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                  <text>Monday, November 12. 1990

Pom•oy-Middleport. Ohio

P•;a 10-The Daily Sentinel

Eagles
defeat
·Redskins

Hills .receives
high honors
Hills Department Store in
Galllpolls was recently honored
with the coveted "New Store"
President's trophy for the Spring
1990, announced Glenn Ryerson,
director/ marketing and consumer affairs.
The award 1s given to the store
with the most outstanding overall perforinance from February
through July , among aU stores ·
that -have been in operation for
Jess than year.
.
The president's trophy is one of
Hills' highest honors and is
awarded to the entire employee
staff of the winning store.
The Galllpo11s store, which has
been serving area customers
since Oct. 13, 1989, was singled
out from other Hills stores and
was praised for its top perfor-'
mance in areas including increased sales, customer service,
store appearance · and cost
control.
Terry Assad, regional man·
ager commented, "Customer
service and store appearance
along with exciting quality merchandise and low prices are what
TOP HONORS - Wayne Benson, (left), manager of Hills
produce sales. Hills maintains its
Department Store of GaiHpoUs, receives the coveted New Store
everyday low pricing structure
President's Tropltey Award on behalf of the store's employees,
by taking cost coatrol very
from Terry Assad, regional manager. The trophy Is awarded for
serious."
the most outstanding overall perfonnance among all stores lnth~
HJIIs Department Store is a
chain that have bee_n In operation less than one year.
growing chain currently consist·
lng.of 212 discount stores_located
in 14 mid-central states. The
company is the fifth largest mass
merchandiser in the nation,
By United Press International . part of himself, though of course
l)ased on annual sales volume of
MAKING OF A MARTIAL It comes back in flashes . And he's
over $2 bllll&lt;&gt;n and Is headquarARTS MYTH: Martial arts mo- finally able to e.x tend the relaxa·
tered ln Canton, Mass.
llie star Steven Seagal seems to lion to friends and others he
have trouble separating myth meets so he can carry on more
from reality. He recently ap· ordinary sit-down conversations.
peared on Arsenio Hall's talk There are times now when he can
RIO GRANDE, Ohio - A
show and said he spent a Iotofhls relax enough to know he's loved
three-hour workshop In publicity
youth in Brooklyn but his mother, even when he's not being funny .' '
and press release writing for
Pat, told People magazine that
non-profit organizations w111 be
he was bOrn in Lansing, Mich.,
offered Monday, NOV. 26 from
and lived outside Detroit before
6: 30 to 9:30p.m. at the University
moving to Fullerton, Calif., when ,
of Rio Grande, College of Bus!·
he was 5. Seagal also has
ness Room 124,' through Rio
portrayed himself as an urban
-G rande's. Of!lce of Continuing
street kid but his mother says he
Education.
suffered from asthma and was
The workshop will locus on the
"a puny kid back then, " even
development of news releases
though he started thrlvlng ·once
and pu bile service announce·
they moved f.rom Michigan. The
ments that follow acceptable
''
People story also casts doubt on
Wdards lor print and broad·
Seagal's claim to have studied in
ctl§t media. Conducting the work·
Japan with Morlhel Uyeshlba,
shop Is Larry Ewing, who has
the founder of the aikido form of
had extensive experience with
martial arts Who died in 1969. But
the media arid In the public
Terry Dobson, a fifth-degree
relations field.
black belt who studied with
"Various service organizaUyeshiba from 1961 until 1969,
tions In the area depend upon the
says, "That story is bull. (Back
media to spread tbe word ab011t
then) I never heard of Steven
.their activities and create a
Seagal." Sources famUiar with
positive Image In the communthe ClA also say Seagal's claim
Ity," Ewing explained. "Because
to have been a ClA adviser is
the cost of hiring a public
improbable.
relations firm with media contacts IS prohibitive lor small,
SAC.ET ON VIDEOS: Bob
non-profit organizations, these
Saget, host of· 'America's Funnl·
organizations rely on _doing their
est Home VIdeos, " says he
own publicity.
prefers the spontaneous videos
''The goal of thiS wor¥hop Is to
over the set-ups. "To be honest,
give people a better Idea on how
I'm suspicious · of all of them,"
to write effectively and to the says Saget , whos.e favorites are
point and Increase their ability to .
the tapes featuring chl1dren and
place articles and news releases
animals. "I'm a comedy profesIn the newspapers, or on radio
sional and some videos look too
and televls ion," he added.
well-planned to make me laugh.
)
The central locus of the workBut some people on the show
shOp will be the construction of
think they're funny so we use
crafted press releases, with a
them." The video show and his
concentration on leads, attribu·
role on the sitcom "Full House"
non and the proper use of the
often result in long workdays for
"5Ws" - who, what, when,
Sa get. "I work six days a week all
where and why. Participants
the time," he said. "The writers
should come prepared to write,
for
home video come here to my
and those who pre-register lor
office (abOve the · " Full House"
the workshop are urged to submit
sound stage 1 to work with me
· articles prior to the class tor
during days when 1·m light In
critiquing purposes.
'Full House.' 'Til be here as late
The cost o! the workshop Is $20
as 1 a .m. on Monday nights doing
and the pre-registration deadline
. the voice-overs. It doesn't make
Is No'\'. 23. For more Information,
it any easier that I'm also writing
contact the Office of Continuing
a bOok.''
Education at the University of
RELAXING ROBIN: Robin
Rio Grande, (614) 245-5353, extenWUIIams
has a burning need to
sion 325. The toll-tree number In
perform but his wife, Man:la.
Ohio Is 1-100-282-7201.
says he can let go at home.
"When he,' s a home he relaxes, "
she told The New York Times.
"He shuts down that performing
The French Art Colony will be the
site of a Riviera Christmas
Party, Friday, Nov. 16 from 8
p.m. to midnight.
. The ball wlll be decorated and
open to the publlc. Shipboard
~ WAY
games wUI be the featured
By
entertainment with special gilts
J.D. Story '
· for participants donated by area
businesses and friends of tbe
Putting snow tires or all-weather
tires on your car?·Have them placed on
FAC.
the car's drive wheels - . trmt wheel•
Prizes for the evening have
on a front·wheel·dtlve car, or rear
been given by : Carl's Shoe Store,
wheels on a standard car. Never mix
snow and regular tlres on the same
Bernadine's, Haskins-Tanner,
axle: 11 you mutt mix a snow tire and a
Dan Thomas Shoe Store. Thomas
spare, si9W down.
Clothier, Quality Dress Shop,
***
Now's the time
to have the radiator
Pl!ddters Pantry," The Bastille
flushed
and
refUied with frl'lh antland Brittany's . ·
fr.__Ideal mlxll !101!!0 ethylene glyDrawing for th:e arts weekend
col and water (check your owner's
manutl to be sure), Important: cooIn Columbus, furnished through ·
lant not only controls temperature, It
Places to Go, and a pastel by
contains antl..mrroslve additive.
Sandy Nelson-Perrine will take
' •.• *
It there' I eu In tile unk tn&lt;l yet the
place at the party. Ticket hOlders
mot« cranke without catcblq:, the
need not be present to win. A
problem rnoy be lo tbe lutl oyotem.
prize of. dinner for eight, served
Cllock tor a ctaned ruel niter. It's
lnexpeastve to replace.
at the FAC wm also be drawn on
Nov. ' 16. For more Information
New-Uaed Can***
Do II Youraelf: Teal·
call the FAC at 446-3834.
drive a terrtnc new (or late-mcxlel

Vol.41, No .144
. CopyrigMed 1990

RIO GRANDE STUDENTS WIN SCHOLARSHIPS- Star Bank, N.A. Trl-8tate has awarded
Its an11ual· scholarships to two Ui!iverslly oi Rio
Grande sludenis, Jennifer Ehman of GaiUpoUs
and Robert MorriS of Ironton. Seen above
.
~

ris Is a mem~r of the Arc lion
" I think what you're doing Is
fraternity. Both are majoring In commendable In helping the~
business management.
two people obtain an education,
The scholarSblp Is awarded to Dr. Paul C. Hayes, president of
students from .Gallla and Law· Rio Grande, told ba?k officials
renee counties, the area served · during the luncheon. 'We deeply
by Star Bank, N.A. Tri-State, appreciate what you are doing
wl!lch operates branches In the and are glad . to ·hav~ you as
Ironton and Galllpoll~ areas. The neighbors and friends .
scholarships were ,presented by Now you know
Douglas R. Daniel, president of
When astronaut Nel1 Arm·
Star Bank, N.A. Tri-State; Da· strong took his first step on the
nlef P. Davies, chairman of'the moon's surface, he uttered the
board; and James L. Heald,
phrase "That's one small step
chairman of the board of dlrec- for a ~an, one giant leap for
tors, during a recognition lun- mankind." The word ••a" was
cheon In the Student Center.
almost Inaudible because of
·
radio static.

Cha~lene

HoeiUcb

Looking to spring improvements
on lhe Middleport levee, Council
also authorized Mayor Hoffman to
begin advertising for engineering
consulrant services on that project.
The village has received grants
totaling $50,000 from the Department of Natural Resources, Division of Waterways, and will be putting in about $25,000 in local
funds.
The maror reponed that the village has 'cleared all the hurdles"
for the work at the sewage lagoons
threatened by erosion of the Ohio
river ballk, · .
· The $199,000 grant from the .
Ohio Deparunent of Developmetll
completes the funding for the
$741,000 project The mayor e"'pressed grautude to Sen. Jan
Michael long and Rep. Mary Abel

•

)

VETERANS HONORED - Veterans Day was observed in
Pomeroy on Monday morning with a service conducted by memberS of the Drew Webster Post 39 of the American Legion and the
Tuppers Plains VFW. The service, held in front of tbe Meigs

County Courthouse, honored aU veterans, but paid particular at·
tention to veterans or the Korean Conflict of the 1950's, wbo were
honored across the country yesterday as the "forgotten veterans".

