldlodWed

....... 2 2 .SOO 2 112
2 l
.400
l
Pbiladdploia .. ..... I 4 .200
4
Central Dlvlllon

•

3.8 V&amp; ·eng., P. st11rlng, ·.~1 ..bralka;
auto. trans., lilr cond., AMIF'NM~ =~~::
cisutte, tilt and crulae, P. 1111
and P. locks, ·dual air , ~ags, 111ar
defroster, calit aluminum wheels,

NHL officials say they will go on strike Monday

•

Scoreboard

Sunday 11m• ,.ntliwl ~1. . C5

Galllpollt, OH-Polnt

As a part of your Health Team,
our goal is to provide you with
The answers you need ...
as close as your phone!

1911 Mer. c.,..

2 dr., 6 ql.,lcldedl Lllw ...., Cloon

19U bids Flr~~~~::L•--::-":"~~~~
1989 Chewy llmtL.._Sf9112 dr., 5 speed, 4 ql.,lir, AMfM radio

1·800·462·5255
•Illness or injury

1911ChlwrS·10P.L1I01•4 "'-· 5lj)lld, bliliw, Lllw Aidolt

1990Fonii.... GL:...111S•4 "'·· 4 c:yt.,lir, ......... -

1989 Ply.Aulal•

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4 dr.. 4 ql.,lll1ll .. lirl Vfl'l Sharp!

•Physician Referral
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•Support Groups

2 dr.. 5speed, 4 eyl.lllao:lc llellutyl

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4dr,4.crL,S...,t,IOI&lt;*IILow ....l

1989 Chewy c.nJca_SJ12"4 dr., 6 "'-· ....... oi, ..... ill whNI

1990FonlllanfwP.U-1 l~.-~

A specially trained R.N. is on duty to
answer yom· questions on health care
and in[onn 'ou about inailablc
ser·,·i c e:-. ... 11 atn.·tO p.tn.
7 d.1ys .1 week.

4ql., Slj)lld,

·ROUER MEDICAL CENTER.
"PartnerS in cb~nge, as we continue tbe Holzer Tradition"

., .

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(

"

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Pege C&amp; Sunday nmee· Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Plea&amp;Jnt, wv

November 14,1993

Cleveland establishes memorial fund for Young
CLEVELAND (AP) ·- The
Cleveland Indianl have establiShed
a memorial fund for the children of
pitcher Cliff Young , the -team
announced Friday.
Young, 29, died in a tnlffic accident Nov . 4 in his hometown of
Willis, Texas. He had pitched in 21
games for the Indians, including
seven as a staner during the 1993
season.
Young left a wife, Tamara, and
two
. 6-year-old Clifford Jr.

and 3-year-old Calneron.
'
Money from the fund will go
directly to the children, but is not '
charilable donation and tlierefore is
.
not tax ded.ucnble.
,'
"The memorial fund has beeO
established so fans. players and lh9
other major league clubs have p
way of helping Cliff and Tamara·~
children, Cameron and Clifford Jr~
should they choose to do so,'' saiH
Dennis Lehman, the Indians' executive vice president of b~. ·

Outdoors

November 14; 199'3

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

. Fre~man writes 'letter to editor'

o,

''Life Ittsu.nlnce

that's right fo~ you...
that's what

State Fann iS

all

about.,,.
CIROU SNOWDEN

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

J42Sicoa.dlwe.
..... 446-4290
H•• ""6-4511
ITAII PAlM

A

INIUU.NCI

seated • Mike Donnally, Jessica Stralrord, Gennie Tuccerl, Whit·
ney Adkins and Andy Betz. Third row standing • Rlcbard Kuhn,
Matt Wamsley, Sara Walker, Carrie Beth Miller, Michelle Davison, Jencie Haner, Andra Bog,s, Rachel LeBello and Becky
Knight. Not pictured • Eric Roderick and David Wright.

GAHS ALL·SEOAL ACADEMIC • Gallla Academy's All·
Southeastern Ohio League Academic Team was honored during
Thursday night's 50th annual fall sports banq11,et at Buckeye Hills
Career Center, Rio Grande. First row, left to right are Ryan
Barnes, Chris Roettker, Ell Nehus and Seth Davis. Second r!lw

•

Slate Farm

CAUME.

llie
'

Uke a good neighbor, State Farm is !here.

Cavs outlast Golden State Warriors 102-93
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -'- The
Golden. Slate Warriors are looking
for some points.
Missing their three highest scorers from last season because of
injuries, Golden State failed for the
fourth time to reach 100 points,
losin$ 102·93 to the Cleveland
Cavaliers on Friday night last season, the Warriors averaged 110
points and in recent years have had
one of the NBA 's most potent
offenses.
Golden State, which scored only
17 points in the third quarter,
knows its offense will be struggling
for a while. Chris Mullin, Tim
Hardaway and Sarunas Marciulionis aU are sidelined, although Mullin
should be back in about six weeks.
"We have three guys ~cally
we'iooil: ·for wheli 'We: n&amp;d· a bas·

!ret," center Victor Alexander said.
"It's either going to be (Latrell)
SpreweU, Billy (Owens) or Chris
Webber. Those are the new go-to
guys. Those guys are just going to
have to get used' to taking .the big
shot. Everybody used to look for
Chris Mullin to take the big shot or
Tim, but thOse guys are not there."
For now, only SpreweU is step·
ping up, having led the Warriors m
scoring in all four of their games.
Webber has scored IS in each of
his two games, but Owens is averaging 13.2, and it's doubtful any of
the three can approximate Hardaway's21.5 average last year.
"It's frustrating," coach Don
Nelson said. "We're used to being
!lhle to score in bunches and now
we haven't been able 'to do that.

'

we are."
New Cleveland coach Mike
Fratello is doing much the same
thing. After the Cavs' 1-3 start, he
saw a lot of positives from his
team, trying to adjust to the
absence of injured forward Larry
Nance.
Cleveland shot 63 pen:ent in the
second half, including 13-of-20 in
the fourth quarter, and produced off
the bench.
"We made some big shots,"
FrateUo said. "I thought our execu·
tion was very good down the
stretch.
"I don ' t know if things are
comin, together. It's only one
game.'
John Williams scored 18 points
and Mark Price hadl6. points and
we·rHtiif'ii.')iltigt&amp;rr~o "lii'OUJ flft ~11ii41''"" "(~ ·
..

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llolldlj ,r11111. 1;3t- (Ill;

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·':sav&amp; *to.oo

.·

Phone
·372·2901
'
372·9511
342·7571
,335 S. Church Street
, Rlpley,·WV

NEW STORE HOURS: .MONDAY-FRIDAY, 1:30 MH1 1111
SATORDAY,I:30 -a 1111;.SUNDAY,
11 All-8 .1111
'

COUNTY

·.

~·New Jersey
~.1

'

....

i·; · NEW YORK (AP) - Familiar-'

~· iJing herself with the accomplish-

•'ments of former New Y&lt;Jrk City
•·j,tarathon winners has given fli'St·
~~Ume competitor Anne Marie Letko
;t.the sense that she can win Sunday's
. ~ce.
.~ In conversations, the 24-year·
ld Letko from Glen Gardner, NJ.,
~l)ften mention1 the names of Ingrid
flltristiansen, Grete Waitz, Liz
~ McColgan and Alberto Salazar.
f';• "Seeing other people who have
j&lt; won New York or talking with
~em has given me a lot of confi·
i'ilence," said Letko. one of the
~:i'orld's premier dislance runners
::Onthe roads and on the track.
....,; Kristiansen, tl\e 1989 winner
Bam Norway, appears to have had
.tJhe most inDuence on Letko, one of
~ 'llle favorites, along with Uta Pippig
?.'~f Germany and Kim Jones of
;;;:.'S polcane, Wash ., in the women's
=}ilivision of Sunday's 26-mile, 385·
~•.,ard trek through the city's five
~roughs .
,,.,; "My coach (Tom Fleming)
t;'~anted to keep me out of the
,,marathon until 1996," said Letko,
"'Slarting at that distance for the fli'SI
~time. "But I was going through
· ~me old magazines and saw tjlat
:.'l(lle (Kristi~nsen) set the world
!)ecord in the 10,000 meters after ,
~ving run the marathon.
'; During the 1980s, Waitz - who
~"on the race in her first two
1,ilpJ'C:8fances in 1978, and 1979 ·d 1t seven m0re t1mes. Salazar

,

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,..8

BJ'fGt S!!lmders, Galllpolill

Note: Jarues wu

David A. Reed, a disabled veteran from Reedsville, seems to be
earning his bragging rights as far as
fishing is concerned.
Reed found the fiShing great just
before and after rain fronts.
The saying you can lead a horse
to water but you can't make him
drink •also applies to catclting fiSh,
Reed says. You can throw different
baits, but you can't always make
them bile:
·
Reed says he prefers to use dark ·
baits on cloudy days, The flsh he is
shown with were taken with plastic
worms, Jitterbugs and shallow
water plugs.
· ·
,
However, despite the fine catch,
Reed pointed out that anglers and ·
hunters alike should not become to
greedy with their catches: To iUusuate, Reed says with· winter coming he will only be sitting home
"wishing to go fishing".

~•Jtf

~RAGGJNG il~GHTS David Reed of Reedsville
shows eight largemouth bass
weighing more tban 13 ponilds
taken,from li local farm pOnd.
The largest fiSh weighed more
tbail three pounds. ,

-

won it in his first three auempts,
from 1980-82. McColgan's victory
came in 1991, also in her first
marathon.
What Letko would like to do is
make a lasting -impression.
"! want to be a dominant force
in distance running," said Letko,
fli'St or second in flve races on the
roads and one on the track this
year. She was third in her two most
recent performances - tlie Tufts
!OK and the TUlsa 15K.
"I want to be like Ingrid Kristiansen was during the 1980s.''

TENNIS
ANTWERP, Belgium (AP) Cedric Pioline beat Goran lvanisevic 7-6 (9-7) 6~ to reach the semifinals of the European Community
Championships and keep alive the
· mce for the last place in the World
, Championships. . .
.It was the flfst ume 1.n fol!l' tournaments that Ivanisevtc faded to
make ·the final, and it strongly
reduced any chance of the world's
No. 9 player had to move up one
place and into the World Championships.
Third-seeded Boris Becker beat
Magnus Larsson 6-1, 7-6 (7·0), and
also stayed in the hunt for a berth.

WE ,HIYE
· ~~ EVERnHING FOR
;THE,JERIO.US HUNT.ER
f

•

""

!•Hunting Clothing

&gt;

,:•Shotguna and Barrels
: •Slugs by Remington, Federal,
: Winchester and
. Benneke
; •Hunting License
~ ·Lur"
·-•All Accessories

.
::

--------------~~
IPBCIAL JJVNTJNG ROVU
Open Fri. Nov. 28, 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m .
Sat., Nov. 27, 7:30 a.m.-8 p.m •

~

'l
';

Sunday, Nov. 28, 1.f p.m.
.1 L..~o=.,.~n~7.:.:::30-8;,:.;;;;.;=00;;.;,N;.;o.;v.;.;28-;;..;;De;.;;,..;.;c·..;.'_ __.