State· board -seeks opmion 90 Brickner
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The State Board of Education
voted 10-9 Monday to ask the
state attorney general to issue an
opinion on whether board president Paul Brickner is serving
illegally .
Brickner, who holds a civil
service job as an administrative
law judge with the Social Security Administration in Cleveland.
said all is proper. He has been a
member of the bOard since 1983.
However , board m em ber
Wayne Shaffer of Bryan said
Ohio law prohibits board
members from ,holding "a public
position of trQst or profit-"
BrlckRer . was defe nded by
some other board members who
said )le was an innocent victim of
a nebulous law' or the target of a
campaign to stifle his opinions.
Recently, Brickner has:
-Chastised sta t e superintend·
ent of public instruction Frankl in

'

t

Walter for his de~artment' s
prqduction of a "disappointing"
report on how Ohio scl)ools
should spend their money .
-Demanded that a letter of
reprimand go into Waiter's file
because Brickner was forc.e d to
· speak last at a meeting. He had
requested to speak early ~o he
co u 1d a t tend another
commitment.
-Suggested in a school law
journal that the 21-member
board is inefficient and should be
cut to nine members.
-Asked the Ohio Ethics Com·
misstbn whether Walter violated
a nepotism law when hi s son was
rehired by the Ohio Department
· of Education.
Sha 'ffer and some other
members of the board defend
Walter.
Member Pat Smith of Worthington says she believes this is

the root of the Inquiry 'request.
opportunity to chastise him for
"It's definitely a vendet~ on
his unseemly action," Shaffer
Shaffer's part," Smith said.
said.
Shaffer said he tried to work
Marth Wise of Elyria, another
out differences with Brickner .
board member, call_ed Brickner
"We agreed he would stay off
"t~e worst president."
,
the superintendent's back, whioh
He has gotten us pins, cards, _
he refused to do," Shaffer said.
writing paper and briefcases but
"He's continued hls antagonistic
has not advanced one educa·
behavior towa rd the superintend·
tiona! idea," she said.
entand the ·department. We have
Brickner said he doesn't underelevated him as president of the stand Shaffer's actions.
board and, from that elevated
"Shaffer seems to be intolerant
position, he strikes out at the of criticism," Brickner said. "A
good board bOard member must,
board ."
·
Shaffer said Brickner, who at times, criticize the superlnends his term as presidelit of the tendelit. Wayne Is an old friend of
board next month, should step Frank.''
'
down now.
·
Board member Anthony Russo
Shaffer said the attorney gen- . of Mayfield Village told Shaffer
erai's opinion should determine he Should have objected when
if Brickner should leave the Brickner was first elected. He
board.
said other state school board
"lf . we ·wait until January to members have held government
act. we will then have lost our jobs.

Ohio schools
need more ·than $10 billion
.
.

.
Full rich flavor,
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
The Ohio Department of Educa·
tion said M01ida y that a state. required survey of eac h. of the
buildings s)lows that $10.2 billion
worth of changes are needed to
bring ttu• buildings into c.ompllance with state building code
provisions .
'
SJate S~ool Superintendent
Franklin Walter said $5.3 billion
of that is needed for repairs, $1.7
billion for additions and $3.2
biHiori lor rebuilding.
·
Recently adopted legisla tion
required the depart(Tlen t to have
architectural firms insJli3Ct the

'

.. not full price. .
'

• AVQilab~ in ICings &amp; ICings Lights.

''

uted) car at Smith Nelsm~ Moton.

SURGEON G.ENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth. And Low Birth Weight.

Mfr's. suggested retail price. · .
King1 Light1: 11 ing "tar:· 0.7 illg nicotine-Kings: 14 mg
"tar:' 1.0 mg nicotine IV. perciprett' by FTC method.

• '.'

'

I

'

o

1 Section, 1 OF' ages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

for .their roleS in getting the final
funding for the projecL The U. S.
Corps of Engineers will be putting
$500,000,
Community
in
Development Block Grants funding
will bring in another $30,000 and
the village will provide $12,000.
The funding will be administered
by the Meigs County Commis-.
sioners.
Mayor Hoffman reported that the
recycling program grant which the
village had applied for was denied .
He read a letter from the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
in which it was noted that only 38
of the 90applications were funded.
That projec[ was for a trailer and
containers to be used in a curbside ..
recycling program to be carried out
in cooperation with Manley Recy.
cling.

Also the mayor reported that the
special housing allowance grant
applied for by the village was not
funded this
NO ACTION
Middleport Council again last
night deferred action on contribut:
ing funds to the employment of an
economic development director by
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.
Lenny Etiason, Bruce Reed ,
retiring president of the Chamber,
Chuck !Gtchen, and · Dr. Nick
Robinson, incoming Chamber
president, again asked Council for a
contribution to the county or·
ganization's program. Eliason explained that the Chamber will be interviewing appticants next week for
the director's position and !hat
Continued on page 10

year.

Nursing home bill
tops Senate slate

STEER .
THIS

•

'

and lighting.
preliminary infonnation needed to
. The village's part of the study move forward on that project:
Industrial development in the
Arrangements to hite engineer- will be $4,500 with perhaps another
ing consuilimts to work on the $2,~00 in -' matching funds going area was the goal when the section
Hobson area port, ,utility and site mto the proJect. Mayor Fred Hof- was annexed. Utility service and a
development and the levee im- fman also reported that he an- pon will facilitate that developmenf
provement projects were made by ticipates that the $2,000 set aside and the sooner the preliminary enMiddleport Village Council at by the Meigs County Regional gineering is started, the mote
Monday night's meeting.
Planning Commssion can be used quickly plans for the area can be
Council voted to advertise for for the water and sewer study par- implemented, Mayor Hoffman
consultants on the two projects, tion of the preliminary engineering. stated.
both of which are being mostly
The area involves the section
The mayor also repotted that he
fun\feq by state grants.
which was annexed into the village had conferred with an FHA official
The' Hobson project which has last year. Water and sewer service who indicated that 55 to 75 percent
been funded with an Ohio Port As· were promised residents of !he.sec- of the actual construction cost will
sisiant . Program Grant of $40,500 tiol) annexed the river side of Route , probably be av~iable in grants with
from .the ' Ohio Department of 7 from the old corporation limits to · the balance avrulable on a low tn·
Transportation
will
fund
a near Gilbert's service station. As terest loan.
feasibility study to detennine es- explained
by Hoffman, the
Council authorized the mayor to
timated costs · for a port facility, feasibility study which will ' be advertise for a consultant to do the
road access 10 the pan, water and mostly paid for with the Port Assis- preliminary engineering on the
sewer services, site development tance Grant will provide the project.
By

Two receive Star !lank scholarships ·
RIO GRANDE- Two students
at the University of Rio Grande
have been awarded the Star
Bank, N.A. Tri-State Scholarship
to continue their education at the
southern Ohio campus.
The recipients are ,J ennifer
Ehman, daughter of George and
Diane Ehman of Gallipolis, and
RotJert Morris, son of Bill and
Sheila Morris of Ironton. Ehman
Is a freshman and graduate of
Southwestern High School, and
. Morrlslsajuniorwhograduated
from Rock Hill High School.
Ehman is active in the Rio
Grande ROTC chapter and Mor·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, November 13. 1990

•

Consultants sought·· for 2 Middleport projects

following a recognition luncheon for the sludents
are, from Jell, Douglaa R. Daniel, pretildent, Star
Bank, N.A. Tri-State; James L. Heald, chairman
of the board of dlrectora; Ehman; Morris; .and
Daniel P. Davies, senior vice president for the
bank.

Art Colony party set

•

Clear tonight. Low In mid
20s. Mostly sunny Wednesday.
·
High near 60.

•

lJit(; class set

H2·2174
JOOialtMalft
, • ...,. , ·011.

Pick-3: 446
Pick-4: 0082
Cards: 4-H;
J.C; A-D; Q.S

Page 3

-People in the news-

SMITH-NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.

Ohio Lottery

c
I~

3,643 public school buildings in
Ohio.
" "This survey empha sizes the
need to make a stronger commit·
me n! to upgral nq , the physical.
faCilities of Ohio's schools, ''
Walter told the State Board of
Education at its Monday meet.
ing . . "Through state and local
partnerships, the General Assembly must'find ways to ensure
that all school facilities provide
an atmosphere that Is co nducive
to learning.
" The 1990 Ohio Public School
Facility Survey provides an

inventory of every public schoo.
in Ohio, a summary of
facility needs, and an accounting
of needed funds," he said. " It's
the most comprehensive report
of its ldnd In this country."
The survey shows at 15 pcrc:ent
of the•buildings ~re 70 years old
or older, 26 percent are 50 to 69
years old, and 26 pecent are 30 to
49 years old .
It also found that middle-junior
and high schools provide adequate square footage per student, but elementary schools
average only 101 square feet per
student, 24 square feet Jess than

the 1985 Gu-Idelines for State
School Building Assistance
Projects .
Nearly a ll the schools (93.9
percen t) are in need of life safety
code systems. Ventilation and air
conditioning systems are needed
in 88.1 percent of the buildings,
heating systems In 83 percent.
and windows In 81 percent.
Heating and ventilation-air conditioning accounted for more
than $2 billion in needed repairs.
Nearly 69 percent of the
schools still have absestos In
them.

b~lldlng

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Th e Ohio Se·
nate reconvened Tuesday for a
three-day post-election session to
start the ball rolling toward final
adjournment later this year.
The Initial Senate session was
to begin at 1:30 p .m .
Senators were expected to vote
on a nursing.home regulation bill
required by the {ederal government, and perhaps on a bill
requiring continuing .education
for physical therapists. Also a possibility for a Senate
vote was a House-pas:;ed bill
tightening the law on the dona·
lion of body parts for
transplanting.
Senate Republicans planned to
caucus to select a replacement
for Sen. David Hobson. R·
Springfield, who was recently
elected to Congress, to fill the
vacancy left by the depar11ng
Rep. Michael De Wine, who was
elected lieutenant governor.
Top candidates were Clark
County Com!l'issloner Merle
Kearns and two Republican state
representatives - Robert Doyle
of aeavercreek and Joseph
Haines of Xenia .
Hobson is the Senate president
pro tempore, and his leadership
position also will have to be fllled.
Sen. Barry Levey , R·

Middletown, . planned to introduce legislation permitting
congressmen-elect to be S\\'otn in
early if · they are filling a
vacancy.
Levey wants his bill specifi·
cally applied to state Rep. John
Boehner, R-West Chester. who
won election to the 8th District
seat resigned by Rep. Donald
Lukens of Middletown .
As the Republican senators
caucus, they were to discu ss the
possibility of advancing cam·
paigq finance leglslat!oil and a
comprehensive solid waste recycling bill, both already adopted
by the House.
·
The senators may decide t~
leave the campaign finance
leglstation until after the first of
the year. when Gov .-elect George
Voinovich takes office. Voinovlch has made that one of his
priorities.
The Senate may take a look at
an alternative - the proposal of
Sen. Charles Horn. R-Day ton, to
put a· deposit on ca ns and bottles
to raise $300 million for waste
recycling.
The Senate is expected to give
the green light to a !-louSe-passed
biD establishing a computerized
fingerprint network for crimefighting . Tha t bill was held up
earlier this yea r because of cost
concerns and political
considerations.

Production down 0~8
percent in October
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In·
dustrial production dropped 0.8
percent in October after growing
slowly the month_ before, the
Federal Reserve said Tuesday.
The Fed also reported a decline
in the amount of indu strial
capacity used during the month.
Capacity utilization declined 0.9
percent to 82.6 percent from 83.5
p~rcent the month before.
Automobile production slipped
4.5 percent last month and
accounted lor one-fourth of the
overall decline In Industrial
production. The Fed said production w'as · off in most major
market and industrial sectors.
The output of consumer goods,
business equipment and mate·
rials slowed along with declining
au tomoblle prod uction, the Fed
said.
Production .of other big-ticket
items. such as appliances and
furniture, also continued to be
weak during October.

Nondurable consum er ijOods
output also declined, reflecting
reductions in the production of
electricity for residential use,
gasoline and clothing, the Fed
said.
ExcludinJ?;·motor ve hicles. the
production of business equipment fell slightly in October
while production of industrial
equipment showed "widespread
weakness," the Fed said.
Information process ing equipment output slowed · aft er growing at a robu st pace puling the
third quarter. Construction supplles production was trimmed lor ·
the third consecutive month,
reflecting continued weakness in.
real estate markets.
Manufacturing output dropped
0.8 percent during the month
while factory utilization fell 0.8
percent to 81.7 percent, the
lowest level since September
1987. The operating rate for
utilities feU back to levels that
prevailed earlier in the summer.

Chillicothe unit ordered for duty .· in mid~East .

for summit
Ar~y:~::=OI~&amp;Sool on call
flO call Congress back into session

By United Press International
have been placed on alert beSeptember.
·
running bakeries . ·
\
. The ltlOlst Field Support Com- cause of the Persian Gulf crisis.
The unit was scheduled to · Meanwblle, it is uncertain
bat Company · from ChiUicothe
A Pentagon spokesman said leave Monday night · lor the whether the first reserve unit
has been called for duty In the Monday the Zanesville unit is to Middle East. Ofllclals could not activaied in Ohio wlll be able to
Middle East and the 342nd leave Thursday lor escort guard be reached Tuesday to contlm return as scheduled on Friday. ,
Military Police Company from duties at Fort Meade. O!llclals the unit's departure.
Forty-three members of the
ZanesviJJe Is to report to Fort ·would not · say how many
Maj. Tom Chupka, a spokes- 2361st Army Reserve signal
Meade, Md ., In thelatestroundof members were going to Fort man for the 83rd Army Reserve center.unlt of Akron has been in
activations for Army Reserve Meade or provide detalls about . Company In Columbus, said, the Fort McCoy, Wis., on a 90-day
their assignments.
121-member 1001st Is to help U.S. assignment.
units from Ohio. .
· The Ohio · National Guard,
The 1001stfrom Chillicothe had troops In the Mld!lle East In • "They're waiting tiiJ the very
meanwhile, said Tues.day that , been trainlngforcombatdutyat repairing tents and tanks, pro- last second of the 90 days to
two Army National Guard units Fort Knox, Ky . , ··since Viding laundF facilities and
Continued on page 10

to debate and vote on the
United Press
1 escalating U.S. military Involve.
Arab states dlspl~yed a coo
ment In the Persian Gulf.
response to Morocco s call for an
''I think the presiden t must lay
Arab summit on the gulf crisis,
1
out now to the nation and the
but Iraq sr~~ sen ~r Menvoys
Tuesd~y to, pa 81~ t 0~~ - Congress what our alms are and
-then he must call for a session of
and . gypt s
res en
osn
Mubarak headed lor Libya to · Cong~:ess .. . . to . debate those
sound tut whether a summit was Issues and to vote alflrmatively,
I would presume, so that we have ·
leaslb e.
.
u.s. Sen. Rlc~~rd Lugar, Ri authorization lor what ·is relnd., cl~.ng a~ Punrl~vel~: ~ qulreji," Lugar said on NBC's
The Today Show .
fUpport, urge
res en us

~

.

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''

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lj

lnternation~l

..,.

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�,,·]

. . .,'J·

Conimentary
The Daily_Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA.
.II~

l!!l!m!::! ,...,...._.._-+' ,.,.....,., c::l•"""'
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ROB~RT L, WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General M.a nager

PAT WHlTEHEAD
Aesletant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association . .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
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tles.

The ·experts' eyeballs
By ARNOLD SA WISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Writing about his abject failure as a hlgh ·school
biology student, James Thurber recalled being told to look Into his
microscope and make a drawing of what he saw.
Thurber sketched and turned In what seemed to him to be a fair
' likeness of a paramecium, but the teacher returned It to him with a
falling grade and a note saying he had 'drawn his own eyeball.
That Is just about where the political experts were left last week
atter the 1990 elections.
.
Casting about for a theme .to explain the mood of the voters before
Nov.~- the pundits declared this was going to be a: "throw the rascals
out" election because the people were sick of all poUtlclans.
On the morning of Nov. 7, by scrambling through the returns, they
could find some cases where Incumbent officeholders had been
ousted or given nasty scares by what seemed to be. an angry
electorate. But there was no way they could find a true national
movement aimed at punishing everyone on the public payroll.
There were some odd effects. Sen. Rudy Boschwltz may have been
punished for the behavior of other Minnesota Republicans. But If that
were the case.. what explains the excellent showing made by the
substitute GOP candidate for governor In the same state?
The same kind of Indirect backlash may have given Sen. Blll
Bradley his fright In New Jersey. Accodrlng to one exit poll; the
voters were flghtlng .·mad about the tax lncreses Installed by the
administration of Democratic Gov. James Florio and since Florio
wasn't running In this election, they took .It out on Bradley.
But there was no across-the-board sentiment that could be trac·ked.
It experienced politicians were really In jeopardy, how c·o me veteran
officeholders like Ann Richards didn't get ousted by newcomers like
Clayton Williams In ~e Texas governor's race and veteran senators
like Claiborne Pell, D-R. I., and Jesse Helms; R· N.C., easily put away
challengers who were supposed to be pushing them hard?
The final outcome left the "spin doctors" for both parties able to
claim some form of victory. The Democrats made much of the fact
that GOP candidates lost In several of the places President Bush
campaigned.
The Republicans noted that the party In control of the White House
has lost an average of 28 House and five Senate seats In off-year
· elections since World War II and the 1990 outcome was nowhere near
that.
There also were several other analytical avenues cluttered by the
actual votes. It was true that the candidates who raised the most
money got the most votes, but people like Bradley and Eioschwltz and
House GOP Whip Newt Gingrich all spent big and either got beaten or
scared blgtlme.
And, noting just the three men above, It Is obvious that being liberal
llke Bradley, moderate like Boschwitz or conservative like Gingrich
was no Insurance against voter dissatisfaction.
So what was the key to this election?
.
Just as patriotism Is said to be the last resort of scoundrels, the
age-old political axiom that off-yearelections are decided on the basis
of local Issues may be where pundits must hide.

Today in history
. By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 13, the 317th day of 1990 with 4ll to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter·.
The evening stars are Mercury and Venus.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
St. Augustine of Hippo, a theologian, In 354, King Edward III of
England In 1312, Scottish physicist James Maxwell in 1831, Scottish
author Robert Louis Stevenson In 1850, and Supreme Court Justice
·
Louis Brandeis In 1856.