W&amp;A •• A . . . .

~~~TIONf

·.· alUM LU BER

&gt;

•

•'

'

ol'tbe Year ID 1992)

-Sports briefs-

:tan win ,marathon
on first try
....

. 1

•

Anyone in Ohio with information .regarding poach.ing is enCOllf·
aged ili call the Tllm In A Poacher
(TIPS) Toll-free botline at 1-800.
POACHER. ·
Call TIPS with the following
information:
.
- ·Violation date, time and
location;
-... DeScription of violation;
-Names or identifying features of the violator;
- Vehicle and license number.

runner feels she

ST. 'at. 241, CHISIIR

POINT

which regulate when a Cl\rtain
species may hunted and by what
means. These low-life poachers are
stealing from the hunters who do it
"by the book".
Scumbag poachers, be wamed,
every hou,se you see may have
someone watching you dialing 1SOO·llOACHER. Every c11r you
pass may have your license number. Sooner or. later, you' will be
caughL
Jim Freelllllll
Pomeroy

PLAYER, SCHOOL
POS.
Kr
WI'
&amp;-0
•-Nick T~ Ad8w .............- ......··-····... ···QS..S
m
JCahiel;m Muwell, Albma ..............JlB-CB 5-9
166
· '·Ould Rimes. Gallipolil .................... QS.DB S· IO lS.S
Jamie Caldwell, Gallipolil .............. HS.DE S-8
J65
Mike Domllly, Gaii~•-·-···· ..·-.... SE·DB (,..(}
160
DyiE Ev.., Gallipolia ....................... OT·DT 6-2
280
Heath HulclUnlon, Gallipolis ..............FB-DB S-9
ISO
Jeue ~. Gallipolii .................... HB-DE S-10 170
Gcolf Mlahews, JICktoD ......................QB·DB &amp;-0
192
Zack Tay14!r. J.:ktoD...........................OO.DT S·8
192
Jay Wackier, JICkiOII............................OT·DT 6-4
20S
Brocks .Burri•, Loa~n ..........-.................or-DT 6-8
275
Rym Carpenter, Lo&amp;an....................... OO.DT 6-2
2SO
Jam Colcrove, Loa.-.................:..- ....TJJ...DB S·ll 170
Brilrt Miller,I.Ala• .........:........................QB
6-0
190
Ollci zubetman, Logan .......- ..........fL.DB S-1 169
0ri1 Kni&amp;hl. Mlrieua........~ ....... :...- .... 'J'&amp;.DL -S-10 200
Nick Mille(, M1rictaa ........................".... C-DL &amp;-0
185
· Eric Sauls, Mlrieua _.."............:.... G-TB-LB
210
Ry111 Alloway, W..a~ ..........".............F8-DE &amp;-0
17S
6-1
•-s~· Pa-due, W.,-en .......- ...........~-··· TE:-LB
ISS
R)'lll Seevers, W~rrer~ .....,..................... ai"·DT S-10 21S
•-Indicates rqw"'er &amp;orn 1992 all-league team
·
PLAYER OF mE YEAR
Chad Barua, GalllpoUs
COACH OF mE YEAR

,\

FACTORY UNITS

.Chamois Pants

Dear Editor,
I would like to address the issue
of subhuman morons leaving headless deer carcasses in the meadows
· of GaUia and Meigs counties.
I hope you poachers are proud.
I'm sure you m:e getting big bucks
for the big bucta; you kill and you
think that.justifies your actions, but
jt doesn't
,., , First. I w~er the type of idiots
.. ;who engage m this activity are a
~ )ltep beyond your everyday, garden
... ...ariety imbecile. Considering that
~ 1hese blockheads transport loaded
'• ·fuearms in motor vehicles and dis· : charge the same firearms from or ·
~ across roadways, it is a miracle
: :Jbey haven't shot themselves or,
, ·even worse, someone else.
~: Second, in return for the privi·
: lege to hunt, legitimate hunters
·'agree to abide by certain rules

j:•

'

Hunting Boot
Insulated

.

lnsurallce Company

HomC Office: Bloomington, Illinois

.

I envy you readers.
As a staff writer for the Ohio
; VaUcy Pulilishing Company, I am
: pretty much prohibited from writ:. ing letters to the editor, a courtesy
,: the company extends to au its read~ ers (and even non-readers).
:
By following · a few simple
) guidelines, published inside a little
• box on the daily commentary page,
:: readers have the opportunity to
:: express th~ir thoughts and con:: cems. on prcny·much ~Y IOJ?IC, to
.; thouSJIDdS of other
. people m the
•. area.
:.
The guidelines State: Letters of
, opinion are. Welcome. They should
· be Jess, than 300 words. All letters ·
:: are subject to editing and must be
.: ·signed with name, address and tele·
'' phone number. No unsigned letters
· wiD be published. letters slioukl be
· in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities:
As a staff writer, I have the
· opportunity to express myself in
the follll of an editorial. But if I
; could write a letter to the editor, it
would probably go something like
: this:.

.

1993 All~SEOAL football selectioll8

In the Open

'

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915-3301

YR
Sr.
So..

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

So.

Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.

'Jr.
Jr.
' Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

h.

PLAYER.pF THE YEAR • Heath Hutcbioson, 5-9, 150-pound
junior fullbacli: alld defensive back, was named Gallia Academy
High School's player or the year by the Blue Devils coaching starr.
Iu nine games, Hutcbinsoo rushed ror 718 yards in lUi carries,
reci'Vered a fumble, caught 18 or 21 passes for 329 yards and rive
toucbdowns, scored .ll4 points on a school-tying record 19 touch·
dowu and 10 extra points, bad 119 yards on seven kickolr returns,
21 yards c. a pass Interception, 11 yards on a punt return alld was
credited with ;19 tackles on derense. David Thomas, left, or
Tbomill CIOiblers, Gallipolis, presents Hutchinson with the 1993
Jantzen Golden Helmet player of the year award during Thursday
n!&amp;bt's 50th aanual ran sports banquet at Buckeye Hills Career
Ce~ter, Rio Grande.

�•

November 14,1993

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

Page C8 Sunday llmes Sentinel

us1ness

Bill Dickey, New York Hall of Fame catcher, -dies at 86 ·
1

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)A little advice early in Bill Dickey's career sure went a long way.
Dickey made it to the major
leagoes in 1928, joining the New
York Yankees a year after they

Cooper.
In 1977, Dickey retired from his
job as a securities representative
from Stephens Inc. in Lillie Roclc.
the largest brokerage fmn off Wall
Street

The Yankees were loaded with a
lineup full of future Hall of
Famers. Dickey saw Babe Ruth,
Lou Gehrig and Tony Lazzeri "hitling the ball nine miles, and I tried
to pull everything, too."
"Miller Huggins, the mana~er,
called me aside one day. 'Look, he
said, 'you're never gomg to hit the
ball as far as Ruth and Gehrig. Get
a big bat and hit it where it's
pitched and the pulling will come
to you later,"' Dickey once
recalled. "And it did."
Dickey. who spent the next
three decades with the Yankees as
a Hall of Fame catcher, manager
and coach, died Friday. He was 86.
Dickey batted .313 with 202
home runs in I, 712 games from
1928 to 1946, all with the Yankees
and all at catcher. The Yankees
reached eight World Series with
Dickey and won the championship
seven times.
His career started during the
glory times of Ruth and Gehrig,
and ended in the days of Joe
DiMaggio. He was an 11-time AllStar, had his number retired by the
team and had a monument in his
honor placed at Yankee Stadium.
He was Gehrig's road roommate
for several years and became best
friends with the Iron Horse. Later,
Dickey played himself in "Pride of
the Yankees," the classic movie
about Gehrig that starred Gary

of death wasn't available, a funeral
home spokesman said. No funeral
services had been arranged Friday
nighL 1
Dickey was born in Bastrop,
La., and spent his childhood in
Kensett, Ark.~ family moved to
Litlle Rock when he was 16 and he
maintained his home there until his
death.

The left-handed hitting Dickey
finished his career with 1,209
RBis, He hit .255 with five home
runs in 38 World Series games.
He also was a part of All-Star

history in 1934. Ii was-Dickey's
single that broke Carl Hubbell's
record streak of striking out five
straight eventual Hall ofFamers.
·- ·
· · ·

Dickey hit the winnmg hoJ!Ie

Navy at age _36. Dickey spent rv.o
years _as a heutenanl a~d helped
or~IZC SP,Orts and athleucs for the
servtce.
•

run that clinched ~e World Senes
victory over St Louis in .1!!43 and,
at the end of the season JOIRed the

fi
B
l
Schroeder's next start could be hzs last or enga s
•

=~~t~h~ttili:"~~nsiderthe ing~=~t~~~~~~

He 'II also start Sunday a~ainst
tbe Houston Oilers. But Khngler
will start lhe remainder of the season, coach Dave Shula said.
"I felt that since Jay played in
the
Houston ~?allgame and
pla,yed
effectively, other
than a few
tbat·he'd be
better
for us in this ball-

CINCINNATI (AP) - Quarterback Jay Schroeder's next 'start
could be his last for the Cincinnati
Bengals this season.
Schroeder has made two sttaight
starts, with David Klingler recover·
ing from a bruised lower hack suffered against the Cleveland Browns
on Oct 17.

being a backup.
"I never thought about it," he
said. "This is just the way it has
turned out''
·
Klingler said he doesn't mind
getting another weelc of rest. Talcin~ time off bec~use ~f the back
inJury has left htm a httle out of
shape.

game," Shula said.
Schroeder threw for 213 yards
Oct 24 as Cincinnati lost to Houston 28-12. He had a lost fumble
and an 'overthrown pass that
arguably cost the Bengals 14
points, but he played well _overall.
Schroeder said he wasn't disap·
pointed to fmd out he 'II go back to

(Results as or Nov. 10)
Team
. W
Main Street Liquor Market ..60
Stowaway .............................60
Smith Buick .........................58
Shoney's ...............................S6
Cenual Supply .....................50
Sparkle Supply .................... .48
Bank One .............................44
McDonald's......................... .40
Larry's Painting &amp; Services.32
Toler &amp; Toler Insurance .......30
Flair Furnirure ..................... .28
II th Frame ...........................22

By DAN BLAKE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - ·Labor tensions at the nation's
two bi~gest airlines have intensifted just in time for
the holiday travel season.
American and United airlines moved closer this
past week to what could be the most serious management-union standoffs since Eastern shut down nearly
thn:e years ago. ,
Years of relative labor peace at the major airlines
were jeopardized as miiiUIIlers insisted that the companies need radical change to compete with lowercost rivals afid ·unions demanded a greater share of
profits.
''Organized labor seems to be regrouping and trying reassert itself more. At -the same time, management is looking at the fundamentals ... saying we
can' t ignore (low-cost competitors} anymore," said

MASON, W.Va. -Quality
homes, authorized builder of Randal Homes Corporation of Piketon
has erected two model homes near
the Pomeroy-Mason· Bridge on
State Route 62 in Mason. ·
,
The business offers homes for
all budgets, from small ranches to
large, two-story Cape Cods and
more, according to Betsy Sisson,
manager.
Buyers can choose their own
cabinets, trim packages, Cllf\Xlt and
wallpaper. Homes are built m controlled environments, brought to
the owners property in two sections, then built on a foundation or
over a basement. The home package includes everything from
porches to sidewallcs as finishing
touches, Sisson said.
Although the homes are brought
in two sections, they are not what
are commonly known as 'double
wides," Sisson added.
·
The model homes, one ranch
and one Cape Cod, can be viewed
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday
from noon to 8 p.m.; Wednesday
from noon to 6 p.m.; Saturday from
10-5 p.m. and Sunday from I to 5
p.m. The business is closed on Fri·
day. For more information call I
(304) 773-500 I.

•

44

48
56
58
60
66

····--

2 Dr. Spo~ &amp;Oupe 1,PIB, 5 Sp. Manual Transnisslon,
Custom Cloth Bu..et Seats, Steel Belted Tires.
GIIAC Fhst Tlmo Bu)llf

111&lt;1/IW'If (If !MIIflld)........ -$400

rom-. Dis&lt;...............-$1292

FIC/ot)'ll&amp;blltl ............... .-1/(100

IIIBti-IIIUIIIII--

AuiD, Air, V~ Power, PIS. P/ll. AMIFM Casse~1 J'.Windows, ·
P/lloor locks, P/llrller Sea~ olh, Cruise, Delay w1per.;, Rear
Window Def'11111'1r, Deslaner Accent Pain~ P/Mtenna,
Alumloom Wlieels, illlafEiectrlc Mlrnn,

815 888.
.: re~t~rr~~=.=~
........ 1111 '1121
KATHLEEN GIERHART

High bowlers
(Winning teams listed ftrst
with ~ints gained)
·Smith Butck (8) vs. Bank One:
Daisy Allen, Smith (523); Helen
Spradling, Bank One (403)
McDonald's (6) vs. II th Frame:
Theresa Silva, McDonald's (519);
Gerrie Toler, lith Frame (472)
Stowaway (8) vs. Toler &amp; Toler
Insurance: Bev Houdashelt, Stowaway (511); Sharon Johnson, Toler
(533)
Main Street Liquor Market (6)
Flair Furniture: Vikki Franklin,
Main Street (521); Nancy Shon,
Aair (528)
, . Pai .
Shoney's (6) vs. Larry _s nung
&amp; Services: Nancy Frazter, Shoney's (469); Kathy Hood, Larry's
(474)
Sparkle Supply (6) vs. Central
Supply: Cathy Caldwell, Sparkle
(506); Dottie Chestnut, Central
(499)
200-game bowlers
Marilyn Browning (216), Daisy
Allen (214), Sharon Johnson (210),
VenitLa Mayo (203), Nancy Short
and Belinda Elliou (both 200).
Other 500 series bowlers
Veniua Mayo (513), Louise
Woodall (508), Sue Holley (502)
and Beverley Casto (501 }.

Gierhart
assumes
URG post

0

ROCK SPRINGS- The Tri-Valley Conference, which now has II
schools under its reign, has made a
slight change in the names of tlie
two divisions.of the conference. ·
League . offipials Tuesday
approv~ .s~ortenmg the ~arne~ 1;0
Ohio Dtvmon and Hocldng Dtvtsion instead of Ohio River Division
and Hocking' River Division
respectively as originally designat-

ed.

No Doc feel.~-

'

The Ohio Divisioo includes Belpre, Meigs, Nelsonville-Yc;d:, Vinton Colinty, and Wellston, , while
the Hoclling Division includes
AJexandc:z, Eastern, Federal Hock·
ing, MlUcr, Southern, ~ Trimble.
TIJia m4rks the fint year for the
diVision)' in the Tii-Villley Conference which now ipcludes II
Schools.
l

Shearson -Lehman Brothers Inc., said of airline managers. "They feel as though they need to make a
stand."
But both sides in the American dispute have
apparently decided that they have more to lose by
Laking a contract they don't want than by striking.
American chairman Robert Crandall has been
preaching that the airline needs to reduce its labor
costs to compete against Southwest, cheap start-up
airlines and carriers that have cut costs in banlcruptcy

coun.

At American's headquarters; the belief is that
Crandall has decided the cost of a night attendant
strike is less than the ~st of capitulation. American
says it needs to improve productivity with more flexible work rules and reduced fli_ght attendant staffmg.
closer to federal go~mment mmimums.
The Association of Professional Flight Au.endants

r•

Jili/11 #I llrJ, . ; hi/11, lfit, ,_Ill
IIU liB 1--lil-1411 • 111-IM •14+11fl• fll-1111
o

---- I ...

--

Taxes, Tags, Title Fe«~ exJJa. RaliaE Included In sale price of new vellic~

- - - - - - · - --- .. -- 4 -

·--- -~-

-·-- .. .

IIIIIIJ •
_,
lllay1:1UII:II
llsled where applicable 'on approved credit'. Not responsible for typograpllical errors.
·
.

-

________,___ . .. ...

- -------- . . .... - -

.(.

__

,.

___""''

. -' ··-··

'

RIO GRANDE - Kathleen B.
Gierhart has been named the Assistant to the President for University
Relations at the University of Rio
Grande and Rio Grande Community College, where she will direct
the institutions' public relations
aod marketing effons.
"The Unive_rsity of Rio Grande
and its Community College are
growing, vital concerns to southeastern Ohio," Ms. Gierhart said.
"Promoting both institutions and its
wide variety of features represents
an exciting challenge."
Ms. Gierhart comes to the ~i­
tion with an extensive background
in public relations and marketing.
She was director of public relations and development for O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens
in !984-87 and director of community support for the Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Heath Services Board of Athens, Hocking
and Vinton counties from !989
until1993.
For her work in the mental
health field, Ms. Gierhart received
three first place natioqal awards
from the National AssQCiation Of
Mental Health Information Officers
in 1992 in the categories of events ·
and audio-visuals.
She won six regional and
national awards in print and audio
visuals from the sarile organization
between 1989 and 1991. She has
also been a training consulLant for
the federally-funded Center for
Substance Abuse Prevention Com·
munications Team in Washington,
D.C., served as secretary of the
National Association of Information Officers and has been pub·
lished as a free-lance writer in The
Columbus Dispatch.
Ms. Gierhart and her family
reside in Athens.

.,

says the situation is not nearly as dire as Crandall
would have everyone believe, pointing to the $165
million American earned in the spring and sullllli&lt;C
quarterS. The company's pilots have said that if managers want cost improvements, they could schedule.
flights more efficiently to avoid cosdy congestion at
airports.
At United, managers repealed lhis past week that
they would sell assets and possibly break the airline
into separate companies to reduce costs of flying
short routes. The reorganization plans were what
prompted the company's unions to offer wage and
work rule concesssions for a controUing Sl8ke in the
airline.
Without a buyout, the unions have made clear that
manaRement-labor relations at" United would be
entering one of their most contentious periods ever.

Psychology professional
joins Holzer Clinic staff

Quality Homes
opens model
houses in Mason

. . . . . . . . ,.j

TVC chang~s
division names

November 14, 1983

airline analyst Daniel Kasper or Harbridge House
consultants m BaSIOn.
Tile new resolve oo both sides is a shift from the
years immediately following the Eastern Airlines
shutdown, when even uttering the word "strike" was
taboo. The fear was that passengers, particularly
high-fare paying business travelers, would be concerned about safety and reliability and avoid an airline-with labor trouble.
The likelihood of a flight attendant stiike at American Airlines grew in the past week and the union
inoved up its strilce deadli~ to this coming Thursday. United's managers retterated that they would
sell assets and might break the company into several
pieceS, which could conceivably be non-union, if the
union-led buyout effort fails.
"It's not arrogance or cockiness, but they are
more deSperate," Helane Becker, airline analyst at

MODEL HOUSE ,-.- Betsy Sisson, manager
or Quality Homes, Rt. 62, Mason, W.Va., stands
in l'ronl or the Cape Cod home on display at the

business location. Also open ror viewing is a
smaller ranch bouse. The business offers homes
ror all budget sizes.

Bob Evan_s Farms to help
raise funds
for
project
..
-

L
28
28
30
32
38
40

Section D

Labor, managenient hostility grows at big airlines

BILL DICKEY

Wednesday Night
Pinsplitters

1rimts - ~ttdinel

COLUMBUS • Bob Evans
Farms recently announced its commitment to raise funds for the
restoration of the stained glass
Great Seal of Ohio in the State
Capitol rotunda. The company will
join forces with elemenLary schools
around Ohio to iwplement "Preserving Ohio's Past for the Future,"
an educational and fund-raising
campaign.
More than 100 Bob Evans
ResLaurants in Ohio will work with
fourth-grade students around the
s we to raise the $25,000 needed
for the restoration. All funds raised
during the campaign will be donated to the Great Seal of Ohio program.
"Student's around Ohio can join
together to make history," said Dan
Evans, chief executive officer,
chairman of the board, Bob Evans
Farms. "Not only will they learn
about the history of the Great Seal
of Ohio, they will also beeom~ a
part of our Slate's history and will

'

help preserve our state's past for
furure generations. Each participating student will be recognized for
his or her efforts in the campaign. •
The Great Seal of Ohio is an
offlcjAI state symbol with a sunrise
representing the sunrise over
Mount Logan; a bundle of wheat
representing Ohio farming; and a
bundle of 17 artows showing that
Ohio was the 17th state admitted to
·· the United States. The seal will be
restored in colorful slained glass in
the skylight of the Capitol rotunda
by 19%.
The company is providin~ educational and fund-raising materials
to fourth-grade teachers in Ohio.
The educational materials, which
can be used throughout the school
year, include art, history, math and
English learning activities; suggestions for in-class visitors; ideas for
related field trips; and insti'uctions
ror raising funds during the campaign. Fund-raising effons will be
conducted around the state in

March 1994.

Bob Evans Farms will also provide incentives ror school and student participation and will award
prizes to classes based on participation and funds raised. "This program can extend learning about the
history of the seal and the history
or the state of Ohio outside the
classroom," said Evans. "We have
provided suggestions for additional
activities and will award field trips
as part of the incentive to participate."
For more information about participating in the educational or
fund-raising portions of "Preserving Ohio's Past for the Future,"
co ntact Tammy Roberts, public
relations manager, Bob Evans
Farms, 1-800-272-7675, ext. 4954 .
Bob Evans Farms produces a variety of food products in 26 states
and the· District of Columbia and
operate s 294 rcstauranos in 19
states.

GALLIPOLIS - Richard R.
"Rick" Boone, Ph .D., who was
born and raised in Gallipolis ,
recently joined the Holzer Clinic
Medical Staff. His association adds
mental health services to the Clinic's wide array of specialties.
Boone, who holds a Doctor of
Philosophy 'degree, will serve as a
Psychology Fellow at Holzer Clin·
ic, leading to his Ohio Licensure as
a Psychologist. He will be under
the supervision of Clinical Psychologist, Dr. James E. Althof.
Dr. Boone will be seeing
patients in the Rehabilitation Center and in the Family Practice
Depanment. He will also be seeing
patients in consultation with the
attending physician at the .Holzer
Medical
Center.
"We are very pleased to have
Riel&lt; join the staff," said Dr. J.
Craig Strafford, Clinic President.
"He has a wide range of experience
in Psychology and we need his
expertise to help us with problems
that call for more than medicine.
"We are also pleased that Dr.
Jim Althof will be the preceptor
for Rick." continued Dr. Strafford.
"Dr. Althof is an excellent Psychologist who will provide Rick with a
positive working relationship."
Althof and Associates will also
provide overflow psychological
services for Dr. Boone's depanment

Boone graduated from Gallia
Academy High Schoor in 1972.
While there, he was involved in a
wide range or activities, including
musical drama, service clubs,
scholarship clubs and varsity baseball and basketball.
Following high school. Boone
enrolled at Ohio University,
Athens.

DR. RICHARD BOONE
He graduated Summa Cum
Laude in 1977, with high honors in
Psychology.
From 1978 to 1982, he did graduate work in Oinical Psychology at
the University of Alabama.
Boone was a Medical Service
Corps offlCtr on active duty in the
U.S. Navy from 1982 to 1990. During his Naval career, he served an
Internship in Clinical Psychology
at the Naval Hospital, Bethesda,
MD. Currently, he is an active
Reserve officer in the U.S. Navy,
holding the rank or Lt. Commander.
After release from active duty,
Boone pursued his doctorate in
Psychology. By 1993, he had
received both his Master of Arts
degree and his Ph.D. in Clinical
Psychology from the Rosemead
School of Psychology, La Mirada,
CA. The Rosemead program places
special emphasis on the integration
of psychology with religious and
spiritual concerns.
He is married to the former
Maria Ann Hanson, also from Gallipolis. They have three children:
Ryan Eliot, 11; William Tyler, 8;
and Olivia Nicole, 2. They reside in
Gallipolis.

Long joins staff of law firm
CIRCLEVILLE - Attorney Jan Ohio Senate where he represents
Michael Long recently joined the Pickaway, Ross, Scioto, Lawrence,
law form of Patrick K. Greene and Vinton, Jackson, Gallia, and Meigs
Counties. Elected in 1986, Senator
Co., L.P.A.
The law f mn has offices located Long serves on the Senate Judiciaat 117 Island Road. Circleville, and ry Commiuee, which reviews legis11 East Washington Stree~ Athens. lation having an effect on Ohio's
Mr. Long has been practicing law legal system.
While Mr. Greene's practice pri·
for 14 years. Mr. Long has served
as assistant prosecutor for Pick- marily related to Workers' Comaway County and Circleville. He pensation, Social Security Disabilihas also served as the legal repre- ty, and Americans With Disabilisentative for the villages of South ties complaints, Mr. Long' s pracBloomfield and Commercial Point. tice will be primarily devoted to
probate and personal injury matOhio.
Mr. Lonp, is a member of the ters.

Evans Outdoor Education Center adds Burley Tobacco Market
staff to increase educational programs .. week to begin Nov. 22
•

JACKSON - Canter's Cave 4-H .
Camp Inc. recently hired a marketing director to esLablish new eduCational programs, and market the
camp to new audiences. The center
has also acquired an intern student
from the University of Rio Grande
to assist in the new operations.
Lee Henderson, the new marketing director, brings his experience
as a camp coordinator from Camp
Palmer in Fayette, OH., and an
educational Instructor at The
Adventure Education Center in
Columbus to help initiate educational new programs. Mr. Henderson is a 1993 graduate or the o;tio

State University with a Bachelor of
Ans in Philosophy.
Some or the new programs that
Henderson will be offering to
routh and adult groups is a team
mitiative course. Team initiatives
are a set or physical problem solving activities designed to help a
group of people to work together
and communtcate. In addition to
this program we will be offering a
high ropes course beginning in the
spring. A high ropes course is a
physical obstacle course located in
trees approximately thirty feet orr
the ground. This education pro-

gram teaches individual s and
groups confidence. concentration,

and the power of positive mental
thinking.
For more information call Canter's Cave at (614) 286-4058.
Todd Reigle will assist Henderson, and will be responsible for
publishing brochures and other
public relations activities to help
market the center. Reigl e is a
senior majoring in communica:.

tions, with a concentration in public relations. This is the fust intern·
ship between the Eli&lt;abeth L
Evans Outdoor Education Center
and the University of Rio Grande.

•
group
Wiseman to head msurance
COLUMBUS- Independent
insurance agent Thomas E. Wiseman of Gallipolis was installed as
presif:lent of the Independent Insurance ,4-gents or Ohio (DAO} dyiing
ceremonies at the associatiOn's
96th annual convention recendy in
Cleveland.
Mr. Wiseman, president of the
Wiseman Agency lix:., 451 Second
Ave., GalliPOlis, previously served
as vice president, ireasun:r and as a
member of IIAO's board or
trustees for three years.
While serving on the board, he
also SC!'Ved as vice c~ of the
Ohio Agents Political Action Committee and as a member of lbe)..eg·
islative Committee. In addition, he
is active as a legislative ambas·
sador to the Ohio Legislature and
to the U.S. Congress.

;

In 1990, he received the association's Young Charger Award as
Ohio's outstanding young agent.
Mr. Wiseman is a past president
of the Gallipolis RoLary Club and
The Gallia County Chamber of
ColiUDerce.
In addition, he is currently serving as a. director of The Ohio Valley Bank, Holzer Vanguard, Inc.,
Rm Grande Corporation, Community Improvement Corporation and
is a member of The University of
Rio Grande's E(llerson E. Evans
School of Bu~iness Advisory

Board.
IIAO is one of the nation's
largest trade associations for independent insurance agen'ts in the
United States, representing 9,000
insurance men and women across
the Ohio.

By EDWARD VOLLRORN
GALLIPOLIS - Time is rapidly
approaching for the Burley Tobacco Market to open (week of
November 22) . The local ASCS
office mailed marketing cards on
November 5. If you have not
received your marketing card, call
the ASCS office immediately .

Farm Flashes
Black Shank disease is becoming an increasing concern each year
in Gallia County. Producers should
bum the stallcs and other stripping
room trash from fields when: Black
Shank exists. If burning is not possible, put extra materials back onto
the field from which it originated.
There is a lot of guessing about
prices for the 1993 Burley Tobacco
Crop. Many uncertain sit uations
exist. The average for all grades in
suppon price will be an increase of
3.4 cents per pound. A total of 4.5
cents per pound will be collected
for the no-net cost fund, 3.5 cents
wiU be collected from the purchaser, and I cent rrom the seller. That
money is used to run the cooperative (Pool} and cover any losses for
Tobacco purchased through the
price support system. Industry officials are doing a lot of talkmg
about the marketing of high mois. tun: Tobacco. This could very well
be the year to avoid marketing
uwet" Tobacco.

THOMAS WISEMAN

Feeder calf prices are likely to
be pressured lower bY. losses on

cattle currently bemg sold. escalating fe ed prices and the onset of
winter. The 400-500 steer calves at
Oklahoma City lost more than $16
per hundred in sale price last week,
while the heavier feeder cattle
made significant price gains.
Three groups of steer calves
weighing around a 450 pound average sold for $91 per hundred at the
November 3 Graded Cao.le Sale at
Hillsboro Producers. Another
group of steers weighing an aver-·
age 652 pounds sold for $88.50 per
hundred. The average fer 380 graded steers weighing 530 pounds was
$78.67 per hundred. Some 366
heifers weighing an average 494
pounds sold for an average $71.83
per hundred.
The Gallia County Cattlemen's
Association has obtained a porlable
cattle working chute with two gate
panels. The basic system was won
by the local Association as a result
of membership gain with the Ohio
Cattlemen last spring.
Some local association funds
were added to upgrade to a portable
system. The chute is available on a
rental agreement The rental rate is
$20 for members and $25 ror nonmembers. A $10 deposit will be
collected- and an additional charge
or $5 per day will be collected if
not returned within rbree days from
pick up time. If you would like to
schedule usage please call 4467007.
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County's extensloll agent, agriculture.

'

t

�.

Poftleroy-&amp;lddleport-Galllpolls, 0H Point Pleasant, wv

November 14, 1893

November 14, 1993

Grizzlies centerpiece of $50 million tourist attraction
WEST YELLOWSTONE
Mom. (AI')- Klnlilhna, a 3si
pound Alatb ~ut!t'.11, iJ in lbe
middle of a SSO mill ' dcbale.

TIIe:l-YQ";o!c!Jriu.lyMJnear!Y Jbol b l1lidint prbqc dumps
111 AJuta. Today, be's romping
~ a ~at:re compound in lhc
Grizzly Dittovay Centtr here w1th
Toby, a 7()().powld pallrllU from a

pme farm, and two 180-pound
grizz.Jy cuhl, Mu and Moritz.
Ouuicle the compound, those
deve"'"nJthe SSO minion IDUrist
auracuon ~ •guing wilh environmentallsll and the government over
whedla il'a proper to use grizzlies
- listed u threatened under the
· Endaasered ~pecies Act - in a