~erry's World

t

~~~N~~~~b.~11~3.~1~9!90~------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~-:~

PIIQ8-2-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tough defense gives Eagles·
28-14 victory over Redskins

-Tuesdav. November
13, 1990
-.
.
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·. Sophisticated forces would beat Iraq
sites, command centers and
· WASHINGTON -The United their American counterparts,
munitions factories.
States would win a war against and they have never been tested
The United States has more
Iraq In under three months, In war. Iraq ftelded no alr.forceto
than
1,000 tanks In the region
according to ihe latest ·secret speak of during Its 8-year war
Including
the top-of-the-line M-1
· with Iran.
Pentagon estimates.. '
Abrams, first fielded In 1987. It
Superior air-to-air missiles
That Is not simple bravado by
shoots
"on the move, ls .exttemely
also
give
America
the
·
advanoverconfident brass. Casualty
accurate,
has a ra.nge of two
estimates in the tens of thou- tage. The Sidewinder, the Spar·
miles
and
can fire every few
sands have been enough to row and the J,&gt;hoenlx missUes can
seconds.
dampen any Rambo spirit at the be shot from any angle at .o ther
Iraq has no navy, ;md that was
Pentagon. The projections for a . aircraft.
·
OJ&gt;
as long as It had only a small
The current war plan favors a
quick and "dirty victory come
coastline
to protect. But now It
massive air assault in the openfrom cold facts. ·
must
defend
the coastline of
The United States has superior Ing hours of the conflict. Amerl·
Kuwait
and
vulnerable
Islands In
air power In the region - more ·can, British and ~ audl Arabian
the
Persian
Gulf.
About
125,000
than 1,000 combat aircraft. Th,e" jets would beSel\t In flrstto knock
Iraqi
troops
are
assigned
to the
Iraqis have 500, the best of which out"lraql antl·arcraft batteries,
face
a
coastal
defense
where
they
are about 100 French Mirage radar systems nd airfields.
armada
of
five
aircraft
massive
Then the sower bombers
fighters armed with Exocet
·
would
follow, making pos~lbly as carriers and 11,000 Marine ammissiles that are useful against
large, slow-moving or stationary many as 3,000 bombing runs a phibious assault troops .
The United St\ltes doesn't have
day, to knock out nuclear,
targets.
the
fourth front - the west chemical
and
blologlc,
a
l
weapons
Ira(Jl pilots are no match for

IT

By JOE CIALINI
UPI Spol18 Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The combination of
the Philadelphia Eagles' most Impressive defensive effort of the season and Heath Sherman's
most productive game as a professional over·
whelmed the Washington Redsklns Monday night.
Philadelphia's defense forced thte.e turnovers
that resulted In touchdowns and Sherman ra11 for
a career-high 124 yards Monday night to give the
E;_agles a 28-14 victory over Washington, their
th ird straight victory.
·
"It feels real . good," Eagles defensive tackle
Jerome Brown said. "It feels like old times.
Turning the ball over and giving It to the offense.
It reminds me of the old Eagles.l knew It was just
a matter of time until we started td' take
advantage of opportunities. "
Sherman scored on a nine-yard pass from
running back Keith Byars and on a two-yard pau
from Randall Cunningham. He became the first
Philadelphia runner t() gatn· more than 100 yards
In two straight games since Wilbert Montgomery
did It three consecutive times In 1981.
Sherman, a two-year pro, ran for l13 yards
against New England last week.
•·1r means a lot that I gonoo yards and that we
won toO," Sherman said. "It wouldn't be fun If we
didn't win. You feel tired while you're doing-It but
you feel good afterwards."
The Eagles, 5-4, also scored on a 30-yard
Interception return by William FrizZell and an
18-yard fumble return by Clyde Simmons. The
first Interception of Reggie White' s career also set
up Sherman's second touchdown.
The Eagles' defense, which forced 56 turnovers
last year, managed only 14ln the flrstelght games
of this season. In a 13-7loss to Washington earlier
this year, the Eagles !ailed to produce a turnover
or a quarterback sack.
''The defense played one of Its best games since
I've been here," Philadelphia head coach Buddy
Ryan sald. "The entire defense played well." .
Washington, 5·4, scored on a eight-yard pass
from Jeff Rutledge to Don Warren and a one-yard
run by emergency quarterback Brian Mitchell.
Both Rutledge (sprained thumb) and his
backup, Stan Humphries (sprained knee), were
Injured and knocked out of the game. The
Redsklns were forced -to use the rookie Mitchell,
who directed a 56-yard drive late In the game
thatproduced ,the Redsklns' second touchdown.
"It was tough day for us," Washington head
coach Joe Gibhs said. "l have to give them credit
but what I Worry about most Is that we got a lot of
guys hurt. It's gOing to take a lot of people to
regroup and bounce b;lck. We've had tough luck

Jack Anderson
covered, because It belongs to
Jordan, and King Hussein bas
allied himself with Saddam Hussein. The United States Is still
hoping th.a t the little king will see
the light. ·
The Iraqis are tenacious but
sluggish fighters. The Iran-rraq
war dragge&lt;l on over most of a
decade simply · bec"a use both
sides dug themselves In and
didn 't move much. Iraq has not
faced the kind of mobile offense
that America and Its allies have
In mind.
.
Nor can they last lopg without
spare parts that have been held
back by the embargo.
· The bottom line at ·the Pentagon Is that while Iraq will claim
thousands of U.S . lives, It wlll not
win.

NeeDS A ~T­

E?Lec T10N c;e~CflN

TV

REPA\R

CLeANING

a

..

Oajt Hill's volleyball team,
which won the 1990 Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
championship, saw three of Its
players -seniors Violet Adkins,
Cindy Carney and Me lynda Galliamore (Player of tne Year) named to the conference's first
team.
Oak Hll! coach Richard Hamilton, who guided the Oaks to a 12-0
league record and an 18-5 overall
mark, Was named Coach of the
Year.
Also making the league's first
team were (team, overall record, league record):
Kyger Creek ( 15-41, 10-2) Beth Bradbury (Sr.} and Jodi
Nance (jr.)
Southern (7-12, 6-8) - Junle
Beegle (sr.) and Megan Wolfe

-~·

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.

Welcome to the 'Customer ·Boom'
Unnoticed, but much welcome
111 a moment of economic gloom,
two big new Items of demographic news are upon us, each
powerfully optimistic .
Among other things, the new
demogra·phlc tidings should
create - presto! - a new
generation of business geniuses
whose faces wlll adorn the covers
of Forbes and Fortune.
A demographic milestone was
reached during the first six
months of 1990. The Total Fertll·
lty Rate In the United States
climbed to an estimated 2.1
lifetime births per woman. The
new figure Is the highest since
1971. It Is the fourth straight year
of Increase. Something big Is" ..
going on that demographers had
not expected, and It appears"to be
hap!Jenlng only In America: The
Birth Dearth Is ending.
Further, the United States has .
just enacted a new Immigration
law that substantially raises the
number of legal, the skllled,
Immigrants. That too was unexpected only a few years
The
new statue provides for a 30
percent annual increase In slots,
from 540,000 to 700,000 (plus an
·extra 55,000 for the next thr~e

Ben Wattenberg

that would move toward a
years).
·demographic
freeze and then to
In a country of a quarter of a
actual
population
decline (a growth. When World ·war II
billion people, the fertUlty and
pattern that Is now playing Itself ended there were about 133
Immigration Increases may not
out In Europe and Japan ).
million Americans; today there
sould large. Just walt a few years
We know at least one Important
and you will learn otherwise. ·
are more . than 250 million. By
thing about those. new people:
Only two years ago the U.S.
simply holding his share of a
Census Bureau Issued a series of They will all be customers. They sharply growing market, a busl"most likely" projections that.. wlll need food, clothing and ness..,~xecutive could look very
were keyed to then-extant fertil- shelter. At different po"tnts ·In good Indeed. Smlllng and suntheir lives they will also need 6urned, there he was on the cover
Ity and Immigration rates. When
diapers,
cribs, roller skates,
compared to projections keyed to
of business magazines - a
books,
crayons,
cars, lamps, certified dynamic genius.
the , new rates, the difference
sunglasses, rugs, VCRs and lawn
becomes clear:
For a while, It looked as If the
mowers. They wUI buy tickets ·to . party would stop. Birth rates