clcrifaedroadside zoo.
Developer Lewi s Robinson
hopea 10 display up 10 a dozen grizzlica :u lbe main drawing card for
his 87-acre tourist park at the west
entrance 10 Yellowstone National

Part.
He bad planned to stock his center wilh YellowSIOIJe gri1.zlies who
got in10 trouble by raiding campl ites or garbage dumps or otherwise posing a threat 10 human~ .
Such bears now are often killed.

But die U.S. 1"1111 llld W'lldlife
Service rdllled 10 Ia
play lfizzlieJ taken aaywllere ia
the lower 48 Jlates. The IJCIICY
said lbe pizzly park'sllaluJ u a
ror-p-olit craerpruc and'its plan 10
neuaer its beln would violare fed·
eral regulaliool covering grizzlies
liat«&lt; under the EndanJered
Species Act.
EnvironmentaliJII agm:d, argoin&amp; that the bean are bc~ter off
dead than spendinJ their lives
behind f - for lbe amusement or
IOtlrists who pay $6.50 each for a
look.
Robinson "is claiming 10 be
saving and acting ill tile best inaerests of grizzly bears. But once a
bear iJ relliOYed from lhe wild and
placc4 in the center's population,
that bear is as good as dead,"
according 10 Dave Gaillard. coordinator of a pizzly project supponcd
by a coaluion of environmental

.._dis-

groups.

Robinson said without his facili1y - and a public ouu:ry in AlaJka
- Kanlishna would have been
lcilled. The bear developed a 1aste
for garbage inDenali Nauonal Part
and used up rus chances to repent

To fmd more bean RD6iDsoo
now iJ lcriing 10 ~ llld c..acia: llleit lrizzlia .-e noc rovcml
by lhe fedcnJ ~q~~late But be
said_ he a1Jo _willlipnlhe wildliie
rervice'a denial.
.
"The next bear !bey decide 10
lriJJ aa~. il we fmd OUI, we'D
appeal 10 every political force
known 10 man, and tile pubiK: as
weD," he aaid.
Robinsoo's bears are neutered
and c:aditioold 10 aaswec a dimer
beD for food. They cavort before a
constant now of camera-lOti ng

live iD Yellowstone md lbe surrouadia&amp; areas or Monlaoa,
Wyomillg and Idaho. Most of lhe
rest inhabit Moalllla'J Bob Marsb~l! ~ilclem~ss are:a aad lbe
ad~~mg G~aq-. Nanonal Part.
Grizzlies aiJo In~: m pans or oonhem Idaho_and Washing100 sa&amp;.
Gnzzhes bave a teen sense or
smeU. and males pocmtially coold
be drawn for mile$ 10 a female in
beat. Environmental groups said
lhe CCDI.I:r could attract olber bears
that might become habituated 10
lhe ~ aad ultimaldy bave to be
Robinson and lbe Montana FJ.Sh,
Wildli(e and Paries Department say
spraying females takes care of lhal
concern. A 9,000-volt electric
fence also deters wild visitors.
Tbe first time Kantishna
IOUChed lbe fence inside his babitat.
lhe jolt knocked him 10 his knees,
Fad said. He now gives lbe shiny
cable a wide benh.
Kantishna, neutered and
declawed, doesn' t act li1ce he would
rather be dead. He COQis off in a
pool of running water and scatten
gallons of droplets ill a playful dash
10 roughhouse with Toby.
"They seem happy, content,"
said Jim Reid as be snapped pic·
lures through a 300 mm lens. An
18-foot-deep dry moat and the
electric fence separated him from
lhe frolicking grizzlies.
Reid, a drugstore manager from
Boise, Idaho. frequently visits Yellowstone: 10 photograph wildlife. If
the alternative for the grizzlies is
death, he said, he prefers seeing
problem bears in Robinson's babi-

Kantisbna, Toby. Max and
Moritt aU wece declawcd IDI c:astraled before bccomi11g tourist
allraelions. Ally fl'll!aJcs dial might
find lheir way 10 lhe CCIIter also
will be decfawcd IIIII ..-Jed
'"These arc safety considcralions for the bears," said Gale
Ford. lhe cenlier's veterinarian and
a formec dirc:cfor orlbe AWb Zoo
Anclaorage. "They are beuerbehaved bears."
It's esrimaled lherc are fewer
tban 1,000 Jrizzly bears in the
lower 48 11aJCS; some 250 of lbem

in

U. S. Marines stormed beaches of
Tarawa 50 years ago this month
By SID MOODY
,•
A.P Nnnf'eatures Writer
:
It was scarcely big~er than a
• golf course, this coral JJlet called
Delio.
But it waa the flfst of a series of
•
• bloody steppin~'IOnes acron the
• Central Paciftc for the United
: States rowan! Japan, steps in World
: War II that were 10 make names
like Saipan, Peleliu, lwo Jima and
Okinawa hallowed names.
The Marine landing on Tarawa.
4
the belaer-remember«&lt; name of lbe
• aiOII of which Betio was a part. on
: No•. 20, 1943, was a harbinger of
• most of what was 10 come. Short.
~ furiou ' fighting on i! lands too
small for subtlety ending in tri1
umph for lbe Americans and anni• hilation or mau suicide for the·
,. Japanese garrisons.
~
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, com• mander of the Southwest Pacific
Z Command, deplored the suaighl·
; ahead, poinlblank lactics of the
w Marines as heedlclaly wasteful of
; lives. (His American and Au•!!. ualian army ~· howe•er. lost
more men clearmg eastern New
Guinea than the Marines aad

with 25 eight-inch coaslal JUDI Marines ashore, Shoup radioed:
captured from 1be Briti$11 al Smga- "We need help. Situation bad.''
pore. They had buried 14 laakl ill
Desuoycrs risked grounding 10
the sand and built 100 bloddlouses, steam as close as they dar«! to
some with concrete walls 8 feel lhcll -the~efendcrs. Near Shoup,
lhicl:. Then there were lbe lidca.
Time magazine correspondent t.aiS.
Tarawa is one of those rare Roben Sherrod saw an enemy solspots oh lhc planet with "dodg- dier hit by a flarnclhrower.
ing" tides with unpredictable
"The Jap flared up like a piece
movements on a roughly 24-hour of celluloid. He - dead instantly,
cycle - one high aad one low a but lhe bullets in hiJ cantidie belt
day. S incc lbc: attack was coming ellplodcd Cor a fuU 60 ltJCOIIdi after
across a half-mile reef, timing lhe he bad been charred 10 nothingtide was critical. Maj •. F.L.G. Hol- ness.••
land, a New Zealander who bad
By dusk, S,OOO Marines were
Jived on Tarawa 15 years, warned holding 1,000 yards of beach ACROSS
the Americans there w:u only 3 delpite I.SOO dead and woWidcd.
1 HMI-leNBhoe
feet over lhe reef at low tide. "You Some artillery bad been landed, as
7 Sharp pains
won't be able 10 cross." The Hig- weD as blood plasma.
12 Froci&lt;
ginalanding craft drew 4 feet.
17 Mature
That night Japanese snip~rs
The planners of the invasion, sneaked out 10 lhe wrecked amph21 Pact
22 ''The - Escape''
Operation Galvanic, predicted lbere
uacs 10 fll'C at lhe Marines from the
23 Demise
would be S feet on D- Day. But the ~ with their own machine guns.
24 Aetor Jack night before, 14-year-old Rota
During the first night the
25 Thr-toed sloth
Onorio paddled his canoe out to the Marines held lbeir fire lest they
28 on- Twist word
huge Oeet of lhrec .battleships, five give away tlleir positions. The next
28 Pertaining to
escon carrie!S, 26 cruisers and momins more Marines waded in
the chaelc
destroyers and I26 transports car- lhrough lbe hellfue. "Within live
30 Cheracterlatlca
rying 18,000 Marines of the Sec- minutes I saw six men killed,"
32 Bergman 10
ond Division. He told the Ameri- Sherrod noted. ''I can count at least
33 Ritacans lbe reef would be impassable a hundr«&lt; Marines lying on the
35
Saucy
tomorrow . Nevertheless, the nats."
0
37
Geraldine and
argued Marines were coming.
Bloated bodies, violently mutiLaWanda
LandinJ on hostile shores under lated by gunfire, lay at water's
: - in vain - lhal America's naval
39
Stalk
~ aad air ltrength be JlOIIfCd into his . fire was as second nature to lhe
edge, providing some of the
40 Individual
"'' offensive up the New Guinea coast, U.S. Marine Corps as leather grimmest photographs of World
41 Derived from
on to the Philippines and lhcncc 10 necks. Two hundred Marines
War II. But the Marines kept com&lt;43 Mountain ash
stonned Fon Montague in Nassau
ing in ill lbe tide rose. Tanks were
""...;.
Iapan.
.
.
•
fi h . '
45
Denominations
•
The JntcrservJcc 10 tg tmg .or Harbor in the Bahamas during lhe ashore. Marines cut the island in
47
TV's
McMahon
- limited men and materiel - wilh American Revolution. During lhe two, dodging among the pillboxes
48 Declare
,.. the war in Europe having priority 1920s and '30s, Marines (there and stumps of shattered pa!m trees.
49 Takes one'a part
, - JorDelimea Jell bystanden won- were only about 3.50 officers and Shoup 10 fleet: ''We're winning."
52 Olatrlct In
' . dering who the real enemy was, lhe 10,000 enlisted men in the whol~
Germany
A bulldozer driver, fending off
• · Axis or U.S. JCDCrall aad admiraiJ service) were continually landing bullets
MCIUIIfled
with
his
blade,
scooped
- down the hall. Fortunately, the in trouble spots in lhe Caribbean 10 sand against the entrance of
56 Wire nalla
: Pacifu: w:u big enough 10 accom- safeguard American interests.
57 lnVII'It
bunker,
Shibasaki's
concrete
"If the BaUie of Waterloo was
~,; modale far1e egoJ and jealousies
59 Name of 12 popes
Marinea
pbured
ps_olinc
down
lhe
won on the playing fields of Eton, air vents, then 111 it, incinerating
""'and traditions.
81 Humble
": Whatever
its
merits, the Japanese bases of lhe Pacific 300 Japanese.
82 Post
t-facArlhur's llllteJY new in the were caplur«&lt; on lbe beaches of the
83 Remainder
After three days, the surviving
:. race or lhe Navy brass and their Caribbean where the problems Japanese
84
Concerning
at the end of the island
• .. commander, Adm. Ernest J. King, involved were worked out in slaged a Banzai charge. Crying
86 Fort -, N.J.
-:- : who were damned if their new fast Marine maneu•ers," wrote Gen. "Japanese drink Marines' blood!"
67 Small rug
carriefllnd bauJcships would serve Holland M. "Howlin' Mad" they stormed Lt. Norman K.
88 "The - Pebblos"
. under an Army acncral. Moreover, Smith, who led the Tarawa Thomas's Company B.
89 TV' I Maude: lnlts.
71 Pismire
• • tliey argued, by opening a second Marines.
killing lbel!l -u fast as
72 Merganser
Marine Corps doctrine became a they"We're
·: Cront in the Pacific the Japanese
come at us, bul we can't hold
74 Oregon's capital
~ , would be 'whipsawed by alternating landing manual in 1934 that was
longer. We need reinforce76 Bod/ of water
:·:American atllieb and kept off bal· holy writ durins lhe Pacific War. much
he radioed Maj. Bill Jones
ments,"
n s1n ln"'nld'dle \
- anee and out or positJon . This But Tarawa taugnt some murderous of the Sixth Marine Regiment.
78 Hebrew letter
:- turned outiO be lhe ease.
lessons of its own.
"We
haven't
got
them
10
send
79 "Candid
- When Marines landed on
Adm. Richmond KellY. Turner, 10 you. You've g0110 hold," Jones
Camera"
, • Bouganville in lhe Solomon Islands who had the nickname 'Terrible replied.
,.. iln Nov. I, 1943, the Japanese nect Turner," was in charge of gelling
resulta
They did. Three hundred
8t Decimal base
_ ' burriod there fearing an auaclc on the landing force organized and Japanese
lay dead before lhem.
82 Apportion
- their major base at Rabaul. Thus ashore . Then Smith, "the only
Offshore,
Japanese
submarine
1
83 Quote
there waa only a land garrison to Marine general who could shout 7S torpedoed lhe U.S. escort canier
84 Ardor
- ~fend Tarawa, 1.291 miles to the
louder than any admiral," was 10 Lipscombe Bay, which explod«&lt;
85 Speck
.-.east, three weeki later.
take over. This clamorous duo was spectaCularly before sinking with
87 Snakos
~: 1be existence of parallel offen- to pair in repeated landings to the loas of 600 sailon.
89 Egret
;,.;~ivea •lw tolvcd the problem of come. But this time they had only
On Makin, where operations
10
Retreat
""flandlinJ MacArlhur' s hero slatus century-old charts and interviews were also hampered by the low
92
Fate
,..._.,1111 the American public and lhe with ronner residents to steer by. tide, lhe Annr, took the island after
;~,:...,my•• and Navy's unwillingness And lhe tide was indeed ouL
three days. ' The trool" were jit· .
hive one servtcc command the
On Malcin (MUG-rin), 99 miles tery and stayed jittery,' said Turnto the north, 6, 700 men of the er, auributing this to poor off"tcer·
~!Qther.
.
.
"" "The e&amp;Uibltthmenl or lhe two Army 's 27th Division landed, ing, further evidence of mutual
:::·dlalm and two route1 of advance opposed by about 800 mosdy labor mistrust, even disdain, between the
r.::in the P~elfle neatly solved the troops. To lhe south the U.S." war· services.
.:hraucratlc and public relations ships blasted Tarawa for 2 1/2
By the afternoon of the third
'"'ProblemJ," wrote war historian hours. "It seemed like no living
1j Ronald H. Spector in " Eagle soul could be on lhat island," said day, 7S houn and 4S minutes afaer
it began, the battle of Tarawa was
A~lllbe Sun."
Navy Capt Charles J. Moore, chief over. Only one Japanese officer
;
Euentlllly what the U.S. strat.c· of staff to Adm. Raymond Spru16 enlisted men survived;
: IY wu in Adm. Chester Nimitz's ance. overall invasion commander. and
1,027 Marines had been killed.
1 cheater wat 10 1ecure successive
"There aren't .50 Japs alive."
Many of lhcir bodles washed 10 sea
: ltlandJ and fixed aircraft carriers
The Marines in their new or were buried under the sands of
wilhln bomblnB ranJe of lhe next amphibious armored amphtraes batde. For years, parts of skeletons
1 island 10 be lnvadcd,lhus leapfrog- found out otherwise as they of
the fallen would surface. Some
l JinJin about 500· mlle ju.mp_s . crunched over the unexpectedly probably bir. buried under the f!!ll·
• ·MICArthur used similar tacucs 1n shallow reef at 4 mph. Eleven of ways speedily built by the Seabees
' New Guinea. TheiCI moves were the machines made the shallows in preparation for lhe next step·
,accompanied by ever-increasing on Iy 10 be destroyed by monar fire. pingsrone, Kwajalein and Eniwetok
I flumbefl of CIITI«&lt;, batdeshipSand
The rainbow tropical waters turned
'
- land·based bombcra which were red from the blood of Marines and in the Marshall Islands. ·
Smith IOIIml Delio after 1be bat.
• llldn1 comlllllld of the sea and &amp;!r dead fish.
Col. David M. Shoup, a future tle. "I passed boys who looked
,;;ftorn !he J~P~· just as the arch•' teet of Pearl lflrbor, Adm. lsoroku commandant of lhe Corps, made it older than their falhm. It waa lbe
ashore and set up a headquarters of most com~laely defcndell island I
Jiaman1010, had forecast.
. Tll'lwa ('1'AR-awa) was an atoll a son against !he wall of a Japanese ever saw.'
of 25 illolt In the Gilbert Islands fori. After 90 minutes, as the
near tbe Equator, 2,081 miles Marines ehmg 10 a 20-foot sbip of
Tarawa had bceri instructive.
1outh west of Pearl Harbor. Its beach In the lee of a coconut loa Noxt lime. inltcld of
flat
1,500 defenders, rirst· rank seawall, Shoup· radioed for "all llljector)i at lhe walls of boxcs,
,f lllf)SMie navr, soldiers, were based possible su~''
the Navy. would lob she Ia 10 hit
"It was like being in lhe middle lbelr more vulnel'lble roofs from
on the 2 1/2-by· 1/2-mile islet of
; 8etlo (BAY ·S'b;~~~ and led by of a pool lablc without pockets," above. Beller 111dios 10 withstand
" Adm. Kcijf ""'
. He boasted recalled one of men in the first the shock of batde and salt water
hit Coree could "wllhstand assault waves.
would be developed. More landing
Three hours later, with casual- craft were needed and the pace of
by 1 million men for 100 years."
.Japanese had armed Betio ties at 20 percent and only 1,500 lhe landing assault quiclrencd.

I

3
..

i

~nalini:~=.ff:':J:'ur

Do not avoid
a void
By Plillllp Alder
ODce you bave uncovered a good
trump fit. which do you prefer: alialietoo opposite the ace or • llagleton
opposite a king-queen boldioa? Ril!lt
- the former, because !here are DO
•m•
loaen. We say tbat those bands
well. Yet point-count addicts tbiDk tbe
latter 11 better because they bave an
extra blgb-eard polal.
H.ands tbat fit well wUI uauaDy aen·
erate more tricks tban tbe polat..:oun~
suuests.
foday's North-South bands fit exceptlonally well, because !he diamond
void is opposite only low diamonds.
But although N~rlb-Soulb bid beauti·

,'::,l

z;

BULLETIN BOA.·R.D
I

•'

. i
PAYING RESPECTS- Veteran Ron Turner sinks a Vietnam
Veterans flag into !be ground next to his uncle's grave at GreeD·
lawn Cemetery in Columbus Thursday. Turner went to the ceme- 1
lery to visit tbe grave and in the memory of his brother who is still
missing in action in Vietnam. (AP)
•

94 Tr8JUIIjr95 Father or mother
96 Make Into law
97 Allgel1111 glove
99 Old name lor
Tokyo
100 Unlock
101 B8Cl&lt; of nec:1&lt;
102 - Tim
103 DIVIng bird
105 Prlllll about

DOWN

1 Kind Of party
2 Solo
3 Neon symbOl
4Hoov.5 AbOve and
touching
6 MUik:al
Instruments
7Greveel0
8 Umb
9 Kind 01 tide
tO Festive occaaions
1t Pllllorma
12 DeVIto 10
13 Soak, u nax
14 Hearing organs
15 Declered
16 Rec:otled
11 Legal matter
18 Negative prefix
19 Ached
20 Smoldering lire
remains
27 God of love
29 Makes
acceptable
31 Selleck TV rote:

..-cJngly

101 Martin ID
109 Parisian Mason
110 Warble
111 Meara
niiiiiMIIkes
113 Agile
114 Simian
115 "-,the People"
118 Sharpen
117 Alderman: abbr.
118 Church bench
120 Tellurlum symbol
121 Mine antrance
122 Waistband
123 Fashion magazine
124 Rip
128 Tell
128 Baker's product
130 Sarcasm
132 Let fall
134 Ranta
135 Jump
136 Exist
137 - hyssop
139 "- Rl-"
141 Nickel symbol
142 Suitable
143 Pr81S8Bior
payment
145 Fed the kitty
147 Implement
149 Night bird
152 Mother
153 Harbinger
155 AI and Tipper
157 Clayey earth
159 Moon of Jupiter
160 Ireland
182 B&lt;lnd
t &amp;4 Railed sur1aces
on ruga
168 Mixes, as dough
188 Apothecary's
"weight
169 Abounds
170 Chairs
171 To come to one's

lnlta.

34 Unpretentious
36 Snare
38 Brook
40 Elliptical
42 Accomplishment
4-4- bond
46 Lat It stand
48Dry
49 Fragment
50 "Goodnight"
girl
51"- Elaewhere"
53 Regrets
55 KO•IICII 10
56 Wedding ring
58 Colltly fur
80 Chair
82 Horae's neck·hair
66 Moray
88 Drunkards
69 - Roug4t, La.
70 Representative
72 Sting
73 Marriage
75 Meadow
78 Individuals
77 Alluring woman
79Sil60Biaclcened

82 Repaint
83 GoddMS 01
wgetatiOn
84 Public It~
86 Smail child
86 Expire

Revival begins Nov. 15
at Mercerville
Missionary Baptist
Church with
Curtis Sheets 7:30 pm

89 Joyow

Renovate
91 Growing out 01
93 Wandering

•

Slow &amp; easy better than cold turkey

Beauti · Control Image
Consultants would like
to thank everyone, who
attended our 1st annual
Open·House, and made
it such a huge success.
Thank you
BobbiHood

11m11111y
95 More Indigent

97 Child's fllvortte
word
98 Slater
102 Shade
104 Retained
106 Chooee
107 Malice
108 Apportions
110 Traded lor money
111 "Pretty Maida

·,

---Row''

112 "The Bad -"
114.Mualc: slowly
118 Pile
117-leacue
119 Genial; grateful
121 Wolfhound
122 Whip
123 Diphthong

LAYNE FURNITURE
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED FROM

.

interview. Uf smokers who had
never quit for a week, only 10 percent bad quit by the time of the seC·
ond interview.
.
.
Likewise, 18 percent of smokers
wbo said they lit up fewer than I5
cigarettes a day had quit by the
time of the second interview. Only
8 percent of pack-a-day smokets
ltad quit, and only 5 percent of
heavier smokers.
·
Those who said they waited 30
minutes or longer 10 bave their first
cigarette after waking utf were also
more likely to quit than the others.
"If you can't have a shower
before youf first cigarette in the
morning.- you're in real trouble.''
Pierce said.

REJOICING LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
CRAFT FAIR
Rejoicing Ute Church
500 N. Second Ave-Middleport
Fri. &amp; Sat. , November 19 &amp; 20
llme: 10-5 Some Table Space
Available Contact: Carolyn Riggs
614·742·3181

125 - ~

Gospel Sing
Mina Chapel
Nov. 20, 1993 7:30p.m.
Grubb Family Singers
Sandy Keyser
Proceeds to Building Fund

'450 TO '1195
FREE DELIVERY
MON. THRU SAT. 9-5 PH. 448·0322
3 MILES OUT BULAVILLE PIKE

127 Teutontc deity
t28 Found lault with
129 Mand
130 Lawmaking body
131 Bare legally
133 Minnesota Fats
game
136 Exploded
136 Uncanny
140Cozy-·
1&lt;43 Down: prefix
14-4 Wild plum
146 Oacar-Renta
148 Path
150 Broad
151 Defeat
153 Dr- border
154 Mr. DeLuhle
156 "Desk_ ..
158 Malee
181 Sun god
183 Swayze 10
165 Spielberg 10
167 Equally

Gallipolis Emblem Club #199
Third Annual
Fashion Show
Sunday November 14th
'2 pm til4 pm
Elks Lodge Profits going to
the Senior Citizens Meals on
Wheels Program.
Adm . Adults $2.50
6-12$1.50
Includes Desert Buffet

Gallia County Health Dept.
offers
Free Childhood immunizations
Tuesday
Vinton Village Hall 9:30-11 :30
Gallia Met. Apts 1:00-3:00
Courthouse Lobby 4:00-6:00
Wednesday
U. of Rio Grande Child Care
8:30-11 :30
Rio Grande Estates-1:00-3:00
'

Just in Time
for
Thanksgiving
Great Savings on
Keller
Dining room groups
(Especially Cherry)
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furniture
955 2nd Ave. Gallipolis
446-1171
Victory Baptist Church would
like to apologize to the
families of the loved ones
buried inour cemetary lor the
flowers that were removed.
Please forgive
Sincerely
Victory Baptist Church
Linda's Hair Loft
announces new employee
Michelle Tripplet
New Hours

Mon. a-s:oo
Sat. 8·5:00
Tues-Fri. 8-8:00 pm

•

Call 446·2342
or 992·2156 .
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page C-3
I

A key featurl!' of the program
was repeated follow-up calls from
counselors. Without such followup, "dociOrs' advice is useless,"
Pierce said.
Pierce also found lhal restriction
of smoking at home and in the
workplace was a factor conbibuting 10 successful quitting - when
combined wilh assistance li1ce lhat
in lhe California no-smoking pro·
gram.
David Abrams of Brown Uni·
versity in Providence, R.I., an
authority on smoking cessation,
praised Pierce's work, saying it
confirms an emerging view that
quitting is often a gradual process.
"You 've got 10 see a slip or a
relapse as a learning process, rather
than a failure," Abrams said.
studyinprovides
a new view
of The
quitting
which smokers
are
Ninety percent of smokers who
encouraged to make progress by lty 10 go cold turkey fail 10 quit,
smoking less and quitting intermit· most of them relapsing within four
· tently, rather than making the diffi. days, Pierce said.
Pierce and his coiiC3¥ues based
cult choice 10 stop immediately.
A no-smoking program their study on intervtews with
designed for the state of California 4,624 Californians who were asked
was based on Pierce's findings and about their smoking habits and hishas enabled 26.7 percent of smok. IOJY and then interviewed again an
ers 10 quit, roughly twice the rate of average of 18 months later.
Of those smokers who said in
those quitting wilhout the program,
said Shu-Hong Zhu, another UCSD the fU"St interview they bad quit for
researcher who helped develop the a week, 18 percent had quit altoprogram.
gether by th_e time of the second

LARGE SELECTION OF

•

(

ATLANTA (AP) - Tapering
·off may top going cold turkey
when · it comes to · quitting
~~:S~h~~!~.'ion researchers
Those who can delay the day's
fJrSt cigareue or give up smoking
for seven days have a good cbance
of eveniUally dropping lhe habit for
good. according 10 a new study.
"Maybe our goal shouldn't be
h
to get I em 10 quit," said study
author John P. Pierce of the University of California, San Diego.
• 'Maybe our goal should be 10
get them 10 quit for at least a week
Of 10 ~et them under 1.5 cigarettes a
day,' he said at a meeting of the
American Society of Addiction
Medicine.

House For Sale
2 story, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
basement, In-ground Pool,
with many extras. Must see.
Make Offer. 614-256-6580

90

flrill!in

•

The Jumbo in Centenary
3.3 miles from the
intersection of S.l;l. #7 and
S .R. #141
on S .R. 141
Homemad~ Pizza
Special15 in. $5.00
Hot Dogs
w/Homemade Sauce
Ice 75¢ a bag
Ice Cream
Shakes
Sundaes
Candy
Tobacco
Cigarettes '1 53 + Tax
Generic Cigarettes '1" +Tax
Phone 446-3500

Empire- LP Gas Ventfess
Heater oii Salel
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Burlile Oil Co.
446·4119
Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
Inventory in Stock!
441-1700

!

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

.........""
•

i

•

.

Sunday Tlmea s;nunel Page D3

Smoking study:

L....----------...J

'

;J:tO

the

fuQy to an'elll;elient cran&lt;l IJam' S!lqth I
ati!Uaad to Ulllblt 100\1 declarer-play
lecbDique to repter a plus IICOI'I!.
Norih made 1 limit raise, llbowinl
at leut lour trumpa aad about 11
point!!. Now Soulli" prodUCed a votdshowinl jump beyoad lour spallea.
North reall., afJ b1a cards were WEST
EA8T
worklai, 10 he jumped to sll: spades. : • • 7 4
+t
.
Gettlqtbemeaase,Southwentonto :KQJT4
.:~~ 81 75 ~
ae~ld bave been eu to illlwDe • t • 7 4 s
+ Q 10
tb&amp;t tbe bearll were bfell~l evenly.
~
SOUTH
But Soutl' uw. tbat he bad IS tricks
• A Q• 5 s
whatever !be heart break (UIIIIIlia&amp;
• A QJ I 2
the trumt~~ weren't 4-0). At trick two,
.• : ·;
Sou•• J..ta """de to tbe dumm~ Wben
n • 5
·,..
.,...
-.·
both IJIIpODen_ts followed, eclarer
Vulnerable: Both
ruffed a diamond with tbe spade
Dealer: South
queea. He led another trump 10 dum·
my aac1 ruffed tbe last diamond With Saoo~
Well
Nor~ Eut
the spade ace. Back to dummy With a I •
Pua s •
Pau
, club to tbe king, declarer drew the last 5 •
Paa 8 •
Pau
trump and claimed IS tricks: four 7 •
p..., Pau
Pau
. spades, 'our hearts, two club&amp; and
Opening lead: • K .
· three dl~d ruffs 111 band.
A nice dummy reversal - but what
bappeasll West leads a trump?

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~~~~~~~ll
iii

SUNDAY PUZZLER

•
J

1

BRIDGE

tilled.

lDUriJII.

Pomeroy-:-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, wv

•

Community Rummage
&amp; Craft Sale ·
November 22, 23·8 to 4 pm
DAV Bid. Kanauga, Ohio
Table reservation
$3-1 day
$5·2 Day
Lunch sold by DAV Auxillery For
reservations call
446· 7910 or 446·4208
Route 124, Racine-$32,500
The kids can walk to high school
right across lhe street' Nice 4
bedroom, t balh home with new
carpet, handsome woodwork. huge
kitchen and lull basement all on 2
acres w~h 2 car garage plus
carport. Fru~ trees. garden space.
Call Uz Kahler at Larry Conrath
Realty, Athens, Ohio. Office- 614592-3015. Home 594-7006. Car
phone -Voice mail -591 -7007.
Reattors we will co-op with you.

Wamect to Buy

9
•

3 Announcements
Frltnds

In

Chrtot

Chrlotlon
Doting Servlee, "Helping Chrlallan Sl')jlltl flnd Chrlotlon
Pa~-. Call1-.e30-7511i.

w-.

c

In

northom

1.go().218-50t0

Ert.

73ll7 $Z.VII

Per MJn. Mutt Be 18 Yra. Procell

Co.I02-t54-~.

Now eldnnlng, cutting. wrapltlng,lloozlng - - Aloo making
ltlcttorr-omdtld Jorkr.
eummer Nu~. tnll ~na.
C..wlanl'o Gni:ory,WV. ~75-MOC.

Decorated

Frw flmale Fox Terr~r. 614-742· W.nlld To Buy: Junk Aulae
WHh Or Wftl!o.. llol- Coli
Lony Uv&lt;lly. 114-318-HOl.
Frw Klttono To Good Homo, A~ =7"":'=-'-~--7-=.:::....,~
ter 5 P.M. II!I14 418 •011.
Wanted To Bur: Standing TlmFrw Klnono To Good Homa ber 1 Pine, Good Prlcoo, 1140nlyl Call After 5,30 P.ll. 614- ::3S8=-41!1015===·:;:=:;:=:;:====2ol5-6t!l.

Lorvo For
Outtldo Dog,
2183,
Dotollo.
Mlke4

Doa,
8131.

lr~~ed

11e-:m-

Male, Qood Watch
Black, S14-446-

8-n l

Pupploo Two ~ntha Old

Mix, 614To UOO For w.. Ronw•~r /She
VIrginia
Port:elaln · Ucenee olol6.0861 Or &amp;lc-448-8303.
Platooil Chuck -tphol, 241 PuppiM- lwka. okt, ma.. and
Eoll roodwoy, Pat1 Jalfoi'OOfl, -.11,
molhor· Rog. Englloh
NYum.

hound, hlthor- ml10d llaund,
114-VII:l-39112.

PUBUC NOTICE
The VIUage of Rio Gronde
will be oeceptlng ..aled
bldo on lhe following ltemo
unlll Tu•doy, November 23,
1183: 1177 Genetol Motoro
Englne; 1188 Generol
llotoro Engine; Ponaoonic
KX·E700M Typewriter with
Floppy Dltk Drive ond
Dlaploy llato with 8K
Memory; 440' Uaed 8' Choln
Unk F~nca with Poat and
Moln Goto; 2 uoed town

To

good hom• boautltul 3/C

German Sh1pherd and . 114
AU8trallan Shepherd pups,
wormed, 814-992-1'913.

=6-,...Lo~st_&amp;-::-F_o-::-u_nd...,....-=­

mower•, 2 uaed weed
••tera, 1 uaed 1111 leaf

blower; Onan Portoble
Electrical Genet~tor (20.8
Ampa - 120 Votlo); Portable
Watet Pump (200 GPII • 3
lneh); 2 too-Watt Mo10roto
Rodloo, 85 Regency; Tripp
Lite; Spol Ught; Antenno;
Red Lena Cover; Light Bor
with Sp.. ker; 2 Motorolo
Hond Held wlh Ropld
Chorgeto; 2 grill llghta; 2
Bullet Proof veolo; Shotgun
holdet; Gallo Drgonlzor for
Radloo; Polorold Land
tamer•

1nd

114-245-

1112·~1.

Roword Up

Public Notice

Ele. Aloo

....u, wt11
buy OM pa.ee or comP'*
hot••hold, · - . . ,..... aid
blcycleo, eoN Ooby llortln, IM-

Ploooo conlaet Don
Thorn_., 3251 2tlh Strttt, 2&lt;145.
Rock l~nd,INinolo 11201.
No ~ • ....,.. , No -lngl
Juot Tlil Molt 01 Your CliOicoll

Avol-1

,...-.,,no

membeni ..,.

tholr lllrnllv liVId

:.r.~u~

-

lYflt 01 FumM-.

Antlq- ondlttm too larQI or too

Morr R. I Ellon lhornpoon I

•oourt.

Uoo

AppllonooiJ, Artllquo'o,

llalo Pupploo 5
3
Black /WhNe, 1 il._n, 11C-37V2834.

Looking lor lnlormallon on lho
family of John or .11Thonipoon, born In tho mid
1800'o In p.,,.rlvonlo I living
In Malga County In the 1100'1.

Olher family

Or Ee-

Complolo
tatool Any

~..
ll•lbem
llolglllo,
Po-oy,
white ftutly cot
with

::l&lt;~..i2~

r_1=C8=rcl=o:f:Th:::a:nk:s::~

The family of Helen
(Grover) Erwin wlah·
ea to expreaa their
.ppracletion to relatlvea, lrlanda, and
nelghbora lor their
prayera, food, flowera, carda and thoae
who vlailed with ua
during h.,. 111114181.
Sp~~elal thanka to
Rev. Jim Pattaraon,
Rev. Bob Haraman,
the Holzer Hoapltal
medical and nuralng
ataff who cared for
her and the McCoy
Moore Funeral Home.

Ruw Wa
-.o,
- .2528.
buy Htatae

Gallipolis

· miiC8llaneouo(lmto.

Item• con be aeon 11 the
Municipal Building Monday
&amp; VIcinity
through Friday from t a.m.·
3 p.m .. Blda will be openad I FatNfr: wtnt11 ctat':l:t
and awtrded TUIIdly Chltdlon. . A1tu11o. T""- F
evening, November 23rd II luro, Mloo.c f'!ldor, ..,_,,
'"' G!&lt;&gt;o'Oo'o Cntt.
8:00 p.m. The VIllage h" SUnday,
the rlghl to accept or reject ApproX. 112 Milt Fn&gt;iio Al.7.
ALL Yanl-lkill 1o Peld In
any or all bkla.
, _ , DEADLINE' 2:00 p.m.
November 14, 1llt3
lhe . , bo- lho ld " .. run.

.......,.

• 2:00 p.m.
Iandor ldllon • 2'00

(!unciiJ -

FrkiiY.
,...,..

a.:~
beaulifW~

~-·.t.•i~:IKws and
M111y, M•y 1\allks,
Mrs. Bnke P.

lorelei
P.O. Box I
Blclwel, CM!io 45614

•-·

Don' Junk ftlMaJor
Boll u. y - Appi-.

TV'o,_ Rolrlgenolcn,
F......,
Air Condltlonon,
Ort-, Copy llachl-, Etc.

Color

vc.·,, w-.,

&amp;14-256-12311.

Eotatoo "-1 i•"- 11!&amp;Bl.
MChlck our oftlr befonl ... ling"

SM-2CS.IMC8.

J•

D'o Aulo Porlll ond Solvioao,

1110

buying

Ju'*

304·7'73-5343.

AN

&amp; trvci.a.

.

On Nov. 6
DAWN GILBERT :
celebrated ber 18th
binhday at home with
friends and family.
Happy 18rh Binhday
anil &amp; st MsMs in IM

·- .... Plaza and the staH
wcders at the Haber
Him Ploaoo Call, SM-C4e-77:15. Meclcal Center, and

other

t.e.

Wottlng

-Loll---:,t,...an""'P=....
- ......,nt=-an""'Dog.::--.,-Lo-11 1
Seon S•nday, II Anyono Soe'o

7
Yard Sale
;___..,.:_....;.....:..;.....:..._ _

.tOMWIN, - ·

...,.,._, old lompo~Oicl lh«·
_ . . _ , Old doe
onllq•
fumlturo. Rlnrine
lq"-

THANK YOU
To the doctors and
of the MI-.J!. I
lltwse5.ecac;Q

the. Em.erpency
sen-.e, !her khl cril
efficient service at
this time . was

.

foturt

Love Mom &amp; Dad
Jennifer, Cory, Brad
11

Help Wanted
A~

M1rbtlng ReMin:h
Co. will be
conducting 1
- n : h project In
thla community thli

winter. If you~
you would be Pilei
fur your time. lflt....... '-d C811
1..f00.411 1542 .
,,

�...
Page-04-Sunday nmes

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaunt,

~~~-=~~~~j=1~1~~H~e~~~~w.~=m~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11===H=al=p=w=an=t:~::=;
'1::-:-:-J:.

~:0:

=.

POSITION AVAILABLE FOR ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR

=--WI- =
-. ·-18

Wanted to

o.n.aJ

M

~-~

,. . . . . . .

·9

Business

20M« 1 - - - .

OpportunHy
E6A TREE SEIMCE. T~'!!l~
IHOIICEI
~~~: ¥:A=-:-.~ OHIO VALLEY PUBUS- CO.
:Ill'
Aftor4p.m.
.
::"'.'llT.=rt:'l..:.~
NOr to HOd manor through tho
~.,rr~= a~.o:~:.S~IIablo mall until you have ln..,lgotod
lha offwlng.
llloo PaUia'o DIY Coow Contor Eam llonay at Homo wlh a
11-F a A.ll. -t:30 P.ll. Quality Computar. No Elplrl.,..
Loving
AI Clolklroil
Aaq'd. Pro"''
InOUr
It care
Goal.For
Part.Tlme,
Ful~ aurance
ctalmL EacJn.
Time~ Aatlatanco Avail- CO&lt;ne Patantlll oompanr , _
11
Wantad
:;,-~ ITo
tng. From tsoti6. Flne'g AvaiL ,.
1
IIOND-1181 oat. 142 (24 In)
School,
School-,
II&amp;A National Clllmo Sarvlco, Inc.
Ladr To Worll In Retail Store, School, ~~14-M~-8224:
Mull Hovo Exporionco In Rotoll
Eam lolonoy At Homo With A
And
Rotoronco A• T I T Lawn S..VIc:e, town, Computor. No ExD Aaq'd
IN To: Box llndlcaDina, 8tump removal, Pmcn•
1-Mahh lnaurance
~§:;~~~~~~:...=::::
nd1.atJ0.531-1440.
lui cr-.nup. 304-1"J'S..5VOZ Clalme. Exa lnooma Patantlat,
4U3t.
--====.!..:"'::::::::::::·~--ComP-Any Towlnlng. From ft,415.
_
Fine , Aviii. tiOGIID-11118 EaL
Public
Sale
~~.:~)National
Ctolma
8

:.0':":',::; C::r.'i&gt;::

wamBd to Buy

: Wanted: book· Thomu Barton:
Hlr-madt
physician
of

Syr.cuae Oh., 614-9924717.

·Top Prl&lt;u Pold: All Old U.S.
·.Colno, Gold Rings, Sliver Colno,
·Gold Col no. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
:151 SocondAvonuo,Galllpolls.
: Wanttcf IO buy: UAd mobile

.homn. &amp;14-44&amp;.0fl5

I

~

.·8:30am-1:00pm.
~;"J,~· ~~~ 1.3or ~'l:.'912~s1.
614-992· 2428
tt 1:00

: • " • pm.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

$12.08 Mr To Star1, PIUI
8eneflt1. Postal Carrie,., Sor·
tera, Clarka, Ualnttnlnce. For
An Appllc:etlon And Exam ln-

tomoatlon, Call 1·211-T.II-4715.

Eat P-11432. I A.ll. To I P.ll. 1
Daya.

AVON I All Arlao I Shill_,

Spae ... 304-171-1421.

Rt. 124 approx. 3 miles

Will take consignments Fri. Nov.
noon

till 6

19 from

p.m. and Sat. a.rn.

Dan Smith auctioneer 1 1344
Rhett Milhoan apprentice 15926
Refreshments· Cash-Positive

I. D.

ext,.!:==================~

monor
want
• ~~h
olthlr
AVONI or
AllMllrilyn.
or-.
WIY-CIIII
..2141
01

1-800.112-1351.

AVON HOLIDAY • Houno, lneoma,
Rawordl. Avoragt •·
HouriJ Sailing II Worto. ••- 1
Hame. No DOOR /DOOR.
OWn

,.,_._

lonowtngty _ .

-loln_GI..

., . .

law. 0...- n hoooby
lnlonned lhlt 1111 Itt:. . .
lldw.tlled In~..

35

=II)'

.,. av-on an oqull

"""'"'unity ·
~~~~~~~~132

31 Homn for Sale
HouM F
or Sola: t llontho Old, 3
led-. 2 latho. LP Gaa
With Hall Pump, W/0, Stowa,
Frlg, DWiht
oarag., With
ar
WI outAc,.~
,...mltuow
10
lllnul• From Gavin Aftd Ga~
Upolla, Good NotghborOOod,

Mobile Homes
for Sale

'Mx70, 2bdi1n.; garden tub, I'P"
.,.,. - · largo loltctoan, att
apptw-._ air conclltloroar; ,.,.
dOiplnnlng, $10,000, • - ·
2331. _ ___,._ _ __
:::;.:::;::_

HUTCHIISOI IUCTIOI IIC.
HOUSEHOLD IUCTIOI
SUIDIY IIOVEMIER 211T 1:00 P.M.

Take US 50 &amp; 32 west and exit onto 50 west
towards McArthur. Quarter of a mile on left. Signs
Corclnal Freight Corrlor, Inc. poated.
hoo on opanlng lor 20 OTA
4 pc maple bedroom suite; 3 pc maple bedroom
drfvert; tor new ftlllbed dlvielan
In llurrlcana, wv. lolull ha.. 1 ,,
suite: 2 pc depression bedroom suite; matching
washer and dryer; other washers and dryers; hutch
1111
equi_.,, . cupboard; relrigerator: elect. stove: horizontal fuel oil
~lue Shlald IMu,.nce,
homo moac w I "do, lllaloatclo . lurnace, works good; maple dresser; depression
lnHn Hurrlo- wv. 1~
dresser; new ma~a windows; treadle sewing machine;
1222.
desk; dresser w/mirrow; 2 dinene sets; wood table and
EXTRA INCOIIE
4 chairs: pine cupboard; bookcase; collectibles; hand
EARN 1200-$500
WEEKLY., __ IIAILING TRAVEL lools: box lots and many mise smalls· and other items.
GUIDES •..,. ..,_ion MlfaJdrnW ...,..,_. ... ... Terms: Cash or check w/ positive 10 •. Out of state
checks need bank lener••Food available.
vaiO!M! to: I • I llal!lo&gt;g -vlco, P.O. Box Utll2l; 1110m1,1'1
ISla. ' '
Audio..., M•k Hutchinson
High Eamlngal Part /Full Time
614·691-6706
Poo: I'll FHA -gage
Rotunda. No llloorlonce. ow~
Ucens.. •d lontled i• Ohio
Houno,
~-

=

Houow.

IIIIIEDIATE
OPENINGS

om:

2 bedroom !rolla&lt;. rat a dop, Rt.
a2 N. l..ocllot. Ad on right, no Completly Fumlahod Small
pota. 304-47J.1D'It
Hauaa, ~0/mo. Ptuo Utllhlaol
·· ~::.:::.!':.::.;·:..:::.::.·----1 And DooooH. 114-141-o338. Col
2 bedi&lt;IOfl1 troller1 ret I dtp, Rt. =.
la:.:.fo:.:.ow:.:_::
1op:;.
. nm:.:..,------.-,12 N, l..ocllat Ao on right, no ::pota. 30W75-t0lll.
. Countryoldo Apt. on !1811. 2 Bod"""!'!.CIA, 010, WID
3 -mt, Oaa H•t, In Ga~ $33WMonth. DopooH Aaquloea
·Mpotle, 114-441.,'1003, aMo441· IM-44&amp;-4222 orlt4-448-2t'N.

11113 22 Hundrod ~,. Foot
AmLaalah u!"~~· can
P.ll. Or
va - g o , 114-251 a224.

a...367..12e7.

Real Estate

P.....,..,,

-..p,

..... n7!11mo, with depoOit, 114-

1401.

Rentals

tilt Mx'IO llobllo Homo For

a.•

2br. houoo, Now Haven. 304-372·
~- -nlngo.

Rent,
w.t• lnctuciiCf, c.n
Aftlr S P~ll. eM 388 Itt:
•
..
d=,
moblia
........
2
lllnoravlllo .,..,
..._. -uloea, lt4ftl-tm

,.,.,..,;;;·'i

4 mllao nonh ol HarrllonvAio;:,
SA 881, , 3411/mo. lllul dopooH
and utiiKioo, at4-fN·7241.
Trailer tor rwtt In Syr11eu.1,
mult have r.flrence~, 114-112·
.2121. ~.;
. '·

Beautiful wooded

River

Fron11a-

4

·--11141.

Reg. '99.00

DUIAJIOO
BOOT' OUR PRICE

-··--

Reg • ..,.,,_uu
OUR PRKE

ssooo

.sssoo·
WOAK BOOTS
BY WALKER

•
CAROLINA
•

Georgia

and products.
BUYER BROKER

2
lodoaom With mont Ott 588, All City UtJIHiool
HI,IIOO Firm, l'lnonao, Col
LarTJ, IM-4tlot117.

Represents the buyer

5.66ACRES

only

More or less: Wooded

Bedroom

Brick, 6M-4tf.7157 Aftor 8 P.ll.
V1ry Nee 3br. home, In town,
tua baooment, lonaad J•rd, 1
car garoga, now wlndoWo, low
utllh'"!, lmmodlalo occu-,
only NS,OOO. W.tllan R-:1
304-87!1-3433 or aftor 6pm
a'/!1-7101.

In

----1

call

a

Merchandise
5I

VI'AA FURNITURE
614-441-ml Or_114-441-1428
'liD DAY SAioiE AS CASH
OR AENT4.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

448.,.523.
2 1bl. apta,, reuonobla '""'· 'G r.elou• living. 1 and 2 bed-

OUTSIDE
FuRNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron Tobia W/4 Chal,.;
Fan lack Rocking Chair .,_;
Gordon Arch War'o $121.00

for Rent

~ br. · OJ\1., j&gt;ortlallr fumlohod,
2200 . '""'"' Pt. Plaaoant,
S200/rn0.
"'"' ulllhlea. :IDW'/Io
~038 eflao lpm,

Pakl, 1 BMiroom, Upttalrs,
Second Avenue, Oatllpoll1, No
Pau1 Exclllonl Concmloro, 614-

3D4-t114DI3 or 875-4100.

room

•Pinmenta

at

VIllage

GoOCis

.....,,,

dryer

repan. ~22U.

-·

vi H E R

The airline passenger .was
upset about the many delays of
6
her flight. She stormed to the
--L--L--1.--&amp;___,JL..-..J ticket agent, •1 could stick a
~---------. feather behind my ear and ~et
T HRUUN
there faster. • The agent replied
a 19 1
sweeUy, ·By all means, madam,
I..,;,..........L.-'--L--1---1 - - - • - • • • - - is clear."
~..,..:;;,_;;......;.;..,...;.;....;;;....;..;.._-1

II

I I

FELNSY
10

11

IB

I

REALTOR•

Phorw
llloin Offk• - 388-88%6
B,...nelo Offk•- 446-6806

OILY 3 LOTS IYIILIIU II

LAKEVIEW SUB·DIYISION
Thie beauty epot lo BUILD In • choice neighbor·

G

Complere the chuckle quoted
by filling In the missing word1
you develop from step No. 3 bel-.

Real Estate General

hood.
Loti:! ................- ....... 2.348 At:. MIL
Lot C ............... -...........5 At:. MIL
Lot 11 ·-.......... - .......... 2.250 At:. MIL
All Iota eubject to the reetrlctlve covenenll which
•hell run with the lend.
Utllltlet evelleble; rurel Weier, underground electricity, aerator IIIYIIIIIII ecceplld. Conveniently
locllled clo11 to Hoi- Hoepltelend IIONI.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

WE HAVE LOTS OF PROSPECTIVE BUYERS, WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!!!
CALL TODAY
446-7101 OR 1-800-585-7101
Russell D. Wood, Broker.. 446 4618
Tammie Dewltt.............441-1514 Marthe Smlth ............ 379-2651
Judy Dewltt..................441-o262 Cathy Wray................ 446-4255
Phyllis Miller................ .256-1136 Cindy Drong-skl... .2~7
J. Merrill Carter............. 379-2184 Cheryl Lemley...........742-3171

HENRY E. CLELAND Ill .. 992·6191

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
SE4::0~1PAVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631

KATHY CLELAND-'"""992-6191
OF11CE".;..--~·-- 992-2259

I

I&lt;
on a
Oftero laoge
kiiCiiMin. FuM unfinished baoement
a 2nd
bath lhat you can finish to oult your natds.
Frashly painted on the Inside. Jusl listed at
$49,000, don't miss outl Cali Cerolyn.
H05

NEW LISTING! HASTE IIAKES WASTE!
Don't put oil looking at this heme today. Supar
location, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ronch style
heme, natu&lt;al gas htaUcantoal air, basement,
attached 2 cor garage, spacious lawn well
land'C8pld Make '" appointment todayiii6U7

•
•

of cebinata,
loland. Thlo
on a dead-end
of the river.
1500

TUPPERS PLAINS- 6+ acres with one floor
lrame home with 2 badrooms. 1112 balhs.
large front porch. Now shingle roof. fireplace

NEW LISTING! ""'''T
DEBBIE DRIVE. Quality brick ranch. latgo
roomo conalating of 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
clning area, living room, fuN ba01ment. 2 car
· garage with altctrtc door opener. Immediate
Possession! Laval lot approx. 100' x 150'.
$70's.
1604

NEW USTINGI lot:'AL
HOME BUYERI
this wall decoraled 3
badrooms ranch style home. living room,
kitchen, bath, full basement Newer elactrio
hoet pump. Anached one ea!pOrt. Must see 1o
appnoc:iatol Just minutes from town!
1603

with insert, ,B.G. heating wilh newer heater
TPC . water, garage, and barn . Paved street

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! MAKE AN
OFFER I ASKING! $29,500.00.