Year Previous
Current
football games, hire accountants plummeted !rom Baby Boom
1990 251 mUllen
. 251 mUllen
2000 268 million
276 mUllen and lawyers, go to movies rated highs (3.7 children per woman)
NC-17, see the pediatrician, the to a Birth Dearth low plateau (1.8
2010 283 mllllon
300 mllllon
dentist and the radiologist.
2020 294 mutton
325 mUllen
children per woman}. Politicians
Welcome to the Customer
2030 301 mUllon
346 mUilon
said the Immigration numbers
2040 302 million
364 million Boom!
would not rise and might be cut.
The CB should yield a boost for
2050 300 million
379 million
Now, the bad news/less growth
2080 292 million
402 million existing American businesses.
scenario Is out the window.
They should gain customers
Beyond providing · more custo·
from the new 8 million unex- mers, the new irencls also dim in·.
Thus. In the next decade alone,
we can expect an additional '8 pected people In the 1990s. The
Ish the future Social Security
new customers will also provide
mllllon people. That number
shortfall, reduce the housing
the base for many new
grows to '1.7 million ·two decades
slump, shrink the per capita
businesses.
·
out, and to 45 million additional
national debt and will keep the
All this provides a fertile
people In 40 years time.
GNP rising.
commercial field. American buThe changed rates make a
I! "greed Is good" was the
sinesses prospered In recent
difference between an America
motto of the '80s. "growth Is
that will grow In the future or one decades lor many reasons, not
good" will be the motto of the
the least of which Is population
'90s.

(SO.)

,

Eastern (8-12, 5-7) -Toby Hill
(sr.) and Lee Gillilan (jr.)

SVAC cagefest
slaled for Friday
The SVAC boys' basket~an
preview has been scheduled for
Friday at 6 p.m. at Kyger Creek
High School.
Defending conference runnerup Soutl)ern will lace Oak Hillin
the opener, followed by Hannan
Trace vs ." Eastern at 6:45p.m .,
Kyger Creek against Southwest·
ern at 7:30p.m. and North Gallla
against Symmes Valley at 8:15
p.m. (Times approximate)

··rve got bad news. Today. I was downsized
- outplaced -· call it what. you will.·· ·
•

..
.. . .
•.
•

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WARREN sl:ORES - Wu1hlni~On
Don Warren (bOttom} dives Into
the Redsklu' flntt touchdowl) aiitJ . knocks
Philadelphia cornerback Eric Allen (ZI} to the

ground In the second quarter of Monday night's
game In P~Uadelphla's Veterans Stadium, which
the Eag;les ·came back to win 28-14. (UPI)

THE LAKES, Nev. (NEA) :This column has just begun and
It's already mldleadlng. Speclfl·
cally, the dateline Is fraudulent.
There's no community anywhere
In Nevada named The Lakes.
It's only a commercial real ·
estate development on the wes.t ·
ern edge of Las Vegas. Mo·
reover, there's nothing resem ..
bUng a lake anywhere Is sight
except for an oversized puddle at
a nearby Intersection · and an.
artl!lclal pond at the entrance to
a residential development,
called Canyon Gate, across the
_street.
Nevertheless, mUllens of pieces· of mall are sent from and
received at The Lakes every
year. For hundreds of tho11sands
of people holding credit cards
Issued by Clticorp, the parent
company of the nation's largest
commercial bank, The Lakes Is
where monthly statements orlgl·
nate and payments«recollected .
That's because when Cltlcorp
selected a site here fOr one of Its
three credit , card processing
centers (the .other two are In
~loux Falls, S.D. and Hager-

stown, Md.),ltdldn'twant to deal
with snide remarks from Its
customers .about sending money
to Las Vegas.
So the bankers successfully
pressed the U.S. Postal Service
to transform Cltlcorp's sprawllng concrete and glass building
here Into an ersatz town, com·
plete with Its own name and zip
codes.
But that petty deception pales
In contrast with the abysmally
ln!erlor service and arrogant
attitude some consumers say
tney are encountering wtth Increasing frequency when dealing
with Citicorp and. other leading
firms In the financial services
Industry .
Item: After American Express
falls to provide a promised
service to a card bolder, the
c0mpany pledges quick remedial
action -but again It's unable or
unwilling to honor Its commitment. "We dropped the ball,"
acknowledges · a company
oltlclal.
Item: Mutual of Omaha writes
the holder of a canceled tnsuranee
. policy to say ~·you wUJ find

your refund check enclosed." No
check Is enclosed and an uncar~
lng corporate bureaucra.cy takes
weeks to provide one -without
any apology. "This does
h
,
appen,' says a company representatlve. "We don't do It
deliberately."
Item: Household International
repeated1Yfalls to comply with a
routine request to transfer responslblllty for a credit card
account from one family
member to another. "Maybe we
screwed up," admits a company
executive who claims that "we
handle thousands oftransactlons'
very well...

Indeed, a hallmark of financial
services Industry responses to
mistreated customers Is a sell·
.serving c!alm that the firm
usually does outstanding work
and the Individual's problem Is
the exception to the rule- If not
the consumer's fault.
More logical explanations:
·
- Too many of the employees
assigned to provide customer
service perfo.r m their tasks at a
mediocre level
and have little
·
Interest In sell-Improvement.

...5 Those who do care Initially
'
ful
are demorallzed b y t he stress
dltl
1 ·
con onsofthehlgh-technoogy
sweat shops maintained by lnsensltlve companies.
Se
a ted In small cubicles, wear·
1ng headsets and staring at
computer screens throughout a
tedious workday, telephone
"boiler room" employees strug·
gle to cope with every lmaglnable form of c.razlness humanity
has devised. ·
Some callers are Incoherent,
some are rude, some are
swindlers attempting to perpe- '
Irate criminal fraud - and
h
ot ers are decent people with
reasonable requests. After years
of listening to the cacophony,
dis t1ngulshlng among the various cat egor1es becomes lncreas·
lngly d!Hicult.
Fl
nally, company executives
are more often Indignant than
"- asked about the
apo1oge tlc Wm:n
deteriorating quality of the ser·
vice they provide to holders of
financial ·product&amp; ranging !rom
c re dll car d s to Insurance ·
policies.

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1

Pma lnlernatlonal, .

Inland Dally Pr"sAuoclatlon and rhe

..

Southern- Cheryl Pape (sr.)
Eastern - Lorrie Baker and
Edna Hensley (both seniors) ,
and Stephanie Otto (so.)
North Gallla , - Dee Dee
Dobbins and Cherie Weaver
(both seniors)
1fanaan Trace - ·Christy and
Tony a Short (both seniors), and
Tammy Thomas (jr.)
.
·
Southwestern - Cheryl Darnell, Angle Rose and Missy
Williams (all seniors )

Heideman new coach
of young ·Eastern five

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

•:: :::"
•' '

··.

By SCOTI' WOU:E
Heideman
indicated
that
Sentinel Correspond~nl
strenglhs for her team would be its
Tile Eastern Eagles girls'
inside game, the 5pi;Cd of the
basketball team, under rookie ·guards, and its overall defense.
IC I M !'; T I £
A L L II ...
head coacll Dawn Heideman, Is
SIBLING
''Our guards have great speed.
anxiously and optlmls tlcally We will be getting up and down the
RIVALRY
looking forward l'? the utx:omlng ftoor quickly. We have good
7:00. 9:10
1990-91 cage campaiSJ!.
balance throughout the line-up and
QI.! LY
Heideman, a star p11yer at Ohio if we remain aggressive, we could
l 'IIJII IMTIW£S
3:00
Universtiy, replaces former varsity lead the league in boards. The
UTtD Ill
mentor Geor&amp;e Gagai, who team's shooting is improving, but
MASTER BOWHUNTERS • Harrison Starr, right, and Sam
CC»fHtG $1)(111 Sfoll.lt*[ I" "IIIOCKY S"
&amp; OISMEY'S "RUCUEIIS IIOWJI ~NO UNDEII"
· transfened to Kentucky near his . missed shots give us offensive
McKinney were awarded Master Bowbunters plaques and patcbes
.. .
hometown of Ironton. Heideman boards and there we hope to show
at the Chesler Bowbunters and Arcbery Club banquet on Novem·
earned first team All-MAC honors our strength.?'
ber 4.
·
and was fifth in the nation in field (See EASTERN on Page 4)
goal percentage during her playing
days at Ohio University. She is c,urrendy fifth on the All-time scoring
list at OU and is sec:ond overall in
rebounds. In high school her jersey
was relired and she was named the
"Player of Jhe Decade" for girls'
The Chester Bowhunr.ers and Ar·
basketball in Ohio.
ellery Club held their annual outAlthough. this is her first varsity door awanls and bowhunting ban'
.;01111-~
assignment, she has coached at quet on November 4 at the
~mington
, MOSSBERG
many basketball camps and clinics. American Legion in Middlepon.
Heideman is assisted by 1984
There were awards given for top
Eastern graduate Thmmy Capehart shoolers of the year in all classes.
and the team's manap are Lori
Awards given at the banquet
20 GAUGE ONLY
were: Rusty Tucker, top male
Eastman and Patsy Aeiker.
28" BARREL
Theresa Lambert was the lone bowhunter release; Sam McKinney,
5-SHOT PUMP AcnON
MOEMFIEO CHOICE
senior lost to graduation from a 3- top mal~ bowhunter fingers; ~dy
~mington .
VENnLA"'rE:D Rl8
I7 ch1b of one year ago that consis- Wheeler, top male ffiO release;.
EXTRA DEER BARREL
ted of mostly freshman and Ann McKinney, lop women
sophomores. Eastern wiU still be bowhunter fingers; Randy Wheeler
r'""~
4 Oz. Aerosol
,
[ SALE $21999
young, but with one year of ·ex- and Ann McKinney, lop man and
Reg. '3.59
£_
PAvfC"&gt;E
--""'-.N-..1
perience under their belts w!U be woman for round robin; Terry
~ /,..,
~
better prepared to rake on the chal- Tucker, Joe Smilh, Kelly Parson,
F&lt;EG $249 gg
lenge of varsity basketball.
Rusty Tucker, Roger Starcher,
·• SAlE $299'~
Returning letter winners are Randy Wheeler, Am McKinner.
seniors Lmrie Baker and Suzanne Bill Sim, Danell Krautr.er, Phyllis
Clay; 'Illbitha Phillips, Jennifer Starr, Harrison Starr, John Young,
Roush, Lee Gillilan, and Tiffany Tim Smith, Gary Casto and Lynn
Gardner, all jooion.
Young, ace plaques;
MODEL 89
The first year Eastern coach Siid,
TIDI Smith, most improved
32 CALIBER
5...SHOT
ACTION · 5 SHOT
"I am very positive about this year. ·shooting award; Tim Smith and I ile
1
STAINLESS STEEL
Htsmos
, ···i!"::~' .
12
GAUGE
The girls are v~ talented llld with Smilh, 550 Club contest winDer$;
Aeg. S180.QD •·
.• •
ze·· .VENl 8ARRh
· a 'new attitude and hard WOlle, Ann McKinney, Sam McKinney,
MDDIAED CHOii t
they could be a bi&amp; surprise to op- Harrison Starr, Randy Wheeler,
SnHHfTIC STOCK
-"LADIES
ponents."
•
Lynn Young, Coy Starcher, Roger
.R... '111.tt
SPECIAL"
"Our main wealcness is OUt level SIIKther, Ioe Smith, TIID GiUilan,
of cmfiderlce...you Clll't lole year Joey Smith, big game awards; Lynn
lifter year and 8lill bow how 10 Young and Walley RII.!SCII, successYou'll Find More In Store Savings -'- Stop In Todayl
win. Once we pin 1101110 con~ ful bowhuting patcll; Sam Mcfidence our ream will be much bel· Kinney and Hanlson Starr, master
ter. My point guards will have 10 bowh111ting award; Tin Smich, SSO
· lllep forward and rake cootrol.. We Club belt buclcle (flnl time in the
"Your Hunting Headquarters"
•
will try to gel our winp QP and SSO club); Randy Wheeler l1lld ·
•
OPEN MON.-SAT. 6 A.M.-8 P.M.
down the court 10 CIICh the slow Roger Starcher, knives for third
'i
Rt. 124
RACINE, OHIO
tranSition of other ~- Oar time in the 550 Club; Ioe Smith,
949·9200
~rag jacket for his fourth time in
,
.
' club.
.,
\.

•

EBER'S Hunting
!
Season Savin ---....:

Chester awards
banquet held

.t. DIYIIIon of Multimedia, lac.

thr011gh

Hannan Trace (7-9, 4-8)
Tracey Jenkins (sr.)
North GaiDa ( 4-12, 3-9)
Deena Petrie (sr.)
Southwestern (Z.13, 2-10)
Lisa Hall (sr.) .
_
Receiving honorable mention
were:
Oak WU- Jo Chapruan, Alicia
Lloyd and Jennifer Ramsey (all
Juniors), and Heather Ramsey
(so.)
KYler Creek - Amanda cOx
and Danlelle Scott (both seniors)

BOWHUNTERS
AWARDED-Theselndlvlduals were awarded plaques and
awards at the Chester Do-- " ,
whunters and Archery Club '· ·'
banquet on Sunday, Nov. 4.
Shown are ( L-R) Bill Slm,
John Young, Joe Smith, Terry
Tucker, Sandy Wheeler, Ann
McKinney, Sam McKinney·,
Roger Starcher, Phyllis Starr,
Tim Smith, Rusty Tucker and
' - .. \
Harrison Starr.

...

The Daily Sentinel

Financial services often fall shortRobert Walters

.'

with our quarterbacks. It's hard to explain."
The Eagles broke the game open with three
touchdowns In the Ujst 3: 51 of the third quarter,
two of them coming after turnovers.
"We went out with a different attitude," White
said. "We were going "to be more Intense. Of
course, It's easy to be Intense on Monday Night ·
Football against the Redsklns. But we'Ve got to
continue this."
,
Byars took a pitch from Cunningham and tossed
a nine-yard .s coring strike to Sherman to give the
Eagles a 14·7 lead with 3:51 to plily In the third
quarter, capping a seven-play, 33-yard drive.
Washington's RalfMojslejenko managed only a
37-yard punt from his own seven and Anthony
Edwards returned the ball 11 yards to give the
Eagles possession at the· washington 33.
Cunningham hit Sherman for six yards on a
fourth-and-four play, then scrambled for 12 yards
and a !irst-and-goal '!rom the nine. The ·Eagles
scored on the next play.
Three plays later, Philadelphia went ahead 21-7
when Wes Hopkins sacked Rutledge, forcing a
fumble · that was recovered by Simmons and
returned for a touchdown with 2: U to play in the
third.
"We had opportunities to make plays In the first
half and didn't get It done ," Rutledge said. "Then
they just came after us."
·
Hopkins said: "He didn't see me. If you hit a
quarterljack on the blind side, the chances are
he's going to cough it up."
Humphries replaced Rutlege on Washington's
next possession and moved the Redsklns to
midfield before disaster struck.
Byron Evans Upped Humphries' pass and the
ball was Intercepted by White, who -returned It 33
yards to the Washington nine.
Three plays later, Cunningham hit Sherman
froru two yards out to gl_ve the Eagles a 28-7lead.
"I can catch the ball too," Sherman said.
Rutledge threw to Warren for an eight-yard
touchdown five seconds Into the second quarter to
tie the score 7-7, two plays after a botched punt by
the Eagles.
Washington's Sidney Johnson got In the
backfield quickly against Philadelphia punter
Jeff Feagles, who tried to run, then threw a
desperation pass. Feagles was penalized for
Intentional grounding and'the Redsklns took over
at the Phll!ldelphla 12.
A Washington mistake enabled th~ Eagles to
take a 7-0 lead wtth 3:32 left In the first quarter.
On a tblrd-and-one . play, Mike Gollc hit
Rutledge as he threw and Frizzell darted in front
of Ricky Sanders to pick off the ball and race 30
yards. into the end zone Ul\touched.

~1

(V8P8lfll-. .)

.

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All-SVAC volleyball team selected

ago.

•

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EBER'S
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'

TuesdaY. November 13. 1990

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

TUesday. November 13, 1990

Redwomen cagers to open season today
The campaign to excei!d last season's seventh-place finish In
Dis trlct 22 beginS Tuesday for the Un lverslty of Rio Grande women's
·basketball team when It hosu Kentucky Christian at5: 15 p.m. In Lyne
Center.
With their starting lineup set and preseason experience gained In
two encounters, the Redwomen are ready to take their Improved
skUis on of!ense and defense Into competition against the Lady
Kntihts, who were 17-9 and fourth place last year in Division Ilol the
National Christian Collegiate Athletic Asscictation finals.
While Rio Grande's preseason didn't open encouragingly ·- the
Redwomen were defeated by Shawnee Stale ~2 In a Nov. 6
exhibition game - all-around Improvement was seen In Sunday's
home scrimmage with Otterbein. The Redwciinen played three
20-mlnute halves and emerged the winner with a 29-polnt margin.
"Shawnee State ws a fluke because .we'd suffered all kinds of
problems with turnovers," Coach Doug Foote commented Monday.
"But Otterbein was more like our team. We didn't turn the ball over
·
as much, the defense was better and we played harder."
Foote's new lineup of probable starters Include Jennl Couch, the 5-4
sen lor from Ppmeroy, as one-half or the defense and Gena Norris, a
5-2 freshman !rom KtngsiOn,,on the other side. Couch, a starler last
season, placed second on the team In the number of assists, averaging
3.5 per game In 1989-90, in addition to 7.3 points per outing. Norris, a
medical redshll;t last year, gets her first full opportunity with the
Redwomen this year. .
Two veterans make up Foote's offense. Small forward wtll be

Debbie Fredrick, a 5-8 sophomore from South Charleston, Ohio, the
only member of the team to net Mid-Ohio Conference and DISf;l'ict
player of the week honors last year. Fredrick led the team In average
scoring (13.7 points} and in assists (4.8) to make the All-District and
All-MOC first teams.
Kathy Snyder, 5-10 junior from Gahanna. brings to-tl'le power
forward slot an average of 6.4 points and 5.5 rebounds from 1989-90, in
addition to scoring 70 percent from the free throw line (47-68). Her
efforts won her a place on the All·MOC second team.
At center Is Kerr! Kidwell, All-MOC honorable mention last year.