87 Acrae, rn/1. Vecant land locat.d in Cl&lt;Mn &amp;
Springtiafd Townahlpa, just off U.S. Rt. 35.
Frontt on townahlp road end old U.S. 35.
Water end gae evelllble. Lend lays mooUy
rolling vAth oxceHent building locations. Hao
high hill erea vAth nice view. City achool
lfY•torn. Bettloc:lition in Clallil County to build
and live. Priced at $87,500.
1236

I

4.2 ACRES. Uving room, kilchon and dining
room, bath, central air conditioning. 24'JC24'

I
nice lized lot.

' A llove In \he Right Dlreclionl Step up to
homaownershlp in this spodaaa 2-3 badroom
home in Middleport. You'll enjoy tho laoge
cemer lot and 2 cer ~rage. Taka a look today.
Priced at $55,000.
•
1507

liD BILE HOllE PLUSI Lots of extras. t
3 bedroom mobile homo. 2 story 14'x22'
unfinished swelling. Two extra outbuildings.
Ovor 1 aero lawn. $20's.
IG01
RANCH I A LITTLE BIT OF LANDI Home

.l iZolr

POMeflOY· SA. 7 Older 2 slory frame heme
· 3 bedrooms, balh. doibla hung windows
pan~ walls, carpet flooring, cenlraJ air, storni
doors and windows, carport, basement 3-4
acres ol ground. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
MAKE AN OFFER! $35,000.00.

OWn A Comer of Firat A - Plua aiUver
Lolli For your femlly or lor lhl invaator, thio .
ptoptrty hu unlimited poaoiblllloa. Mail hcuae
oftara leoge Nt-in kitchan, living room, llllinll
room, 2 bedroome, 1 ·bello, . baaemant offera
1torega, laundry, femlly room end bedroom.
Alto tlttroched It • 1
eq. tt ... room rou
can uae for a butlneu or convert to mooa
femllr living ·~ Nice 2 cer 1111111111 ..;th • 2
bedroom .,.ment 10 help PlY rour rll(!r1gaga.
Enjoy thio aummer on your private !Mr lot
llthlng, boeing &amp; cooking out. All thlt priced at
only f100,000.
.
.
.... 5

COME HUNT. BUILD AND AELAXI SR. 338
· Approximately 57 .6172 +acres ol VAC/ONr
GROUND I great view of lhe ohio River. Coukl
be used ao building silo. or subdivided or used
as hunting ground. All minerals currently with
the property go with the property. ASKINGI
$23,000.00.

,ooo

'

•'•
I'

In Town loceUofl. Clood n~iqbbo&lt;hood. Deep
lol 2 bedrooms, t beth, lovong &lt;Dom, dining
room, oat-In kitchen. Won't find many at thit
low price. $34.900
1201

YOU CAN'T BUILD FROM SCRATCH, .A
BUILDING THIS SIZE FOR THIS PRICEI
Located In TUPPERS PLAINS· 4,400 sq. ft.
block &amp; brick IMollding approximately 20 yeatS
old ..one floor wllh 3 baths, 3 unll air
cond11ioners kitchen &amp; bedroom areas
Approximately 1-1112 acres of ground o~

Genllernen'e F.,m Haow's a 32 acre farm
lhara paofact tor lhl wot1dng man. Remodoled
2-3 badnxim home, nice hcrae or muld·
PU&lt;POOI baCT),. pand tnd l)lore. Boaudful
Nttlng, completely ltnced. Some wooda,
moot!Y ,...,,., 144,800
1221

1201

....

Real Estate General

SHER~I HART """""·-.742·2357
I

GO FISHII Anytime you wenll 14.77 acres,
m'l, ..;a. atocktd pond. Thatio Ia aloo a 1992, 3
bedroom mobile home to live in wh~o IMoilding
dream homo. Call today. Priood at
~¥·ow·
1504

seuoo

I
I I' I I I I
L A

- • o~ryar;
Wo- ut..-largo
tub, IIIN """·

Real ~state General

HENRY E. CLELAND.-.. 992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER--949·2439

'

Owner Wtnl.l I lolclll v.,Y nice ranch stylo
home in family oriented nalghbo&lt;hood. 3
bad100111o, 1•'11• !emily room, 2 cer 111"'11"·
localld In a...., echool dttrlct. Latve covered
ptllo to enjoy. Fenced In yerd ... Oulbullding.

WNrtpoal

Dryor, llalrtgorotot;
T.V. FrNDr, Stow-.~
Mia ow we, 114-216-1231.

.

L...

Household

i.AtvaMII 175, V.ry Comtonablal

HAL B E c
5

wa""",

Color

Real Estate Genellll· .

,.

paved street wilh cement otlveway. ASKING!
$66,000.00.

st~ve.

••'
•
•

~

446-3644·

••

.

l
.

.....

~

OWNE!I READY
TO SELLf HAS
OUTGROWN HOME· RACINE· 1969 Clayton
Sectional 24 x 40 located on approx. 72 x 72
lot. Home In very well kepi ccncliilon lnclude9 3
bedrooms, 2 baths oloidrlc heal pump/central.
email front doctl all blinds 6 curtains, storms &amp;
ecroeno. calling fan, Caihedral collings.
r"'go 6 refrlgliratar.UIIIIty room oW

:~~~~o~u~ls~ld~e~.•iwater
taucat
to
paved
streel. Close
sidewalk,
In kitchen. AEDUCEO

'

'

COMMERCIAl. &amp;WILDING IN DOWNTOWN
POMEROY MAIN ST. ACCESS· L01ge office/
thoWJOOm ,with huge dloplay windc!w. Lola of
atorage space. Nice rooms upstairs for

.

c.-tolyn -~•ch!".441'·;1 007 ..
Sonny Garnes-446•2707-' ~ .
'

some · water or elaclric. Driveway to

cabin. A~ a Cl!pOrt. This perfect Daar and
Turkey areal Great location for the Hunter. or
IoYer of tho OUtdoOIII ASKING! $17 ,000.00.

,,'

.WISEMAN·.REA:t·ES.TATE, ·
.,
·DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555

SEASON IS HEREII RACINE·
!lharon Hollow RD. SeclUded hunting cabin on
approx . 20.05 """''· 40 x 26 cabin has W.B.

..J::"'

bolh bualneN ·
cen be uttd 11
renLil until with ..,.
....t. :Wti.~~Zt'~
lnvaatrnant or uoa as ,.:&gt;!dance wilh help ori
r.vmenta. Clood locetion for ailher. Rtllilenot
aa 2·3 bedrooms, living room eaHn kitchen
Easy to heat.
'
. 1210

WE NEED LISTINGS!!!

loretta McDade· 446·7729
Patrick·Cochran· 446·8655

-n

Appla-, "'

Vlno Sl-, oil a..._?DI, 1IQO.ootltl-3411.

2--3 Ytara Otd, GOod CondHion
Tan Color. 11+441-3375.

· 304-87HII84.

BEAUTIFUL APAfi:TIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, U, Jacllaon Pike
from $201/mo, Wolk to ohoa •
movtea. Coli aM-441-2511. EOH.
Fumlohod Apartmont, Utllhlea

7.5 aoraa ori the Rlverl With a small woods
for a screen lrom both Rl 7, this Is an ideal.
building site. Located 6 miles btlow town. Clllf
David for more Information.

E - Your Cull11111
chanr kllchan
counterapeca and
contemporlry ranch It
atrtat and olfera a
Tho priccola $89,000.

-

Ground Aoor, Wator Paid, 11
Codor, Golllpollo, $3211/Mo. a14o
388
_
__:-8000..:.:.:.:..·- - - - - - -

Real Estate General

_ _ _ _...;.Re.:.:..:.;a:...:lE:;:st:...:at:...:e;..Ge:.:..:..;,n;,;;e;,;;lll;.,l_......;,_ _ _ _ _ _...;,R.:..;ee;,;;;;,;lE:;:ll:::at::;e:..:Ge=:n::elll:::_l

llobl'- Homo Lola For Rant. IMo
112-4137 orl1~ 441 eaao•
Troller lo4o lor '""'· ""' wator 6

ii~~o~;;i·iO~;;n~F~-miiu;;;;-(~i4'1=~·.'

sao.

you have

er Broker please

Morton Road.

DON'"T MAKE ANOTHER IIOVE... Wilh out
ooeing this homo flratll Loceted in a quiet
family orillnled nelghbo&lt;hood, this 3 bedi'OCIIII
heme offano a lot without asking for a lot. Laoge
kitchen/family room ...... with calhtdral ceiling
and akyllghta, living room, 2 full batho
screened in porch, attached garage. Latgo lol
C1ly schools. $59,900
1200

P!Jf·

questions about Buy-

City schools, Buhl

1

home

So If

chase.

building lot surveyed.

a

UnMa, Ranta Buod On Adluatod
Income. FIIHA Subaldizod', HUD
Cartltlcotoo Acceplod. aM-441·
1800I Equol Housing Oppor·
tu'!h n.

. . _.

Dlat;!d,

llonor
and
· Atvaroldo
laddi~Twln
11att$141
Sal '"·
Apartmentoln MlddteiiOII. From a111
Ouoon
Sal;Full
4
11202. CoiiiM-tl2·t!otl9. EOH.
Drawor _, 144.111; Cor Bad'a,
Bunlo Bod'o, Poatar Bodo. Full
One t.draorn
IPirtiMntl, Una 01 Scuthwollom • il Bodroorno, Upotal10 Apart· $2211/mo, lnoludot utiiKin, $100 Storti~
klolano llanr
ment, Unfurnlahect, No Pete, - " ' " ' dopoolt, no poto; 114- $hapa a AtI 1120.00;
Stzae · Starting At
1112·2218.
Dopoall Aaqul...t, 8Mool4f.2583.
.,.oct 2 l.ocollone •Bnldo Aulo
Auction Or 4 IIIIOo OIA 141.
2bdrm. apta., tclol oloctrlo:, ap- 45
Furnlshad
Open I A.ll. To a P..ll. lion oSat.
pllancea tumlohod, loundry
=m lacldtlea clou to achocil
Rooms
Ch_, ~roo-, $200. llaanavox
In town. .A!IIIIIcOiiono onllobla
conaota TV,, $200. AntiQuo
II: Vlt- ·o,_ Apto. HI 01 Roome for rent • week or monlh. cablnot -·ng machlno
ca11114-111!·:1711. !!OH.
at $120/mo. Galllo Hotat. Allaxo. cond. :10-f.rul.
a~=~':!1511o.
Couch • Chair, m. or ball of.
lleKh Stowat, lllddtoport, Ohio.
.... 304-871-8781.
llna bedroom tumlahad opt
IIIIIHII• paid, d-K i
Largo Couch lloloao!·lnto Doubla
............ 304-882.,'1581.
Bod sao. ltot-211-824&amp;.

marketing techniques

· School District.

8824312.

qualified home

and land buyers; New

building lot. Green

BusiMII Portn., Fronk Hutchin...
614·592-4349

Dapandabll And Ar-.
For lntorvt• .....
... 10:00 AJI.

LJSnNGS NEEDEDIII
Man.y

lloblla Homo IJI!ICII For Rant In

~n=gtr ~-

'

AT. 275 LONGBOTIOM· 2 stooy frame home
with 1 + porch, sheds, new implement shed,
newer kitchen. newer plumbing , wiring ,
appliances, 4 bedrooms, 2 (approM . 3 years

old) ASKING! $49.900.00.

113 KINEON DRIVE· Living room, kilchon, 2-3
bedrooms, bath. family room, utility. Partiel
r.nced-in lawn. 1 car attached ll'"''l"·

ISM
2 PLUS ACRES SITUATED AT EDGE OF
GALUPOLISI City utilities, 2 badrooms home
wilh kilehen, &lt;ining, bath, living room. FA gas
hoeU
. IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONI 40'x40' 3 car
datached metalgtrage wiih conc1111o flooring.
One story 3 btdroomhoma with washer/dryer.
soma fum&lt;turo, appliances included. Tractor
with blade, plow, bush hog included. Cal lodny.
1536

TWO HUNDRED_ SIXTEEN ACRES MIL.
Vacant land. Mob&lt;le home pad on property.
Spring. Several wooded acres, crop and
pasturo land. Owner vAIIing to sell on land
ccnlract!
1577
TlUS MAN MEANS BUSINESS! LOWERED
PRICE TO $24,100.00. What a great daall Just
parloct homo lor alerting oul or wanting
something smaller. 2-3 badrooms, laoge lot,
living room, kitchen, bath, partial basomonl.
Stn~ buildingi,Home In good roparil
MAKE Hill AN OFFER!
1584 •

RACINE· Mile Hill AD.· 2.72 acres wilh 1 floor
older lrame home with 3 bedrooms balh. altlc
space. enclosed front porch, Also Includes 2

older mobil~ . homes set up on lol, one In
poorer cond111on, one nicer with unit air and
built on enclosed front porch, Many fruit lrees
&amp; berry vines. TPC water, Oulbulkllngs. MAKE
AN OFFEAI ASKINGI $45,000.00.

NEAR RACINE· Jusl ofl Bald Knob •
Stiversville. RD. On Ha)'ITian AD. 7+..,.. with
1986 Radman 26 x 65 sectional wllh added 15
x 35 room , 3 badrooms. 2 baths. master balh
has garden lub &amp; doubls sink, plenty of
closets. fireplace with blower, Ne- lennox
heat pump/central air. blinds, cellng fans, buill
In hutch &amp; wet bar, fencing. storage building, 2
septic, 3 wells, VERY NICEI HAS BEEN
REDUCED TO: $42,900.00.

pot- mNiing room or offoce apace. May ba
convened to an Allartmenl River view. Many
poaaibilltlesl ASKING· $12,000.00.
WANTEDI,URG-ENTLY NEED LISTINGS FOR ALL AREAS OF MEIGS
CO. WE HAVE .BUYERS WE NEED LISTINGS! CAL~ TODAY...

consists of 3 bedrooms, living room , 1 112
balhs, basement. lront porch. iBBr porcll . 2.494
acre lot. Won't baliavethis price $36 ,900 1594
NEW LISTING! COMFORTABLE HOMEI
Gowan To'lo!"ship. One mry homo clean and in
good condition. 3 bedrooms, living room. family
IDDI!I, dining room, bath. NicelilllpiiC8. 24'x24'
lwo car garage. Priced right in the $30's. 1605

VI~ SIDED,. 4 BEDROOM HOME. Large
liv&lt;ng room, dinong room &amp; kitchen, 1 1/2 baths.
Nice laval lol Partial baoemenl back porch &amp;
moro. Priced $30's.
"112
CHEAP! CHEAP! CHEAP! $15,0001 2
Bedroom homo, nice laval lot. Kitchen, liv1ng
room, beck &amp; front porch!
ISII
14x70 MOBILE HOME AND LOTI· Prtcod in
= r $20's. CoU for more details! Won'~t
GIGANTIC PRICE REDUCTIONI IIAKE
OWNER AN OFFER I Commercial building and
moow lhan 8 acows land. PraMnlly ulllld •• an
auction business. Metal IMoilding is approx. 70'
X225 totaiNng approx. 15,750 eq. fl. Cell an
agent for mora detailolodayl
1511

ganoge, two bams.

'1576

NEW LISTING! LOOKING FOR SOliE
INVESTMENT PROPERTY? LIKE SOME
EXTRA INCOME? Home with 4 bedrooma,
IMng room. family room, kitchen, both and
moow. Plus, 2 gtrage apartments! Loeat.d at
1-42 Portomoulh Road. Call for mooa detlilal

1602
NEW USTINGI FARMI Approx. 52 Acres ond a
3 bedroom home. living room, kitchen, bath
laundry &amp; meow. Nice locelioni
·
HOI
EXTREMELY NICE HOllE THAT HAS LOTS
OF CAREl 3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, family
room, lovong room, kitchen, dining room 2
filllp11C8s, 2 ear attached garage and IITMiniti.o
galoow. Call todayl
1587
BACK ON THE MARKEll Now is your chance

to own th1s newer .bnck home. Nice river view
La&lt;ge g....,t room onclu&lt;ing living room, diniftli
room &amp; kitchen. Family room, 2 baths. High
oflietoncy elactnc heat pump &amp; mora. 8 yoaro
leh on lax abatement. Call today lor an
appo1ntmooL
1513
WOW! THIS ONE IS .SOOOO NICE I Laoge
newer bnck . ranch woth lull basement. 3
bedrooms, lovong room, 4 baths, nice kitchen •
clntng araa. Family room, 2 ear oHached
garage and C4!p0r1. French doors! Approx 5
acras and pondl Nice wooded oettingl
and seal
1573

eo;,.

Meigs County
WILL CONSIDER ANY REASONABLE
OFFER I Como and -lhls ranch heme wllh 2
bedroomt, Nving room, dining room, kitchen,
beth. one car anachad garage. Newer
cerpetingf Nico loti
l5a
A HOME OF THE PASTI Beaut~ul older 2 story
home, 4 large bedrooms. den, dining rciom. liv·
lng rooll) , 2 baths, laundry and morel Beautiful
oak woodwork throughout! Nice VIew of river.
Stocked pond. Must see It!
1512

•

Corr!llt•• ~ lurniiHnca&amp;:
Houri: lion lit. N . I......U:
Oi22, I out Butavllo Ill(
F,..DIItvtry.
•

Et-

46 Space for Rem

Wonting lo - · or 3 bedrvom
··
ln prlvato
lnd -lng,
goodlion,
pro1or
a...
tn-2421, If no aneww P'M•
talve rnlliag. on machine. •

·

Dol"•

NOJ.X3S

-l'lba···

LAYNE:S JIIIIINITUAI

t10G

TIAI
Eadoi1SO Each, 114 2ta 111112 AJ.

wiP.II.

Housahold
Goode

......
..
IIUO Y&lt;l I YlnJI 14.41, I
eot.; 2 while Dhalrw; _,_I 2 11144.
•
ond - . cwlo; 2 PICKENS FURNITURE
wllhlcll . - ehoiYM;
-Jood
Boafhltl dl~- aula;
Hoi II hokf fum.. ~ 1/2 rnl..
-10hra. ICawol
'
than
UMi
comp&amp;Aw Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. PI
II, WY.:
w/pltntar, Ulo Cyola IIMdrnl!'; cll1304-t71-MIO.
. . . - wnlahla; cal Dovoa
SWAIN
•
Grata aM+!J-2311 lpm,
AUCTION I FUIIHITUA£. D
1'14-7C2-2211 ...... 8-l$pm.
Olive II., Galtlpotla. • .._
0000 USED APPUAHC:EI turnlturt, ......... w..t.n ...
~
WI~- oalolgolatoo:!, Wot1cboata.l14 1fe 3111.

Rearrange the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6
aimple words.
Print letters of
each In Its line of ~quares.

~OJ.S~~

-r·

.... FlbelaiMo lhollllloll,

1)5

Se.ntlnei-Page

Sl

Household
Good a

.Fumlture For- l..,.,ut king
elzl Li duoou11 IUMe; 2 whM•

0

-62711=.7-::-:-----,,...,.--- l
"N'- a- a~
- - ..,.room lloblte Home,
'Stalo Routo 218 Aroo, Aotoronca
-And Dopoolt: Aoqulrod, 814-2511-

:44 · AP.rtment

tlll llaJO
~ Hovan, 2
... , bridl, 5 DICitoom, 1 112
bat~l new Carrlor hoatpump,
famlor room will...,-. 304-

5I

Edited by C:LAY I. POLLAN - - - - - - -

47 Wantad to Rent

~·~~-~~-----------1

For Sate: Wllor HauMng-.
- · 1V7tl
Co4IOllolga
q,evyI .........
1-1.
tonk,
Athana
ceo~..·~·I~··~4~~~~~~~S~II!·~_,,...,....,..
Eat. A snook /Soda
Rto. $1,200 IWt Pel. 1-80NI!So
8313.
~

31 Homes for Sale

~31'&lt;/HM
H~\1318

•Th'r w bedroom country Uftl"", Fumlahld 4 Rooms And Bath,

;n:;&amp;Pm'.~

-==:::::::;::~:;::::::::::::::::::==

2.33ACRES
More or less.

8

Tho_t Intriguing Worcf Game with a Chuckle

J.HnHNn

Flrwt
HDiter
APinm•ua,
3br. mobil home, rtft,.nc• Second Avenue, Galllpolle. 614o
from lalt landlord, AI. 35, 2ml. 441·1800 Sonlor, Dllablod, a
South of llo:Oonaldo. 304-07!1- Handicapped 1 • 2 ladroom

for Rem

41 Houses for Rem

11tar1 W You QuattiV. IIIUII Bo
bltlolio. -

Room - . St-....,lc
Stova, can Ahar :i PJI. • I

···7244.
Mobile Homes

b To E~De~a~lan A LKal Corporation Hat O!&gt;onlngo For 11
Poopla. $1,200 Par - h To

HoMII:,

--Mo-bl-1_ _ _ ,1_44_ _ __
42
e Homes
Apanmem
for Rem
for Rem

tl5o evenlnge

SEVERAL -'To ACRE PIIACELS:
Countr, Salem Twp.
KN. R•"*.. betutltu1
land; - . puture and hllla.
Coil ."" """" . -p. 1-814-51311845, Atlolni,OH.
42

-..

Sunday nmn

dec-.

""'":li

_ . ond Ito- A•
qul...t 114-63:1-2338.
Nice, ciNn 2 or 3 lood,_
houH In
lor oro
oontrect whh optiOn to IMoy, no

Lots &amp; AcreagB

1112-47:11.

~-t:c~d l:a~ng

Nice I
Clean,
fotSOIMo. Ptua Dopoolt. Ph. '"'
44f.l'lll, Evt. BM-141-11131, •
3 IR homo ,_to IOMI,
tlroptaca,
2 cor
hoot, Mntorat
air. ,.24; 11 I,";

7 Aoama wKh Balli, Fuol Heat,

Real Estate

from Ritchee Bridge.

'"POSTAL JOBS -

auranca, anon VI!'' ol !rea lot
,.ill, all lor only $1"'-., coli t·
-.&amp;:r742SI.

Thlano- w11 not

38~21ath-ln

:113SAn

Galllpallt,

oreat lnv~'

CONSIGIIMEIIT AUCTION
Sat.llov. 20, 1993
10:00 A.M.
Located on St.

11

- Redmon MlrO, -m., Incl.akiltlng aupa, btocka,
51f. warranty, homaiCIWn.. ln-

.

I. 'JU86i l&amp;~!l 94J 01 PIHWO~s 84S
'J46!1J J94 JO SABIBP Auaw 84J lflOqB
l&amp;~dn saM Ja6uassad &amp;U!Ji!e &amp;4J.

wv.

Hovan,

2br. toouaa, 304..112o3l't52.

S©R4{l}A~J&amp;~trs

33HHJ..A.VMNnH

-8.1 ~ua6a &amp;lll .~.i&amp;JSBJ &amp;J&amp;4JJ&amp;6 pua
J88 ,(w puf48Q J84)88J 8 )f:)RI Pln(X)

·

j,____...:===&amp;=A=u=C1=1o:n::=::.-----.

WANTED: englnl tor 1988 Ford

-.......-to......
__
ortgm, or~
nako ~ouch,..,_,
lmlladon or dllatmlnlllon."

21

•wapaw •suaew 11• As.· Ane8Mspe!fd

Thn&gt;ua-.

. . FodoroiFalr~A.d

.

Poineroy-Middleport-Galllpolls,
OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
.

;Jeep II 33HHJ. A~MNnH

1112 N0nto 11dD - · Huge
llfoa!!louo With catheilo
.......Celtlnot
1h...
1 - ."lWo Iaiii. Huge Qer.
....,
· 01
Iaiii.
a..r·
12110 TUb
Sq. In
Fl.Laco
ltorago;
Hea AI Tho EDrH. Uvtd tn
lAM Than Ono YNr. Excollenl
Condltlot, lluat Sae To Ar&gt;-lata, can 1"'241'-20:12
Laavollaa-11 No.Anowar.

M,..._..,••au•
tt•o:• 1"4•1uulljoat 10

14,1993

HoURS for Rem :·

117'1 Tlt111, Jbr. ' rwncehhd, fur.
~.

-.
-famllalalalua·o r -

10

41

November

............
••AJiwrcwh •••;; r

..... • • • '''· coli ftl.lll2o

Mobile Homn
for Sale

32

Gl111&amp;-- I ~~~go!~
kt.tua . . ...,.pNkaw,

:::.:W

14, 1993·

November

Do

=~·j::=·=======~

L.

wv

- ctoanod t,lgh! ~
A.... To: Col EIOdlle, P.o. Coe:asalwl. A1Jid1ntlll, ICevr.

llelge County le ..,cepllng appllceUona unUI Doc. 1
from JMNDRI qu..llled 1o be Ita Economic O.Volapmen l
Dlreclor. The auc.... alul appllcenl lor IIIIa poaldon
muel be ule lo develop and admlnleler the plene
required to promote economic end community
developmlllll wllhln the County, locate end properly
apply lor lho.. funding aourc11 lh•t will leclllllll
lmpl•m•ntetlon of theat plene, be ctpable of
admlnleterlng euch funding 11 mar b• obLilned, be
r•ponalble lor loceUng new bualneaa11 and lndually
willing to loclll In the County end ln•urlngthet they
receive whatever lllltlanca Ia required to do ao,
provide exlatlng bualna1111 with eny 11alelenca
required lo allher expend their operetlana or lnaure
their oonUnued viability. Till• paroon wDI repr11entlhl
County In mett.ra relelld to economic development et
epproprl1le mHUnp end conferonc11 focellr end el
th• IIIII level. lllchelor'o degrH In claclpUne rallied
tolbova proftned but "'JUivalonl wUf be conoldored.
lluelbe ellher 1 r11ldent of Molgt County or be willing
to become 1 realdenl Seltry up to S25,000 to tl.lrl
blled on quallftcedone. Send reaum• to lhe ell.lnUon
ol the lklga County Commlttlonere et thla eddr11a :
Ohl 45761
:C:iCM:U:rth:ou="=·P:o:me;::ro:ll:·

.

. •

REDUCED! IIIIIEOIATE POSSESSION!
49630 Eagle Ridge Roeo:J. 1 112 &amp;tory
brick/vinyl sided home with 4 bedrooms
bath , family room. dining room with bui--in
hutch, kitchen , lilting room , newer heat
pjump. ,Building wilh lruit'OIIIIar. Approx . 2
acre lawn. additional mobile home hool&lt;-up.
1572

REDUCED! NOW $57,500.00 - 4 Bedroom
home situated at Eagle Ridge . Extra noce 1'/,
story home . Oversized 2 car garage . Extra

.1 home hookup Owner wants an offe&lt;L
mob18
·
1558
ATTENTION I DEER HUNTERS! Over 119 acr·
es just waiting lor you. Lots of wooded &amp; pasture land. Septic &amp; well on property.
1581
HOME I 10 ACRES. Salem li"!ng room,
dining room, kitchen. 111m &amp; mosc. other
IMoUclnga. $40's.
1580

RIGGS CREST - This has had lots of carel
Th~ee bedroom ranch with full O&amp;sement SO%
fm1shes . Detached 24')(24' garage and

basement garage also. A must seal Asking
$65,000.00
IS7t

' Discover The Power Of Nuniber 1.nc
lfoOtomt:I•IICII"'fii)QilU' ..... o\NOOfiiiWtD. 1,.-..-. ~

..................... c.e.r" .......

fill

�BEATTIE BLVD."" by

•

Pomeroy-:-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH- Polnt Pleasant, WV

Times-Sentinel
Beanie

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

n tl

Suntona taMing bod wllaco
tonnor, C&lt;yotol Sun bulbo
willa thin 40hrw. on them,

.:.56:.......:.P,;;..at;.;;s....;,fo;;,;r....;,Sa::::.;le:......_1se

Pets for Sale

56

lor sale

Col 114 441 02:11.

61 Fann Equipment

Farm Supnl,rs
lrvr,1ock

!!Jdraullc oii,IO go! Jl21. - .·
Eiiu~J. or· 'ltV.
~'ll'n
1-.z77-3117.

c.

g:=~:tAUSucr.r,.~:.::. :::~·,::.~:r

Julio W

=·==: - ·

AKC Roglll- Coc.... lf:lll

61 Fann Equipment
AKC Rog-111ocll Lob Pupbutt,
ploo, llolo I Fornolo 1280; 814114-1112·3802.
F- ~~ Pd, Hot! F - ,
446·1411.
Doi!Nitlon tor oolo, oil
F- AUiomotlc HOG Wot-.
AKC
Roglotorocl
Brfttony w - ohl, 114-112.a1M,
Roglolorod Auotrallln 114 Ul 2101.
TMn Boys LNther Bomber Soonlol pupa, 4 montho old, Drogonwynd Cot1ory: CFA lhoP-d,_!l_ol_l,}llontho, Hod
JockotluiUko Now, Slza Smoll, obolo I wormod, $110. 304-411 Slomooo Klltono. 81f-4484844 All Shclo, -111111.
Booutl Gift, $55, 11+2511-1445. 1157.
l l o - F"'liuoon 211 Ttoet«
Allor 7:00 p.m.
57
eo.Pull, $8,110i. 210 !1!..
Musical
Twc 10111 Uood Flboralooo AKC
Call, HMI:IIf, StiNO, M,Mai ~
Roglllwocl
Cloldon Ftoh Tonlt, 241S Jocklon Avo.
Gorogo Doon, ~u 114=318- Rol111l-, ooll 114-·3131.
Instruments
LonG 4 WD t,Dw Houro, $8,110;
Point P-nt, 304-1111-2013.
114-2BHI22.
10gol. tonk oot-upo, $11.'88.
1512.
AKC Roglllorod Pua, Chow, Young
Porokooto,
b .H. Clorlnoti144J'1.2728.
Uood
lltrnl1urwoouchoo, Shor·Poy, Cottle, A--· Homot-. $2.11 I s.tH.
rwclln.w, chairs, dining table, lllnlltu111 Pl,_hor, Pokl._., Ev,rydoy low prtcoo.
Terrlw
PoOdle,
cholro ond hutchJ•• oxcollont Bolton
Doohund, Lobo. ai+o441-G404.
Puppy Pollee Pol Shop.
condlllon, 114-112-7-.
Fruits
LcC:Otocl In CI.C. IILtrJIIW CO. tJo1. 58
Wo""
otove 11,000 !!ooall pupploo, $10, ~ llpollo. Now_.. 1~1.o404.
Vegetables
BTU wllh IM, SlSO, lt+iot2'2M'!. Thonkoglvlng wook, 114- • Schoo- puppl• mlnlotu311'11
tftw
5:30pm.
·
·~
Appl
...
juot
on At. 143, one milo
Grodor, T - Slrl-.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
200 PSI 111.11; 1 lncn 200 PSI Boagloo,
gun dogo 1or 1011 I - · AKC, chomplon -.th of C.rpontor. Rod and
I Clrocloo, Ovw · 200
h2.10; Ron E - Eri1on&gt;rtooo, oolo, COli 114-111:Z.2134 allor -~- Coolvlllo, Bt+817o Goldon Dollclouo opploo. Opon l911cltio An Hour, 614-388-9:182
Jocklon, Ohio, 1.-137-t528.
..
:.•
WATER
STotiAGE TANKS
Allo¥o And Bokiw Ground FDA
Real Estate General
Real Estate General
AfiP"'•ocl For Pollblo Wotor.
Roil EvaM Entorprtuo, Jock·
oon, Ohio, 1~7o8528.
wotU excellent, $1200 Frim,

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

November 14, 1~3

63

79

Motor Homo

11 Cra11l:lrtd c- With 12..,.

lOCI Chlrololl Col- Olhoi-.
Duo Soon ~.000 For Oraup.

a....,

Rio
Ohio.
Evontngo: 114-44HBB7.

3100.

Me rchandlse
Now C.olo Ko•boord Stlit In Box
'
Loodod, 1200; OBO, Muot Solll

f14-446..S055.

44 Utgt S+W 29 BIUI I " Wood

Bo1 Extrat, Exc. $425; Mlr11n
1894 Extroo, Eltc. $275. (614)

448-4172 Doyo;

•

New wood pelr.t ltov•. RC
Rooting, 304-372-5308.

ZM-1610 Oak
Anytlmt Alk For Sttvt.
(814)

Belgulm Browning•· Round
Knob, Light 20, SwMt 16, Light
12. exctlltnt condition, $1800,

Curved Glua China
Cablneta O.k TabiM, &amp; Chain,
Etc. River Vtllty Otk Fumhure,
3883 Goorgoo CrNk Rood, Gal·

tlpotlo, OH, 114-441-4311.

From 11111.00. Lim.. L l..o11ono,
Accoooorloe. Monthly •oymonto
Lew Aa $18.00, Coli Today FREE
NEW Color C.toloQ. t.aoG-462•
11187.

55

Building
Supplies

Bloc::k, brick, uwar ~)!pee, win·
dowa._llnttll, etc. Clludt Win·

tora, "lo Grondo, OH Coli 614241~21.

SIMI Bldgo. Gloontlc Suporoolo.
Hugo Sovlngo On 875 Sq. Ft.

614·742· 2768 .

Portable Conc111to Stopo, 2
Slopo, 4Ft. Wldo, 14" High, 34" Through 1,500 ~. Ft. Wt Al'll
Dopth, $85, 614-258-1529.
Not A-arohr. Worlumm Conatr.
614-388-8420.
Ouaur ftODr modal color TV,
53
Antiques
nHdt rtpalrH; 51,..941-28&amp;5 STEEL BUILDINGS. Factory
Buy or tell. RlvtriM Anllquet, dayo.
S~lolo Sovo $$. 241132, 31.SO,
1124 E. lloln Stroot, on At. 124, A•ll.tlc car ltereo power amp, 6011100, 1tix120. Will Dollvor, Bob
814-448-0721.
Pomaroy. Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00
watta, like new, $45, 114-892·
a.m. to 6:00 P.'!!,.Sunday 1:00 80
2354.
to 1:00 p.m. 614-wz-2521.
56 Pets lor Sale
1
Wanted: C.oh pold 1or "Old Loa ::::=o~~n
~..::r. 3 llonth Molo Rogiollrocl Block
Houoo", will 1111110YI. l14-2~ tlonl $125, Phono: 114-446-8292. /Ton Coon Hound, Slrocl By
i44B.
Knight Charro&gt;lon BlOck
Several Uatd Doora and S1orm Grond
Will Buy Ono Hom Or EIIOioo. Wlndowo
Julco
$150,
814-388-11$38.
all1or $30 614-441-4127.
Dove'a Nat AntiQue~, 331
AKC
Doberman
Pupplal, Alao,
Socond Avonuo, Golllpollo, 114- 9 1 - Sola Matching LIJ Bock
AKC Ma .. Doberman Stud Ser·
446-IITitl•· !!'on .SOt., 8:30-6, Recliner, SSOOi Before 8 A.M. Or YICI.
61o\.25W183 Atttr 5:30
Frldoye:......
After 6 P.ll. 114·256-8336.
P.M. Saturday Or Sunday
•
Smllh &amp; WHoon, model 14, Anytime.

'7:," i.:::l!'1.""

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1988 Pontoon boot II honoo
llorcury -or.
1117 ontlquo Glboon guitar, _,. oond~
tlon. $400; 388 SX P'aclcord htl
computor wllh 107 hold drtYo,
14'" VGA monitor, SIOOi I'Mooll2·
3517.
2 C.oh Roglll.,. $100 Eoch;
Eroctrtc
us: W.tl c..
$300; Soo AI: 422 Second
Avonuo, Golllpollo.

i40i!o:

sw-

25"

ltalnlnt StNI 38. high atan-

AKC Rog. Boxor pupa, llvo
dord 12go.. pump. ITHACA model ma111, IWo flmal•, t.wn whh
37, 12go. d•r gun, 114-2BH522. whftt marklnga, mutt ....
Sam Somerville's army IUfplue $2501oo., 814-9tl5-3807.
since 1184 by Sandyville Pat AKC RogiOiorod Amarlcon Por11
Office h• full line liZH Clm• -Colorocf Cockor Sllonlol Puptlauge, Junior klda 4 to aenlor pin Toll Dockocl, bow Clowo,
XXXL. Compotlvo prlcoo. Fri- RemovH, Born: 10111113 Now
S.I·Sun, noon till 6:00pm, Tokln; Dopootro, Rudy In Time
othere dtys &amp; hourw. 304-273- For Chrlatmtal Stud Swvlc.
5655.
Aloo Avolloblo. 614-37!1·2728.

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER .............. 388 8828
WILIIA WILUAMSON, REALTOR .... 245-1070
WILLIAMSON, REALTOR .... 245-8070
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR .............. 446-1187
RUTH BARR, REALTOR ................... 446-0722
DEBORAHSCITES,REALTOR ........ 448 8B08
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .............. 448 8808
MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR .......... 448 8B08
ROSS, REALTOR ............. 245-9575

n/

...

-- bn ·-Curtlll ...... lmpew..,... .... No
Job Too Bla Or Smol, y_,. Ex·

~- -lono, - - .

Rooflntl. Kllchono /Bolito. lno
ourocl, 1'1111 EOII ..Ift. 114-31J.

lllrtcot,

$2711/couolo. Umllod tlckoto.
407·1117-8100 .... 1581. llon-1111,
8:00AM· 10:00PM.
Both vanitY. CoffM Tobia, a·End
TobiN, 2 Lompo, Prlood
Roooonobly, 814·2~.
Brond now loclloo blk loo1hor
Hortoy jackot, Iorge, $10.
Sla 18 ioocldlng gown. 304·77311173.
Chrtotmu TrHot Till 11111 ,_,
cui .,., 4ug $30, ~ on 91.
Ate. a. 1m1 01111 Good ""-'~ Cnun:h. Thornao
TrM F1nn, 304-171-4041,
Cloth Cor eo.w For Cotvllla Or
Slmlllr Sltocl Cor; Good Cond~
tlqn; $100, 814-4-.

1103. CAPE COD - Brick Cape Cod situated on 2'{.

_,

IrA
, ....,

•

1

1112 Ford PlciiUp, Good Shope,
Alum. Whl..e,IM-.t48·15'M.

I

I

r

, ...,

W'tl ng,- - .. -

Uce r I ._,.AoiM.
RkiRIM lleolr'-1, Wi
I,
J04.f75.1711.

......

23 LOCUSTsT..
--•
/til$ 446 6806

acres overlooking Ohio River. Home features 4
bedr~ms , 2 full bathS, living room with fireplace. 1922
sq It hvmg space. 36x48 metal bwldlng and 14x24 frame
bulldmg El ht pump and cent. air. Call tor price and
k&gt;catlon of this beat.n1ful Cape Cod home

IS78. HAVE A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY ESTATE - Build
vour dream home overlooking a large lake 73 Beres m11
ot rolling land, clean and mowed, with a bit of woodlarKl 8
ac. of lakes m/1 Th1s property has many opportunities. Its
present use is a paid fishing lake. Great for a church
camp, camping grounds or subd1v1de . Long Road
frontage .
1885. OLD FASHtON CHARM- In town IOC8!10n tor "Mr.
Fix 1r. Large 2 story home. 3 bedrooms, LR, formal d1nlng
room, kitchen, oath. AttaChed garage and comer lot. Walk
to school and shopping.

f833. PRICE REDUCED, 174,000.00. 3 bedroom wltn
fo.rmal dining room, living room, kitchen, dining area wah
slld•ng doors tp pool area, 1'I• baths, full basemem with
family room w1th fireplace, 2 car attached garage Close
to town - city schools. A MUST TO SEE.

•

·1823. CLOSE IN. Clean 3 BR home w1th 5 acres m/1.
~. 1 bath, eat-In kHchen, very large family room , 1 acre
garage This home Is just rtght tor a young family or a

retired couple. Make appt. to see . Call Eunice Niehm
446-1897.

nrm.

Estate General

II

~

Allen C. Wood, Rea•or/Broker-4-46-4523
Ken Morgan, R...or/Broker~71

NEA. In(

/_ /.

~

D. C. •rat Salts, Inc.

1813. RANCH HOME with family room 3 BAs, 2 baths,
heat pump, cent air, situated on '/, ac. mJI. Home Is 5
miles from town . hosplfal, and app. 6 m1les from shopping
cenrer. Approx. 15 minute drive to R1ver Valley High
School.
1872. STATE ROUTE 110- 3 ac lot
Charolals Hills . Make an offer.

mn ' $15'000 00·

Older 2 story home with 4 bedrooms and buildings ·
Home In need to f81?Bir 117 ac m,11 Call for location.
·

1881. WHITE OAK RD. location. 30 acres m/1 vacant

ltOO. BUNGALOW with 2 bedrooms, LA .. kit, dm area
utility nn Overlooking the Beautttut OhiO River. $29,900. '

land with timber. mineral righls, good road fron tage
Some cleared land. $26,000

HOe. IN TOWN LOT JUST REDUCED, $1700.00 will

ftl19. $25,100 will buy this lovely hOme. 3 bedrm ., LR,
kit , 1'I• baths, comer lot &amp; garage. Virginia l. Smith 3888126

11907. 7 A.CRES WITH 400 SQ. FT. ROAD FRONTAGE.

1121 . NEW LISTING - Very clean home offer~ng 3
bedrms., 2 baths, nic8 entry, LA &amp; family rm., 3 car
garage. located on SA 160. This can be a gOOd place to
sell cars &amp; work at home. 2 lOts.

~ SUPER BUY &amp; do you like seclusion."Neat place to
l1ve on 2 ac m/1 . 2 Bedrm. home. gar &amp; build all new.
$30,000 Of offer.

buy this tot. Call today 245-9070.

·

1913. SUPER BUY $1,000-2 bedrm ., mobile home on
re.ntal lot. ($65.00 mo.) Cozy front porch, add-on makes
thiS a spacious LA, pocket doors to close ott kn area
Range, ref Come see today Realtor owner.
·
·

NEW LISTING, 2 bedroom, 2 bath Park Lane mobile
home on a rental lot $65 00 per month FUlly furnished
don't delay, call 245-9070.
·

1923. NEW USTINCI- Nice 3 bedroom ranch W!lh II
level lot. New heat pump wah central alr, new hot
tlank CaPrilcledWI right, don't hesilate on this one wonllast .
ong.
lma at ~45·9070.
'

wa'f::

me. NEW USTINQ. Beautiful bl·level on a nice lot In
one of the nicer areas . 3 bedrooms, 2'1• baths, 2 car
garage, Priced to sell , better hurry on this one. Call
W11ma at 245-9070. $69,500.00

j

Cannelbura. Inc. 45719
Specializrng in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Bu il dings and
Package Deals. Saie
Hundreds, even Thousands
ol Dollats.
Local Sales Representative
DONNA CRISENBERY
11366 S. St. Rt. 7
Ga llipolis, OH .

ur.; 1xc. cond.j gray WJcruahed
b Ul YOIVot InteriM; $1110. 304-

tl75-1114.

1882 Chivy StO Tohoo, V-11, 4.3, B' truck top ..r, $100 080, 614-

luto,. air, c11H1te. matching
tlboratooo

topper,
mao, 614-111!1~1&amp;.

24,000111,

..

I:MS-3:::.::8::311:::·~-----79

campers •
Motor Homes

MCIRfVER

BEAU11FUL VEW OF
From front pofdl. Thio 7 mt . 3 BR homo lo locatocl
approx. 3 mHeo lOUth of Gotlipolio with 1.33 acre lan_d·
ocaped yard. lnground pool pluo an ...,. 2 room cabin,
.,d a otatage bldg. Mutt .... Price II right
t704
BUSINESS OFFICES &amp; SAI.£SROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO CQURT HOUSE
LOCATED IN GREEN TWP. on Stat. Rout. W -3
bedrooms, 2 balhs, living roorn, dining roorn, .......,,
utility room, 22&gt;&lt;14 garage. Homo;. oix yt'l. old, hal nli&gt;e
lovellot. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

HOME 4 badroorno, 2 bothJ, 2.25 ..,., moN or INa. c:iiY
ochoola, county water. 2 car garage and cennl air. CALL
FOR APPOINTMENT.

tD84 Cltovotto, 4 s-,.~
Porto Cor
114-44W1W.
1D84 Pontile 1000 LE, v-s, outo.,

sm.

~oo~t.:!' !Cl::c~~':'!:

....,.JI
L
?--------.-I

1171.

REOMAH DOUBLEWIDE IN OUAIL CREEK· 8 ,...,. old,
3 bedroom, 2 batho, IMng room, dining
utility room. Priced at $29,900

room.- .......,,

r~· ~ -~--~:~-,

LOG HOllE· localod on Brumfield Road 3 bedruam, bdt,
on 2 ac111s mo111 or less. Cal to - ·

Ca~aday

VACANT LAND- approximately 10 ICIWI loealld
McCormick Rd. Call lor mo111 infonnalion.

Realty

gracious
.
exclusive area. Eleven
total rooms with three bathrooms Foyer wlth 1 open
stairway, large living room with woodburning fireplace,
formal dtning room, gourmet kitchen, famity room and
game rooms have an open fireplace Solarium will let you
enjoy rour seasons. Four oversized bedrooms. Master
bedroom hu cathedral ceiling, whirlpool bath -and
beautiful arched windows. First floor laundry. Attached 2
car garage. TwO heal pumps with backup. 5 441 ac m/1.
If you like lndivkluality your name can be on the mailbox.