The 5-11 sophomore from Hamersville played In all but one of Rio
Grande's'games in her first season and walked away with a per-game
average o! 8.2 points and 6.3 rebounds, second on-the team In the
number of boards recorded.
Tuesday's opposition already has two season games to Its credit .
The Lady Knights opened Friday in a home tournament against
Baptist Bible College; Clarksville. Pa. Baptist Bible won that round
by a 52-49 decision, but lost to KC 57-42 the following day.
Coach Tom Bender will pit guards Stephanie Fraley (5-8,
freshman) and Aimle Arnett (5-7, junior) against Couch and Norris,
while Kathy Bogan (5-8, sophomore) and Kellle Pelfrey (5-10,
sophomor&lt;!) will act as his starting forwards. At center is Jenny Ross
(6-0, sophomore).
.
·
The game Is Rio Gr;tnde's second consecutive opener against the
Lady Knights. Last season, ,Foote's club defeated KC 81-40 at
Grayson, Ky.

READY TO SHOOT- Jeiml Couch, a senior from Pomeroy and
starter lor the University of Rio Grande women's basketballleam,
prepares to shoot in a practice session. The Redwomen open the
1!190-91 season at home Tuesday against Kentucky Christian.

Nowlin, Pritt honored by NAIA
CEDARVILLE, Ohio (UP!) -Bluffton wide receiver i\ndy
Nowlin and Wilmington line·
backer Scott Prit.t have been
selected the NAIA District 22
players of the week.
Nowlin, a senior from Colum·
bus, caught seven passes for a
school record 234 yards and two
touchdowns In Bluffton's 42-25
win over Urbana. One of Nowlin's touchdowns went for 99

By JOE ILLUZZI
Following UNLV In the top ~5
UPI Sports Writer
are: No. 2 AriZona, No. 3
NEW YORK (UP!)- National
Arkansas, No. 4 North Carolina,
basketball champion NevadaNo.5 Michigan State, No. 6Duke,
Las Vegas, currently appealing
No. 7 Georgetown, No. 8 Indiana,
i'iCAA sanctions, Monday was
No. 9 Alabama, No. 10 UCLA, No.
voted No. 1 in preseason balloting
11 Ohio State, No. 12 Oklahoma,
by United Press Internatlonili's ·
co,No. 13 Connecticut and Louis!- .
Board of Coaches .
ana State, No. 15 Pittsburgh, No.
The Runntn' Rebels, who obli16 Syracuse, No. 17 Georgia
terated Duke in last spring's
Tech, No. 18 Southern Mlssls·
NCAA title game, co llected 32 or
sippi, No. 19 Virginia, No. 20
41 first-place votes to easily
Kansas, No. 21 Texas, No. 22
outdistance Arizona for the top
Loulsviile, No. 23 Georgia, No. 24
spot. The UP! board also rated
Temnie and No. 25 Notre Dame.
U.I'ILV No. 1 last preseason.
The NCAA is considering
AriZona received two first'UNLV's appeal and should deterplace votes, Arkansas had four,
mine soon whether the Rebels
while North Carolina, Michigan
can defend their title. Over the
State and Georgetown received
summer, the NCAA placed
one apiece.

NFL standings .
By Unl&amp;ed PrenlnternaUonal

NI\TIONII.L FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Amerleaa Conlereace
East
Team
W LT Pet. PF PA
Buffalo ...............8 1 0 .889 274150
Miami.. ...............8 I 0 .889192 96
NY Jets .......... .4 6 0 .400178 2!6

lndianapolls ... ... 3 6 0 .333 125 196
New England .. :.. . .1 8 0 .111130 257
Centro!
Clncinnati ............ 5 4 o .556 212 225
Pittsburgh ........... 54 0 .556171147
Houston ............. ,.4 50 .H4 194 169
Cleveland ........... 2 7 0 .222128 235

w..

t
LA Raiders ..........6 3 0 .667170137
Kansas City ...... . 54 0 .556 192 138
San Diego ............ 5 ~ 0 .500 214 163
Seattle- .............. 4 50.444 175182
Denve-r ................ 3 6 0 .333 197 224
National Conferenee

E.. t

Team ··
WLTPct.PFPA
NY Giant s ......... 9 0 01.000 226110
Philadelphia ...... 54 0 .556 227186
Washlngtm ..... ... 5 4 0 .556 199169
Dallas ................ 3 7 0 .300125 204
Phoenix .....
%..1 ~22 117 240
Centftl
Chicago ............ 8 1 0 .889 229126
Green Bay ..... ... 4 5 0 .444 176 196
Tampa Bay ... ... .4 6 0 .400170 243
Detroll ............. 3 6 0 .333 213 237
Minnesota ...... ..... .3 6 0.333 194188
Weot
San Franclsc ..... 9 0 0 1.000 222144
~.New Orleans ...... 4 50 .44~ 171 16~
A1la nta .............. 3 6 0 .333 232 251
LA Ram s ............... 3 611133 198 258
Sunday Re!iuh s
Buffalo 45, Phrenix 14
Chlcago.lO, Atlanta 24
Mlnnesora 17. Detroit 7
Seattle 17. Kansas City 16
New Orleans 35, Tampa Bay 7
Indianapolis 13, New England 10
MJaml17, NY Jets 3
Green Bay 29. LA RaJdE'rs 16
NY Gia nt s 31. LA Rams 7
San Dle~i!:O 19 . Dl&gt;nver 7
San Franrisco 24. Dalbs 6
Monday Result
Phlladelph!B 28. Wash!ngtoo 14
Su nda)' , No'll. t R
Det rolt at NY Clants, 1 p.m .
Houston at Cl('Vela nd. 1 p.m .
t'Oew En~ l and a t Buffalo. 1 p m .
Ne"'' Orleans at Washingtcr'l. 1
p.m .
Philad elphia at Atlanta, 1 p.m .
San Di £$lOa t Kansa s City, 1 p.m .
NY Jets at l ndta nap dls. ~ p.m.
Green Bay at Phoenix. 4 p.m .
Mlnnt.&gt;SOia at Seattle. 4 p.m .
Tampa Bay at San Francisco . 4
p.m .
•
Ch!caJtoa l Denver. 4 p.m.
"
Oa.llas at LA Rams. 4 p.m .
Plrt stm ~h at C\nctnnatl. 8 p.m.
Monday, Nov. 19
LA Raiders at Miami, 9 p.m.
w • • • • • • • • • ••

Pro results
..

NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS·

soc.

Monday Re8ult
WashJngtoo 97, New Jerry 92
Tuesday Game8
Washington al Charlotte. 7:30

p.m.
Dallas at Orlando. 7: ·30 p.m .
CJevela nd at Atlanta. 7:30p. m .
Mi ami at Detroit. "7:30p.m.

Philadelphia at Jndlana . 7: 30
' ' p.m .
San Antoolp at Goklen Sla.te, 8

,. p.m .
Boston at Milwaukee-. 8:30p.m .
~

MinnescJia at Houston. 8:30p.m .
Chicago at Utah, 9: 30p.m .
New York at Seattle. 10 p.m .'

••

PhoenixatLAL.akers. l0:30 p.m.
OE'nver at Por!land, 10: 30 p.m .
WediK"!day Gamet!
Charlot le at Boston, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at New Jer!l"y, 7:30

: p.m.

Atlanta at Philadelphia, 7:30
" p.m .
•
Dallas at Miami, 7:30p.m .
..
Indiana at Cleveland , 7:.10 p.m .
PhoeniX at LA Cli ppers. 10:30 ·
p.m .

NATIONIIL liiJfaBY UIAGlS
Mondl)!lltlall
Toronto 5. Winnlpef 2

Tuesday Gam•

NY RangersatPhlladelphia, 7: 35

p.m.

Montreal a t New Jet!fey, 7:45
p.m .

(Continued !rom Page 3)

Sophomore members of that group
are Stephanie Otto, Michele
gOO&lt;! depth on its bench jlcy_ond the Metzger, Karen Moois, and Debbie
stanmg live.
·
Gmy. Sophomore Aubry West is
Comme~ting on practices the
out for the first time.
EHS coach lamenu, "We've had
A small, but good group of
our ups and downs, but in only two freshmen round out the line-up;
and a half weeks, we have made guard Jaime Wilson, Penny Aeiker.
peat strides. We hope and snive 10 and Nora Eastman.
Improve a liUie each day. Attitude
Eastem opens Monday,Novemis good. The girls are fir¢ up and · bu 19 at home against Federal
willing 10 push themselves. Scrim- Hocking.
mages have been 'OK'. We've.
made some mistakes, but we now
f.a81es' 1990-91 slate
know whal we need 10 do 10 win.
o...
Opp..,.nt
We've been competitive."
No'll. 19 ................. ..... ... Federal Hocking
As opposed 10 a ~ch pattern Nov. 26 ........ .... .................. Kyger Creek
orienltd offense, Eastern hopes 10 Nov. 29 ............. .... ......... at Southweslf!rn
utilize a wide open offensive ap- Dec. 3 .................. ..... .......... at SouUtern
Dec. 5 , ........ ..... :............... ......... Trimble
~h. "We hope 10 keep a very
Dec. 6 ... ....................... Symmes Valley
free' offensive ~-up. The girls Dec. 8 .......... _. .............. ........ .. ... at Meigs
need 10 react and take the drive Dec. 10 ....... ... .. .................... North Gallla
Dec. 13.. ............................... at Oak Hill
when iu available. Hopefully, lots Dec.
20 .... ..................... at Hannan Trace
&lt;if husde and movement •will open Jan. 3 ......... .................... at Kyger Creek
up lay-ups for us offensively," said Jan. 9 ........................... .. ....... at Trlmble
Jan. 10 .. .... ............ ......... .. Southwestern
the first year-mentor.
Jan. 14 ............ ......... at Federal Hocking
She continued, "Defensively. Jan . 17 ....... ... ........................... SOuthern
we'll utilize a high pressure man- Jan. 21 ......................................... MeiP.
Jah. 24 ....................... at Symmes Valley
to-man. We want 10 continually Jan . 31' ..... . ... ............ ,. .... at North q""llla
chaUenge the offensive player and Feb. 4 ............. .............. .. Hannan Trace
force ..them 10 make bad decisions. Feb. 7 ....................................... Oak Hill
We hope 10 turn good defense iniO Head c•cll - Dawn Heideman
offense in the transition game."
Currently, fifteen players are
vying for positions on the squad.
The contingent is led by seniors
Lorrie Baker and Suzanne Clay.
The fall spons banquet for
Clay is a four-year player for. the Eas1em High School athletes will