446•3636

HOME with above ground pool, 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
central air, gatage, two out building, city ochool, loca1ld
on Stall Rout. 141. ean 1o see.
VACAHT LAND- 1 112 acreo more or leoo. Waltr &amp;
Electric available. Locatod on Buokridge Rood. Prioe
$6,000.00

1101 . A HOllE WITH A

HEART - One of the .
best things in lite is home ownership. 3 bedrm. ranch,
charming LR, eat-in kit. , W• bath, full divided basement ·
w/offlce room and outside entry. 24'x32' garage w/10' .
doors. Make th1s yours now. FHA or VA .

=

t1~992-'1tt58.

38i.e81S.

I

Hay &amp; Grain

s2.amllm
...

1181 Mercury Trt~Cer, &amp;144111171 Evenlngo.

Autos lor Sale

1itn Noah -..o tlood Body,
Offor, 814-245-51133.
1,o7 P&lt;itorbuiH Conv. Wllh
St11por, Smol Window 310
CUmmlno Ll&gt;'na Wilool Booo,
RUnning Condition, $7,500, 114Wt-3100.
Votkowagon Supor Bootlo,
Ike. body • rnterfor, prJc.cl on

11111 Oklo, 1 ow-, 40 -.t.,
like new, owner will 1IMnee,
$10,000. 304-1'15-3030 or 1754232.
11111 a.moblto 0.111 11.
PS PB PW p
~-...-.m, • • • ower
Soolo, Cllmllo Control, Locka, E!'!- AIIJN Stereo c...

D--··
=It=., ~tiT~
..-a

E&gt;:collont Condllonl
Good, Aoldng: ~,400. 114-441-

4223~fllri:OO P.M. 4cyc.,
11181 Ford Probe,

1% BATHS FAMILY ROOM IN BASEMENT
I
E DOOR 'FROM FAMILY OPENS ONTO
LARGE WOODED
CARPORT. IN THE COUNTRY, BUT
NOT TOO FAR OUTI 547 900
'
.
THIS HOME HAS STONE EXTERIOR AND STONE
FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOII • 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS,
CARPORT, PLUS DETACHED APARTMENT WITH GARAGE
RENT FROM APT. WILL HELP MAKE YOUR HOUSE
PAYMENTI .64 ACRE LEVEL LOT. APPROX . 3 MILES FROM

LAWN.

GARFIELD AVENUE· 3 bedroomo, living room, ltllchen
and bath. Wlthm walking diotance ot stares and odloalo.
Call to S&lt;lQ .

YOU WILL LOVE THE SETnNG ••LOTS OF TREES. THIS
RANCH HOME HAS LARGE COVERED DECK.FAMILY
KITCHEN WITH AMPLE CABINET SPACE .. ON MAIN
LEVEL PlUS A FULL KITCHEN ON LOWER LEVEL..
FAMI'Y ROOM WITH WOOD BURNING STOVE.. VERY
L
AFFORDABLE FOR
COMFORTABLE AND VERY
$52,000.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE -..:R
1..fi00..8M-1066

til
-

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR EN11RE USTlNQI Ptc:lt Ill'
THE FREE QUAUTV HOMES BROCHURE AT sc.E OF .
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, IUPERIIAIIKETI,
MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

FOURTV EIGHT ACRES. MIL RIO GRANDE AR EA
MOSTLY WOODED HILL SIDE . CALL FOR MORE

=, I.~GA::L:LI:POLJ::S~.:(A~G~E~N~T~O~W~N~E:D~)~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::~:::::::::~

~io. ~~1);4 ::'~~1sn~

Real Estate General

lf)epeellon. 304-875-1038 after

REDUCED SUBURBAN BEAUTY _ The tin the yard. Owner an•lous to sell.

remRable spacioUs home with vlaw of the county. Italian
tile foyer, cathedral ceiling·with balcony, 3 BR, 2'h baths,
living room with woodburnlng fireplace, eQUI~ . kitchen,
breakfast room has a lg. window, stereo ·speakers
throughout, brass light fbctures and much more. 2 car
anached garage, aHic storage, 2 acres m/1. This house Is
maintenance tree best quality. Make your appointment

71

· - · · 114-9112·

1m

Insulated windows, central air, kit. w/dlshwesher, trash
compactor and ceiling tans. Den or office rm .. fruit trees.
strawberry patch, grapes, garden spot &amp; basketball court

1148 -

•

I

1

on

.1183. LAND CONTRACT- Corner lot in city. 1931
' Chestnul St . Comfortable 3 bedrm ., 2 bathit w/full
basement Lot 150'x160', D.R., huge LR wffirep(ace. new

I

Aoglot•oil Slond.iidlnd
monl;· ;;112
~.·l~015
~~~
-~-~YO~m~'1~-~
· "~-~
olCJ)orloncod
rldor only. 3-75- :.
•· ~~~~~14-~
!101 or 814-441J.3708.
11111 Ford Eocorl OL Lotchbock,

Transportation
acres overlooking, Ohio River. Home taatures 4
bedrooms. 2 full bBths, II~Jing room with fireplace . t992
sq. fl. living space, 36J&lt;.48 metal building al'ld 14x2.t frame
building. Elec. heat pump and cant. air. Call for price and
locatlon at this beautiful Cape Cod home.

I

Rog. 91ondordbrod aoldlng, 11117 Nlooon :1100 zx Turbo, ,_
gontll, STIO. ~
IOodod, rod, vary ~

Hoy, oquo111 boloo, $1.50 I up.
Sohlrdoy only picKup. 304-1753860.
~ound Bolt Hoy For Solo, Storocl
I~ Born, 114-245-tn17.
•

1803. CAPE COD - Bnck Cape Cod

WI-.

-

Hoy For Solo, 814-211-8071.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
RACINE· Pine Grove Road- A 2-3 bedroom home sifting on
a little over 2 t/2 acres Has a storage building w~h anached
woodshed, a 20x30 workshop, hog pen, and a chicken
house.
144,900
lim. PRICE REOUCED, IIAKE OFFER, 3 bedroom, 2
bath doublewlde on an acre lot. Close to the new 35
bypass. 245-9070.

OLDER HOME· 4 bedroomo, living room, cining ramn,
kHchen, family room, located on 1.8 acroo. PRICE II
REDUCED. CALL SOONI

Now Yorttor Good Concllo
roollcornonl tlon, - l c , . AIIIFII AI&lt;,
ftol!oro, ono horalonf, ono an- Evorythlng Powor
au• hereford croe1, one .atMr, Eto. '78 OCJO Mil• 13 000 t'f4.

For Sail-

on Bob

HOME ON WATSON ROAD- 2 bedroorno, 1 bAth, living
room, c::ining room, kitchen , approx. 1 112 acrea, CALI
FOR APPOINTMENT.

.UCklng, 61+245- 1458.

z:~==!&amp;.~--------~----1 111111

SURROUNDS this

".
""

18M. NICE LOCA110N CLOSE TO THE GAVIN PlANT.
2 story, 4 bedrooms on nice lot New roof, aiding and

MIDDLEPORT· Level laying lot on Broadway Ave . Lot 15
approx. sox 125
Priced 10 . . n at $12,000
HARRISONVILLE· A very well maintamed 1984 three
bedroom mobile home s1Hing on 1.42 acres.
Jut! the lend lor $12,000
May buy all lor $25,500 or
CHILDREN'S HOME ROAD· At the edge of Pomeroy a 5.6
acre wooded lot, with util~ies available Great building site.
$15,000

11161 Dodgo 1100, 814-441.0731.
1861 Oklo Ill Rogoncyb Ill PW,
Hill, Ioeila; crulie; AI ; lrnlfm
It~; new pt~lnt, brak.., tun.

quolvoluo, 814 tas 33«1.
tDM Bronco 1 Bilek. 1113
_..!:.P~H..'-.!6:.:.14:::·:::25:.:,6·. :;16::3.:. 3
Volkowogon Robbtt, Dl- El&lt;·
Clllont CondHion, Coli Aftw 7
P.ll. 11+258-1217.
6
'3
ll est k
tDBI
Cho¥f
Co-y.
.::___:::.:V=:.:O:.:C.:.:.__ _ 1Automotlc, AC; 4 Door, Groot
Goa llltoooo, tlooullful. !Joroao
3 Yoar Old Gontlo Bull 112 Kepi, $2,100, 11+371-25U.
Llrnouoln 112 Anguo, 1,500 lbo., tDI5 f'Ord Thundorltlrd, 2 ~,10~0,:,.:6::;14::4::::4:::6~Jit1::;!·:_.......,::-:--:-·l""'o. om11m _..,. ~
!50 R~IOiorod Anauo, Chi-An- ccndht"!!,. thorp, $18itl c5SO,
gua Caw1, $900i 2l Realat•r.d 114-Me.ilOIII.
Anguo And Chi·Anouo 'Holt.ro, 11111 Oklo Cutlooo su..- V-8,
llony Show Proopacll At: $800. Automatic, 47L~ OrtcilnoiMioo,
$late Run Farma, Jac:klon, OhiO Auna And unve. lleal Nice
:::•1::.4-::281-::..:113::1::•·: ....,.--:-c--l $2,200, 114-3!147H•.
l:oHto
Houflna:
Anytime, 1U1 etuo Flrolllrd T·l'opo, AJr,
AnyWhoro. PLA lloborv Ohio, Cruloo, AUI-Uc, M, Lew
Triolo Crook

Qualified Buyers on~. VIrginia 388·111;!6.

POMEROY· Route 33· A 1 1/2 slory Block home · 2· 3
lamlly room, and a large living room with open
i
. 1
on appro)C. one acre lot with a newer 2 car
insulated garage and a heat pump.
$50,000

TimWataon,

Autos lor Sale

Ev..-y Monel~ Chuek Wllllame, Mil•, AekJng $4,5001 1'14o446oo

OFFICE 992-2886

POMEROY· Anne Street- A 1 112 story home with 3
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, large living room, dining room,
kitchen, full basement Down stairs has archway doors, built·
In cabinets and knick-knack shelves bes1de of fireplace.
Newer carpet and paint, hardwood floors, all on app&lt;ox

446·1066

-f'

71

~

NICe bu11d1ng area

32 Loculi Street, Gallipolla

Moae Cantetbury, Redor-4411-3408
Jeatlelte Moore, Reeltor·2!58-1745

1873. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land lays well
1888. VACANT LAND - Spnngtield Twp 59 acres m/1
across from Holzer Hosp1tal. Great loca tion for large
homes on a hill

Wootf!R.Jalty, Inc.

11114 Dodao Rom Chorgor, I
CJtlric!!~.!ND, IXCOIIonl Condl•
lion. .....,
Howord Mullon,
1St lluiMrrv Avenue, Pomeroy,
614-1112-3781.

•

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i;==================::;l

Comploto 32" oura · - 01111;
. omoll gu ltoolor 1or bollvoan;
30" bllhroom elnk wHh Cllbhwti
ovory1hlng $300, 114-IMI2•11188.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
1.000 Oilton, $321; JET Bot
(No Send Fllllr Roqulf'O!I)
$1,4115; Ron E - Enlo"'"Jockoon, Olllo 1-7-8828.
Eloclrlc I!NIW 1,320 Wot1o Fen
Forc.d And ~n allltlc Controt, $15, 114479-211!17.

•

"-~•nla.t

0511.

FIOWII Arraraprn.nta Acrou

Alytiumo

Electrtcll ..
Relrtgenlllon

Ohio IM-446-2414.

N Ap.

qt, Q/n"J

•

•
"-'ru~·

•

30 Got. 1JU W.18r Hootw Glooo
Unod GOod CondHion, $50, 11444&amp;·7729.
4 whHo opolul whooro wiiiNo,
11" Ford $121. 304-171-1112.
AHontlon: . i!olllng Chrlolmu
Kanougo, W-ndo, 814-2581327, ·~·· 1135.·/
BohoiNI Cruloo, I doyo/4 nlghto.
Undeit:Jcclcedl
Must
Mill

Hilling

~-_.,._

I'CI RIIT• e~

b~

a

1 0 - Blcycll Ulul-, $50,
11+44e-3005.

F""" ·

Improvements

c.11

Real ESU!te General

T. V., ~. it

GoodCOlor
Condhlon,
$10; Sola
Zanhh
l S I - Brown, Orongo, Gold,
Good Condlllon, $50, 614-24&amp;5118.

Plwnblng &amp;

82

a.

PROFESSIONAL SERVIa MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
=========r-==:=::====~
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Now Commorctat, Homo Unllo,
54 Miscellaneous
1915 Luo-r Collecto,. Gun 8"
Borroll. Good Condition, $800,
S.riout Buyerw Only, 814-446-

Horne

81

Horne
Improvements

- - -..no.-wv

W Hy S.OTHEOR. 7

~3~:~~~-=:=:=:=:::::::~~~~·::::::::::::::~:So:tu:•:•:yo::o=ni:~~----~~~~==11~~~==«=-~F=«~Su:: ~~======~==~==~~

52 Sporting Goods

81

Ron'o TV l!lerYico, opedollzlna
In Zonltlt lloo 001 olclrl(l moil

a-

"Every m1nute and a half I feel
like charging that thing'"

campe... &amp;

Livestock

Bo Soon At Vollbarn F&lt;lrm
===:::..."-- --- ":!
1 16 S.R. 114, 2 111110 Eat Ql

-na

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KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Sunday

5pm.
tlllt Pont. G-Am PIS, PB, Air,
1875 Buick Cllntury, dopondobll Auto, 4 Door, $6,1115, AHor 6
tranoportotlon, 814'357.0612.
P.M. I14-317-o22 8.
1112
Thundorblnt Sport Y·
1175 Pork Avonuo Buick, lltlly 8, All Ford
Pow., Sunroof, Excellent
l~dod, '11,000 octuol mltoo, Condftlon, 114-387-0180.
111)111 1o opprocllll, will 0111
ot: trodo I« good 4 whHior, 304- 88 Ford Thunderbird. Lcodod.
112-2418.
114-441-2351
1178 Elconmoe Chevrolet 350 For Solo: 1983 Chovy Colobrlty,
Engl, 1ood TronoportotlonJ PS, PI, auto., air, Good body,
Rona 00 $1,200. 114-211·114• gOod motor, high niiiNQI, Iota
A~or 8 P.ll.
of now polio, good t1111o, good
WOrk car, IUpir lmtfm IIIIWO
1~ Ford LTD, Low ~~~~ Cllltl11,
$1250, 614•742~2427 If.
G9od CondHion, Coli I
ter&amp;pm.
12117, AHor I P.M.

Real Estate General
1811 REDUCED - $A8,000 - Owner Is anxiOus to sell
this 3
ranch. Very nice home and locatkln. Large
LR
Fun basement, an extra large garage
2
sewer &amp; schools.

HOO. NICE 2 BR, 1 BATH
w/dlnlng area, utll. room, gas furnace. vinyl

Cal4-41·1897.
H18. IIIPRESBNE'BRtCK RANCH of superb quality. 4
bednns., 3 baths. comfortable living rm. w/WoOdburning
fireplace, dining rm., equipped kit., all large rooms,
covered back &amp; front porch, 2 car attached garage,
building 6 1 IC. m~. Green &amp; City
DONT BUY
ANYTHING UNTIL YOU SEE THIS
I 388·8826

COMERCIAL LOT· Pomeroy· At the corner of Main Street
and . Spring Ave . A great localion for almost any good
business. Approx. 88 feet frontage on Main Street and 182
feel on Spring Street. All util~ies available
$65,000

1021 SECOND AVENUE· Very nice home
offen1 3 BRo, LR, DR, kill:hen w/f8/lge,
n1frig., waohor &amp; dryer, bath, gas heat, cenl
air, 2 firoplacas, some now carpet,
unattached garega. Shade - ·· CaH today.

_MINERSVILLE· The works all done in this 3 bedroom one
bath home with an new wiring, roof, furnace, insulation and
hot water tank. Make your appointment today.
$35,000
H11.

TIRED OF BEING 'CRAMPED FOR ROOM
but you want to be close to town. too. This
home is for you, located 1 mi . from new goff
eourw, 3 BRs, bath, LA, DR, kitchen .

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE ON THIS
NICE PIECE OF PROPERTY AND HOME,
3 BAs. LA. kitchen, Bath, la'll" unattached
garage w/conc rete ftoor. 4.5 acres mil.

LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE AND
QUIET· Thia could be R: 49.M acrw,
Andrews Rd., 8 y.ar old home wif1 3 liRa,
2 112 baals, LR. DR, FA, '-t Plll'P. 2 c:.r
II"''IQQ plus 241&lt;411 del8ched garega.
Approx. 43 ac,.. in hay.

KNOCKS ONCE- 5 bedrm .. 2

story home wtenclosed porch, tencect lot, 3 carpons, 2
buildings, office or sales building, blacktop &amp; cement

driveways. Bolt garden spot In VInton. $47,700.

HOLCOMB HOLLOW ROAD ... home and
30 acrao, mA, 3 BAs, LR, kitchen, bath.
Owner has dona a lot wotk.

RUTLAND· Beech Grove Road· Approx. 5 acrH with a 3
bedroom 2 bath home with a«ached 2 car garage. Has
equipped kitchen Including the dishwasher. Comes with
washer and dryer also. Country IMng close to town. $41,500

; MINERSVILLE· Block commercial building wilh 4,000 sq.
. carpeted conOfete floor. exira storage bldg., 10 m1nutes
l ,• tloom Pomeroy.

li;;~~:~~~~l::;SR

RACINE· Elm Street- Uve in the 2 slory section ol thiS home
and rent the one story rear section and live tree. 4 rooms, 2
bedrooms and bath. Large nice lot.
$:20,000

Cooootll,

Dooll I Soparolo, 200 WoH
Paw• IooMer, t180 Both, l'14o
446-ma EYOnlng"'•:...·_ _ __
LlYing room oullo, vorv _..
condftlon,l100, 1~.
llldtronlc Dual Chonnol Tono
SVotom U.ocl, iiib. 114448-7121 EYOnlngo.
I

POMEROY· Wright Street· Always wanted an A-trame
home? Well we have just the one lor you. It has over 3,000
square feel and is 3 stories tall. Has 5 bedrooms, 2 baths,
gigantic family room and master bedroom . Oecks on each
level, 2 car garage wHh workshop above, paved drive and Is
nestled In the hollow.
JUST

.-.ooo

DomE TURNER, Broktr..................................... tl2-1112

BRENDA JEFFERS ............................................ ~ •• 112-3CMJI
SANDY BUTCHER .................................................Itl!-1371 .
JERRY 8PAADUNQ .................................... (304) -~

OFFICE ...•......•...••••..-•.•.....•.....•:•..•••••.•......•••••••.•••••••It2•2111

338kitchen.
. OlderLR.
type
home inhas
eat-In
Located
qule.3
t,
There Is also an exira lot with th1s
an excellent building lot. Country tocattan.
·
ONLY $30,000
Hgts. 1 floor plan 2 BR, LA ,
w/blrch cabinets. large garage.
&amp; fenced . Low 60's .

,...._ 8U8!NEBS AT HOllE - S bedroom, 2'/• baths.
white brick home with • · 13 acres. Also Includes a .tOOO
aq. n. commercial building. Call today at 245-9070.
1123.. LOVELY RANCH, NICE LOT, 3 bedroom with new
heat l'"mp, new hot w~ler tank. Brick and Vinyl. 'ax1 o
Dlllllt-.g 245·9070

~OMERO'•&lt;' Brick ranch home , LR, eat-In k~chen , 2 BR ,
bath, bsmt. w/pertlal bath, 1 car garage. Appliances.
.
ONLY $34,900.
- . NICE IIUILDtNQ LOT CLOSE II old
:;m~~ Olalot !"repair. StO,ooO. oo.'~"t:':'l'!. '

~-~~-------.------~----~------------..----------~-----------------·~·~-~·--·-------:·-----=·~··----~·''•
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OWNER WILL BPUT ACREAGE.. 38.50
ACRES m'l naar Tycoon Lat... 28.5 A. in
Rlccoon Twp and IPPfOX. 10A. in
Huntilgbn Twp. Homt on ·ptqperty offers 5
BRo, bath, LR, ·ldtch111, naw luf11IICI, wood
bumlng aiDYO, llidlng. aorna now carpel
Bam on property. CALL FOR DETAILS.
I ACRES. MIL, DAVIS ROAD· Ohio Twp.,
county VM!W available.

~NVE81MENT PROPERTY· Mil Cnoek Ad
3 BAs, LR, kitchen, bath, unattached

gaqge, $22,000

18 SECWSION WHAT YOU WANT? Don't
mlu thio ono, 4 BAs, 2 batho, city scnools,
2 a. mn, allklng $52,000.

PRICE REDUCED TO $62,50011 Beautiful
view ol the river, homo·offers 3 BAS, LA,
kitchon, bath, in ground pool, latge 2 car
unattached giltage could bo a shop . Call

today I
JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD .:. ADDISON
TWP. - 386 acre tarm , 3 ponds , tobacco
base, 44x100 bam wllh concrete ftoors. May
consider split (578) .
~29,000. Five mlnuteo to town. Capo Cod
etyta home w/3 BAs, both, LR, kitch111, gao
heat tun b.Mn\111l

BEAUTIFUL HOllE WITH SPLENDil
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER... Homo ofhtno
3 BRa, LR, FA, DR, 2 112 boths lull
.,._,.,~ cent air, 2 fitWplacea, 3 gaioges
w/eloctric openaro, gafllen spot by ~~v
Cal IDr appointment

...

70 ACRES mil, Sec. 12, Madison Twp .
Approx. 20 acres ti!lablo, so WOods, old
h~ house on property ha s 3 BAs, LA
kitchen . Callar hou sa end sheds also o~
property.
BUILDtNG FOR SALE· Approx. 6,900 oq.

ft. located on Uncoln Pika at Cantonary.

Call for dotails.

US ACRES, MIL, Huntington Twp., comer
of SA 325 and Piper Road. Call lor moN
datallo.

OLD CHEVY.OLDI BUILDING- 420' lronl
on Second Ave. and 62' trontage on G111p8.

1M BKYLANE REBEL MOBILE HOllE·
1072 llq. II., approx. 2 baths, 18x15 LR, .
17x15 ldt:hen, ~lppod. cenl lir. Call lor
maro detllta.

117 ACRES, MIL, FARM IN GUYAN
TWP... O!der home on property w/3 BAs,
LR, kttchen, bath , OR, Farm buildings are
barn, silo, cribs

BE THE FIRST FAIIILY II nts NEW
botha, 'lR. kitchen, gaa
tor maro delds.

HOME· 3 BRa, 2
hMt cent. air. Cal

OFFI~S, OFFICES, OFFICES...

Tharo

what thto 3,000 ft. building oW.11. Locatocl
on SA 160 naar Holzer. Ideal for many
uses. Cal lor"""" inlonntllion.
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. Fl..ta
Grsnde on St. AI. 35. Woll eotabtlohed,
laundromat otto goee With butinooo.
CHERRY DRIVE • 2 BRo , 1 bath . LR.
kitchen, gas heat cily wotBr, used u rental

property.

'

1.75 ACRES . mil. near new 4 lane , ~ BRo,
2 baths, LR. DR, cent. air, 2 car atutchod
garage.

I

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant, wv

Page D8 Sunday Times Sentinel
'·

Farm Bure;;tu says health
.~

·~-;

plan lacks key items

.

!•:_';.:: ".~

•I

JACKSON- President Clintoo's
• Special incenli.ves for doctors
health care reform proposal con- and other health care professionals
tains some positive features tradi· to locate in rural areas. '
tionally supported by Farm Bureau,
• Provision for technical assis· but lacks several key items that tanCe. to suppon the c;levelopment
Farm Bureau considers important. of pnmary care systell)s in rural
Furthermore, panions of the pro- areas. as well as telecommunicaposal are inconsistent with what tion links betweeri rural providers
Farm Bureau considers beneficial and urban health care centers and
for America's farmers and the . institutions.
• Reduction of red tape, papernation as a whole.
work
and bureaucmcy.
Features in the Clinton pl!m that ·
·
•
Commitment
to preventive
Farm Bureau supports include:
medicine-and
wellness.
• A I 00 percent tax deduction
Aspects of the president's pro,
for health care coverage for the
posal
with which Farm Bureau disself-employed.
agrees
include;
• Mandale for employers to pay
employee
health plan coverage.
GALLIPOLIS - Raymond C.
will
serve
as a disincentive to
This
Weiher, Jr., assistant shift operating engineer, at lhe Ohio Valley hire and could actually decrease
.
Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek farm employment.
•
Farm
Bureau
opposes
compulPlant, received his anniversary •
sory
national
health
insurance
and
award for 40 years of service to the
all
the
accompanying
regulations.
company.
In presenting Weiher with his Incentives causing people. to hold
service anniversary award, N. H. individual responsibility for their
Tarr, plant manager, noted that he health insurance is preferred.
• Financing health coverage for
is the flfSt employee to reach such
those
who can't afford it should be
a milestone. Weiher joined OVEC
achieved
tlu;ough reduction of fedon October 4, 1953, as a guard.
eral
spending
and streamlining fedIn 1955 he transfe17ed to the
operations department as an auxiliary equipment operator and
advanced to equipmenl operator
that same year. In 19S9 he was promoted to unit supervisor and in
1975, to assistant shift qperating
engineer. Weiher resides at 1218
Watson Road, Bidwell

Weiher honored

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere In
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly CODtest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off y0t1r
guess to' the Dan,. Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Tbird Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name, •
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls wUI be accepted. AU
contest entries should be turned in to tbe newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
or a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be rea·
lured by the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Dr. Billie Sue Kyger inducted into honorary group
GALLIPOLIS • A local dental its 63rd Annual Convocation in
practitioner, Dr. Billie Sue Kyger San Francisco, Calif., on Novemwas inducted as a Fellow of the ber 5.
International College of Dentists at .
An honorary organization for

It is time to plan for 1994 crops
converted area . Farmers are
advised to get an official wetland
determination from SCS if there is
any doubt.
Once a crop is planted in violation of the hi~hly erodible land or
wetland req01rements ... it is too
late. The producer will be ineligible
for 1994 benefits. By completing
the AD-1026 certification for highly erodible land and wetland in the
ASCS office prior to planting, and
reviewing maps, farmers will have
information to decide whether SCS
determinations are necessary, or
they may contact SCS concerning
details of their conservation plan.
ASCS wants to work with producers to help them maintain their
1994 eligibility for USDA benefits.
However, it is up to the producer to
be informed before planting so violations can be avoided. Contact
ASCS at 446-8686 for additional
information,

By LISA COLLINS,
Gallia ASCS
County Director
GALLIPOJ,.IS • It's not too
early to plan for 1994 crops. If
farmers want to retain eligibility
for 1994 USDA benefits, they must
know before planting next year's
crops, whether the land has had
highly erodible land or wetland
determination made by the Soil
Conservation Service (SCS).
Farmers also need to know
whether ~rops to be planted on
highly erodible land are permitted
by a signed conservation plan and
they need to check whether they
have land that was a wet area that
was manipulated after December
23, 198S, an4 therefore cannot be
planted to agiicultural com modities. Planting areas that were
drained after this date by someone
else does not excuse a producer
from ineligibility if they plant the

Wiseman Agency named Circle agent
ance. "They are considered the
'best of the best.' We arc very
proud to have the Wiseman Agency represent Continental as our
relationship with one another
grows slronger."
The Continental Corporation,
headquartered in New York City, is
a property/casualty insurance organization with about $5 billion in
annual revenues. Its subsidiaries
are leading writers of commercial
and personal package policies and
select specialty coverages through
major independent agents and brokers.

COLUMBUS • Continental
1nsun11ce announced that Wiseman
Atency, Inc., of Gallipolis has
been named a Continental Circle
AgenL
Continental's Circle Agent designation is awarded to the company's top performers who demonsUite professionalism, financial
sOundnesS and dedication to effective insunmce sales and service,
"Only a fraction of Continental's agents achieve Circle Agent
statos," explained Sal Ricciardone,
vice president and manager, Midwest Region, Continental lnsur-

&amp;

the recognition of outstanding and
meritorious service to the profession, the college presented Dr.
Kyger a membership plaque and
gold key symbolic of this Fellowship for conspicuous service rendered the art and science of den tistry,
In an impressive cap and gown
ceremony, more than 250 dentists
from the United States were initiated into the college at this year's
ceremony before several hundred
members and guests. The college,
with representative chapters in
more tJ!an 70 ' countries, has
approximately 7,300 members,
including 4,300 in the United
States. The college conclave was
held immediately preceding the
!34th Annual Session of the American Dental Association in San
Francisco.
Dr, Billie Sue Kyyer is active in
many national, state and local dental organizations. She presently
~erves on the ADA Council on
Dental Therapeutics, is the immediate past-president of the OSU
Dental Alumni Society and pastpresident of the Rehwinkel Dcnlll)
Society just to name a few.
Dr. Kyger is in the general practice of dentistry in Gallipolis, with
husband, Dr. Timothy V,

era! health care programs instead of
tax increases.
• Farm Bureau is concerned that
the plan will employ price controls
while claiming the label of "managed compelition." Concepts Farm
Bureau wants included in the plan:
• More emphasis on medical
malpractice reform.
• Formal recognition of the
important roles that nurse practitioners, physicians' assistants and
midwives play in undeservect rural
areas,
• Ind iv~ual medical savings
accounts to pay for minor procedures out-of-pocket. This would
allow people to purchase higher
deductible catastrophic health care
plans that are much cheaper than
low deductible plans.
• Offer tax incentives for individuals lo purchase health coverage
and invest in medical savings
accounts, and by providing vouchers to lower income people so they
can purchase plans.
Farm Bureau encourages people
to contact their U.S. Senalors and
U.S. Representatives to support
these provisions in the health care
reform package.

HERE IT IS!!

The SPORTY flEW LOOK you've been
waiting for. Co111e drive the all new•••

Crabtree promoted
CHESHIRE • Sandis R. Crabtree has been promOted from Sr.
Maintenance Engineer to Plant
Engineer-Maintenance effective
November 1, 1993, at the Ohio
Valley Electric Corporation's
Kyger Creek Plant, as announced
today by Norman H. Tarr, Plant

1994 GMC SONOMA
Convenience, Comfor' and Quality All
In One Stylish Package.

Manager.

Crabtree joined OVEC in 1987
as an Associate Engineer in the
Performance Department, and in
1988 he was promoted to Performance Engineer. The following
year he transferred to the company's headquarter office in Piketon,
Ohio, as ·a Production and Environmental Engineer.
In 1990 he lransferred back to
Kyger Creek Plant in the Maintenance Department as a Maintenance Engmeer.-Last December he
was promoted to Sr. Maintenance
Engineer. Crabtree Is a gradilate of
Ohio Northern with a bachelor of
science in electrical engineering
degree and resides in Jackson.

-the leaders In the Peoples Bank Discount Brokentge Stock Picking Contest are:

•

-••

Dr. N. P. Klme &amp; Dr. N. W. Robinson

(Offer Expires Nov. 18, 1993)

"i

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8

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE:

\\~t

•0

,.
&gt;

~

[;21 A privale consultation with the doci.&lt;K
[;21 A tborougb spinal examinalioli including onhopedic &amp; neurological tests
. G2J A confidential report of our fmdings .
[;21 An explanation of our .rea.ment procedure if we determine chiropractic can belp you
G2J A referral to lhe proper specialist if we deti:rmine chiropraCtic can't help you

.,,..

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0
S%

IS%

10%

121 X-rays If necessary

ZO%

s, these were the top 5 performing ponfollos out of the hundreds in our conleSL Each contestant chose

Ta AU 5ecUtn• et •••

5publidy traded stocks from a list of 100 selected companies. Performance is !lased upon change In ponfollovalue from
the dose of business Friday, Oc10ber 8, 1993 through Friday, NovemberS. The percentage gain/loss of all entries will be
tneked through 1993 Peoples Bank will award $500tothetop performer, $250forsecondplace and $100forthlrd place.

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THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME OF THE
DANGER SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

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111e Peoples Bank Dtscoonl Brokerage Service is Ideal for lnveslors who do not require the benefit of research or
fttOIIlmendalions, but who still insist on service and personal benefils. Peoples Bank discount brokerage semces are
ol!ered through Olde Discounl Corporation, Member SIPC, NYSE, NASD. Discount brokemge funds are not FDIC Insured.

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MEJGS COUNTY
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
·963 General Hartinger ParkWay
'

Middleport, Ohio

992·2168

MIOOLEPOR
CITY PARK

DB

Low tool&amp;ht 40, )W'IIy
cloudy. Tuesday, m01tly cloudy,
blgb Ill middle SGr..

Survey:

AMultlmoclolnc. - -

MCA announces
holiday activities

NAFTA

in danger
WASHINGTON (AP) - North
American Free Tra(le Agreement
foes are near the votes they will
need to prevail this week in the
House, an Associated Press survey
shows, but backers slill say they
will eke out a viclocy.
"! see a horse race, a down-tothe-wire, hand-to-hand battle that
will be decided during the vote,"
Rep. Bill Richardson, D-N.M., a
chief vote-counter for President
Clinton and congressional NAFTA
supporters, said Sunday. "My prediction is a narrow victory."
·
With the House showdown
looming Wednesday, the AP survey found 204 representatives saying they would vote against the
trade pact or probably would do so
- 13 short of the votes they will
need to scuttle the agreement
Ready to vote yes on NAFTA.
or likely to, were 180 members.
Supporters w,ill need 218 votes to
prevail if all 434 House members
vote because it takes a majority for
a measure to pass. There is one
House vacancy.
·
Fifty others said they were
undecided.
Opponents said their own secret
tally of suppon showed they would
kill the deal, which would gradually eliminau: tariffs and other trade
restrictions among the United
States, Mexico and Canada. Butthey COf!eed~ the}. could not .dis-

I Section, 10 P - 35 cena

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mqnday, November 15, 1993

Multimlllblnc.

active NAFTA opponents. But he
added, "I think we're going to
win."
Treaty foes say the measure will
encourage companies to shift jobs
to Mexico, while supporters say it
will create American jobs by boosting U.S .' exj,orts to the nonh and
south.
A defeat for NAFTA would
politically wound Clinlon, who has
said defeat of the treaty would
weaken his ability to urge other
countries to also lower their trade
barriers. The Senate is expeCted to
approve the agreement should the
House vote its assent.
The AP survey illustrated the
1\urdles Clinton faces to achieving
his goal.
The president, as long predicted,
was having the most trouble persuading members of his own party
l:ontinued on Page 3

Regultir $128 Program

0

. Vol. 44, NO, I~

~d~~~~i;g~~~gB:it;~r;:
Mich ., one of the House's most

We are often asked, "Wbat's tbe ~t way of fmding
out whether or not a doctor of chiropractic can help my
problem?'
We believe the answer can be found in a complete
chiropractic consultation and examination, including Xmys.
And, to help you fmd out for sure, we do a compleu:
cbiropractlc examioalion, including X-rays (procedures
that n(XIIIally cost $128 or more) for $35.
We will make tbis special program available until
Novembef r18, 1993. The only exception to our offer
involves persoOal injury cases (worker's compensalion,
autO accidenls) and public assistance (ADC) in which
case there is no charge biDed directly to the patient for
the fmt visit

·~

Super Lotto:

3·12·19-33-29-34
Kicker:
.448753

to drum up extra
"They've done a deal with

HOW MUCH Wll..L IT COST?

They're out of the gate and beading for the first tum...

Pick 3:
383
Pick 4:
4272

Page4

~~:s~ng deals

Help Me...?·

_how

Browns,
Bengals
defeated

Plans for a holiday open house
on Nov . 28 and the Christmas
parade on Dec. 2 have been completed by the Middlepon Community Association.
. .
.
Tom Dooley. 8SSOC18bon president, said that the open house to be
held from I to 5 p.m. will give the
community a chance to "ring in the
holiday season with a festive flair".
The town will be decorated, the
trees along Second Street lighted,
and most of the stores will be open
for shoppers.
The' parade has been set for 6
p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 2. It will
form on North First Avenue
between Dave Diles Parle and the
Dairy Queen and move down
North Second Avenue to South
Third, then to Main and up South
Second to the park.
Santa will be at Peoples Bank
afler the parade 1o give treats to the
children. Pictures of the children
will be taken with Santa at no
charge, counesy of the bank. No
advance registration is being taken
for parade units. Those wanting to
participate are to repon to the site

BUMPY BRJDG~-Tbe recently resurfaced
Pomeroy-Mason Br1d~e is scheduled to be resur·
· raced &amp;l~in next spr10g af'ter the new surrace

·---•rc ,_ · - ·-·.;. • ., ~ ,

began to exhibit pitting soon at'ler installation.
Meanwhile, workers have patched holes in the
surface. (Sentinel phOCo by Jim Freeman)

-.· ,, -· ~. ' .., ""

Turnni/ie
commission
studying
linkage
1:'
· ·
of Portsmouth, Toledo and Columbus
·
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Turnpike Commission is
ready to begin a study that would
determine how and where a proposed freeway linking Toledo,
Columbus and Portsmouth would
be buil~
.
Gov. George Voinovich
approved the feasibility srody in a
letter sent over the weekend to
commission Chairman Umberto
Fedeli, The Blade reported Sunday.
Interstate 7} would link Toledo,
Columbus and Portsmouth. The
study also would include lnterstau:
74 to connect Cincinnati and
Ponsmouth. Both highways would
be eligible for 65 mph speed limits.
Voinovich said the ToledoColumbus rouu: would be built frrst
because Toledo is the only major
city not connecl,ed to Columbus by

transportation, said 1-73 also would
interstate highways.
"There's been a great deal of attract heavy traffic 10 Florida.
The study would take a year to
bitterness in northwest Ohio
because they feel they've been complete and would review the
denied the benefits of the interstate benefits of using existing roads or
building the freeways from scratch.
system," Voinovich said.
Interstate 73 could be estab"There have been complaints
that it's more difficult to get from lished by improving U.S. 23. 1-74
northwestern Ohio to the capital could be developed from improvethan from any other region of the ments to Ohio 32.
Building a four-lane road from
state."
James Brennan, turnpike devel- scratch costs $8 million to $10 milopment coordinator and a Toledo lion a mile, said Gordon Proctor,
resident, said a new freeway would administrator of planning and envireduce by an hour the three-hour ronmental services at the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
trip between the two cities.
The turnpike commission would
"I have frequently said that
Toledo's problem is we're too big use bonds financed with turnpike
to forget, but tao far away to be revenue to build the freeways . But
remembered," ·he said. " This Voinovich said the imerstates
would not be toll roads.
would negate tha~"
Brennan said the work could
Paul Mifsud, Voinovich's chief
take
seven 10 15 years.
of staff and executive assistant for

Accuser speak~ on allegations against cardinal
WESTMONT, N.J. (AP)- A
Philadelphia man said his public
accusation that Cardinal Joseph
Bernardin and an Ohio priest sexually molested him as a teen will
help him recover from painful sup·
pressed memories.
"Breaking the silence is
extremely important for healing
from sexual abuse," Stephen Cook,
34. said Sunday at his attorney's
office.
Cook, who is dying of AIDS,
said he was suing the Chicago cardinal and the Roman Catholic
Church 1o free himself from images
of abuse he said ruined his life.
"I want to become whole. I'm
tired of hurting," Cook said. "If I
keep holding that secret in, it'~
going to kill me,"
Cook's civil lawsuit was filed
Friday in U.S, District Court in
Cincinnati. The suit accuses
Bernardin, the highest-ranking U.S.
Catholic to face such charges, of
sodomizing Cook at least once
between 1975 and 1977 at a
Cincinnati seminary.
Cook has also accused the Rev.
Ellis N. Harsham o.f Dayton of
abusing him in his lawsuit. Harsham has denied the charges.
Cook aUeged the Archdiocese or
Cincinnati and several other priests
were negligent for allowing the
ahose.
The lawsuit seeks $10 million,
the removal of Bernardin and other
priests at the Cincinnali Archdiocese.
Bernardin, 65, heads the
nation's second-largest archdiocese

at S:30 p.m. There will be no judging, Dooley said. Far more information, units may contact Dooley
at 992-5458.
Parking meters have already
been freed for the holidays,
although downtown parking is limited to two hours.
Merchants will be extending
their hours by being open oo Sundays beginning with the open
house on Dec . 2 and continuing
through Dec. 19. The hours will be
I to 5 p.m.
Hours for night shopping will
begin on Dec. 13 with most businesses exu:nding their hours to 8
p.m. Monday through Friday.
As a special promotion,_the
local merchants will he doing a gift
certificau: give-away. Dooley said
that the plan calls for each business
to contribute five gift certificates to
be awarded started on the Sunday
of open house and continuing for
the fJ.nt four Fridays in December,
Each merchant will have a box
inside the store and ·ihere is no
requirement for a pure base to register.

Doctors, hospitals send
reform ideas to state

... p,,~Jil!IP!\ ;f ,Jilt~y -IQ.. \)Ilnb~ -··

&lt;;an Chiropractic

DR. BILLIE SUE KYGER

Ohio Lottery

November 14,1993

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - An
independent hoard ~reated to rec -

bly won'tlerribly closely resemble
what Mr. Clinton has
but

omme !l! ~~et in.l~¥~s.!11~ _

'fie!'IUi care-' ys m heatS a reform

plan from doctors this week and
likely will get one from hospitals
next month.
The 16-member Ohio Health
Care Board is working toward a
Jan. I deadline for reporting back
to Gov . George Voinovich and legislative leaders who created the
panel.
Ohio State Medical Association
President Dr. Walter Reiling goes
before the board Tuesday to present his group's recommendations
that include a mandate for employers to provide basic health insurance for employees.
Gov. George Voinovich and
Rep. Robert
Hagan,
DYoungstown, previously delivered
other reform plans.
Reiling outlined the associa·
lion's suggestions at a news confer.
ence last week. He said it makes
sense for the state to proceed at the
same time CoAgress debales Presi·
dent Clinton 's proposal for national
health care.
"It is our perception that when
the debate in Washington is over,
some policy will emerge. It proba-

He expects states will be given
responsibility under federal law to
develop policies that best meet
needs of their residents.
"I think in two years approximately there will be a tremendous
debate and issue in this state on
what will be health care for
Ohioans. We want to be prepared,
and we want to offer some leadership from a physician's standpoint," Reiling said.
The association recommends
that tax money now spent on Medicaid be used 10 buy private insurance for the poor, and that taxes on
alcohol , tobacco and health insurance premiums be increased to puy
for the revamped syslem .
Reiling said the plan also suggests increased patient responsibility for health care costs and lifeslyle
choices.
The group suggests creating
medical savings accounts or health
care voucher systems with inducements to avoid overuse of health
services.
The association gave reporters a
Continued on Page 3

--Local briefs-----.
Patrol to check speedometers
The Meigs County Juvenile Court and th e Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol will be al the Meigs High School parking
lot Saturday from 9:30 - 11 :30 a.m . to give all Meigs County students an opportumty to check the acc uracy of their vehicle's
specdomeu:rs. There will be no charge.

Police probe accident
No injuries or citations were reported following a two-vehicle
accident on Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy Thursday around 5:03
p.m.
According to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Alma Marshall, 75, of New Haven, W.Va .. was attempting to park
and struck a vehicle owned by Edith Hubbard. age unreported, of
Rutland.
Light damage was listed to the passenger side of Marshall 's 1985
Oldsmobile and the passenger's side of Hubbard 's vehicle.

Two cited in collisions

ACCUSER - ~Ieven Cook, left, 34, of
Pblladelphla, who teveled sex abuse allegations
against Cardinal Joseph Bernardin . or Chicago,
.
with 2.~ miUion Roman Catholics.
He was archbishop·of Cincinnati at
the time Cook said he was abused.
Cook, then 17, was a pre-seminary
student.
Bernardin has d'enied Cook's
charges and said he does not
remember meeting Cook.
Cook said he became addicted
to alcohol, drugs and sex afte'r leav-

responds to 1 question during an ,Interview at
the office or attorney Edward Ross, seated at
right, In Westmopnt, N.J. Sunday. (AP)

ing the seminary, and said he spent
years bewildered by the rag~ that
led him to such compulsive behavior.
Cook said Bernardin used to call
him by his first name when he 1111d
60 other boys allended the St. Gregory Seminary in Cincinnati.
"I don't understand how he
says he can't know me," Cook

said. ''He came and au: with us. He
knew all of us by name."
Cook said he is sure that his
memory of his encounter with
Bernardin, which he recalled just
last month in psychotherapy. is
accurate.
"I could see him. I could feel ·
his presence," Cook said. He also
· Continued on Page 3

Two people were cited in accidents in vesti ga ted during the
weekend by the Pomeroy Police Department. No injuries were
reponed,
A Racine man's car sustained heavy damage in a two-car accident on West Main Stteet Saturday around II :46 a.m.
According to police, Jason Circle, 21, of Racine wes eastbound
and stopped to make a left turn when his 1987 Subaru was struclc
from behind by a car driven by Susan Well, 42, of Shade.
Moderate damage was reported to front and driver 's side of
Well's 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass. Well was cited for failure to maintain assured clear distance.
An 18-year-old Pomeroy woman was cited after a two-car accident on Lincoln Hei~hts Sunday around I :58 p.m.
POlice reported Lisa Blake, 21, of Middleport was driving up the
hill when she was sideswipped by a car, driven by Kelly Doidge of
Pomerny, coming the opposite direction.
Blake's 1985 Pontiac, owned by Perry Wise, Middleport, sustained moderate damage to the driver's side while Doidge' s 1988
Chrysler LeBaron, owned by Kathryn Doidge, sustained light damage.
Doidge was cited by police for failure 1o control.

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