Eaglettes.
be held Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in
Five
juniors
and
four the Eastern High School gymsophomores from the 1987 junior nasium. Beverage, .rolls and table
high .championship team (9-3) are service wiU be provided. Each
also on the squad. That gJI!Up is led family is 10 take a meat dish, a
by juniors Ttffany Gardner, JC!l- vegetable or salad and a dessert. All
nifer Roush, Ruby Burke. l.,ee Gtl- cheerleaders, footbaU and vollilan,
and Tabby PhiUips. leyball players will be recognized

PtttSbu rgh at Minnesota. 8: 35
p.m .
Quebec at St. Louis, 8:35p.m .
Wednesday Games
Boston at Hartford. 7:35 p.m .
Washingtm al Toronto, 7:35p.m.
Chicago at Detroit, 7:35 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Winnipeg, 8:35

Eastern seems 10 have veri

p.m.

Vanco11ver at EdmontCII, 9:35
p.m .
Buffalo at Los Angeles. 10:35
p.m .

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) . Ohio Slate head coach John
Cooper admitted Monday that his
Buckeyes "got lucky" In beating·
No. 5 Iowa 27-26 Saturday on a
last-second Greg Frey to Bobby
Olive three-yard touchdown
pass.
"But Cooper also credited his
team, especially his much·
maligned defensive unit, for
keeping the Buckeyes within
striking distance in the fourth
quarter.
'"It's like a marathon race, "
said Cooper. "As long as you can
maintain contact with the leader,
you still have a chance to win the
race. I think that's what happened in that ball game.
"On our last three possessions
of the game, we got the ball on
their 24-yard line (blocked punt),
on their 44-yard line and, the last
possession, on !}leir 48-yard line.
"When you keep giving the
offense that many opportunities,
particularly with the sktlled
athletes we have, something's
going to happen ."
Trailing 26-21, Frey, who had
struggled under a fierce Iowa
pass rush · all game, passed the
Buckeyes to the Iowa three with
seven seconds to play . He then
found Olive, who made a leaping
catch for the game winner.
Olive also caught a 21-yard TO
pass from Frey with 6:34 to play
to get the Buckeyes within
striking distance at 26-21.

Pre-season
cage ratings
NEW YORK iUPii - The
prPseasm Unite-d Press ln terna·
tiona! Board or Coaches ' Top 25
college basketball ratings , with
Urst -place votes and last seasm's
records In parentheses. total point s
(based on 15 points fo r first place,
U for secOnd, etc. ) and last
seasoo's final rank ing:
Team
Points
1. UNLV 1321 (35-51 .............. 562 2
2. Arizona t21 t25-7) ....... .... 51412
3. Arkansas (41(30·51 ............ 4878
4. North Carolina (1) t 21·
131 ................................... .412 NR
5. Michigan State Ul {28-61 .... 084
6. Duke 129-91 .......... ........ ... 33514
7_Georgetown r l l 124-71. :...... 311 9
8. Indiana US·lll ........... ... 270 NR
9. Alabama !26-91. .............. 23719
10. UCLA I 22·111 ............... 194 NR
ll. Ohio Slate l-17·13 1 ......... !50 NR
12. Oklahoma 127·51 ..............147 1
13. (lie) ConJ'iectlcut t31·6l ... .144 3
13. I t iel LSU 123-91 ........... 144 NR
15. Plttsbu'lth i12·17l ........ 112 NR
16. Syracuse t26-7) ............... 105 6
17. Georgia Tech {28-71 ......... 73 7
18. Southern Miss. (20.121 ... .46 NR
19 . VIrginia tro-121 ........ .. ... 45 NR
20. Kansas 130.51 ................... 36 5
21. Texas 124·91.................. 33 NR
22. UJutsvtlle t 27·81 ............... 28 16
23. Geo'ltia i20·9l ................ 22 NR
24. Tem ple 120-111 ......... ...... 20 NR
25. Notn&gt; Dame t 16-131...... .. 16 NR
NR-unranked
Other s recelvln,l{ votes: Brigham
Young. California. DePaul, East
Tenn£'Ssee State, Houston, Loyola
Marymount, Mu rray State. New
Me~llco. Nt&gt;W Mexico State, No rth
Carol ina Sta te, Purdue, St . John's,
SW Loui siana. UC Sa nta Barbara,
Villanova .
Note: By agreement wlttl the
Nat ional Association of Biasketball
Coaches of the United States, 1eams
on preibat !on by the NCAA and
lneUglbl(' for the NCAA Tourna·
rnent are ineligible fot Top 2~ and
na tional championship considerallon by the UPI Board of Coaches .
The teams ttlls seasCII are Illinois.
Kentucky, Marshall , Maryland,
Missouri. Northwest Louisiana and '"
Robert Morrts.
"

E. Neal Orteza, M.D.
announce the opening of their
· practice in

and

New York (ALl - Named Tony

Adolescent Medicine

Bartlrcme I ravellnR secreta r y.
Jluketboll
Dallas - Placed forwa rd Ro:ro
Tar:pley on Injured reserve; signed
g\lard Kevin Upshaw .
WashingtCII Signed guard
Ledell Eackles to a 2-yearcontract
and placed him on suspended lls1.

·at
2907 Jackson Avenue
.Point
. Pleasant, West Virginia

eoue,e

- Named Ronni
assistant tennis
.
-Named Joyce
assistant basket·

Seeing patients
9 a-.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

· Foolbatl
EdmontCil (CFLl -

Activated
defensive back Tren t Brown fran
, reserve list: relEased Brown and
added him to practice r[llter.
New England - Released otrenslw lineman David aoualas.

·.

For appointments call

(304) 675-4107
t

. til
Pi7isANr
..... n.

$999..~.~

1690

1642

..

famlljcl prolellif?M&amp;

.

.

~

....

.

DRIVES LANE :_ New Jersey's Mookie
Blaylock (10) drives the lane for two points, but is
fouled from behind by Washington's Harvey

':~·.

EAST RUTHERFORD ,
N.J. (UP!) Bernard King
sho'wed some of the offensive
flash Monday night that made
him an NBA scoring champion.
King scored 19 of his 38 points
in the third quarter to guide the
Washington Bullets to their fi rst
road victory or the season, a 97-92
decision over the New Jersey
Nets.
"It's a good sign, especially on
the road, even though New
Jersey . has been struggling,"
said King , who won the NBA
scoring title in 1985. "It's good to
get the win. It's going to take us a
little time to gel, but every game
has been close, and we have been
in most of them right to the e nd. "
"Bernard is the key to our
offense, " Washington h1&gt;ad
coach Wes Unseld said. ··we are
going to go to him until the well
runs dry."
Harvey Grant scored 21 points

8.7 Nissan Se~:~tra
RED, 2 DR.

.

87 Ford Escort
87 Chevy Sprint··
8 7 Dodge. Colt
6

87 lsuzu Truck
,,

BLUE, 2 DR.

.

86 Ford Tempo

1671

I

WATCHING THE PUCK go alrbOme Is the
trend of the moment for Winnipeg goalie Bob
Essensa (right), teammate Gord Donelly (upper

BLUE, 4 DR.

86 Pontiac Fiero

1657

TORONTO (UPI) - Doug
Shedden scored a pair of firstperiod goals Monday night to
help the Toronto Maple Leafs
snap a six-game losing streak ·
with a 5-2 decision over the
Winnipeg Jets.
Shedden, who was recalled
from the Maple Leaf's New·
market minor league affiliate
Saturday, opened the scoring at
7:54 when he poked In a Paul
Fenton rebound for his first goal
of the season. His second goal
came when defenseman Todd
. Gill stlckhandled up the wing
past Phil Housley and centered a
pass that Shedden, rushing the ·
crease, tipped In_.

Payments Figured With Tax and Tit It Paid. -S..
Salesman For Details
·

SOUTHEAST
IMPORT CENTER
93 COLUMBUS lOAD ATHENS, OHIO - 592·2497

f

left) a'nd Toronto's Daniel Marois (32) Jn .the first
period of Monday night's NHL contest, which the
Maple Leafs won 5·2. (UPI)

Shedden's early goals help Leafs to 5-2

GOLD, 2 DR.

.

Grant in the fourth quarter of Monday night's
game In East Rutherford, N.J., which the BuUets
won 97·92. (UPI) .

r

I'

a nd grabbed 10 rebounds for the
Bullets, playing in the only NBA
game or the night. Mark Alarie
c hipped ih 11 points and guard
Darrell Walker had eight points
. and a game-high 1'!,rebounds for
Washington.
New J'e rsey point guard Mookie Blaylock led the Ne~s with 19
points and Derrick Coleman
added 16 points and 12 rebounds.
Chris Morris had 15 points and 11
rebounds for New Jersey.
King converted 8 of 10 field
goals and 3 or 4 free throws as his
19 points eq ualed the Nets' ou tput
fcir lhe third period . The Bullets
led 81-72 entering the final
period.

. With 2: 33left in the game, King:
hit a running jumper which gave
Washington a 92-83 lead. With
1:48 remaining New Jersey·s
Sam Bowie hit a free throw to pull
the Nets within 92-88 and Coleman sank two more free throws ·
all: 05 cut the New Jersey deficit :
to two.
;
But Grant tipped in a King miss ,
with 36 seeonds left for a
rour-poinl Washington lead. Charles Jones hit a fre e throw and
King made two more· in the final
seconds to complete Washing- :
ton's · scoring. Derrick Gervin ·
sank a layup for New Jersey at :
!he buzzer for the final margin.

In the Top 20 ...

86 Dodge Charger

1609

Arizona features a strong Iron·
tUne and adds Chris Mills , a
Kentucky transfer. Arkansas, a
Final Four team last season,
opens its final year in the
Southwest Conference trying to
give the league its first NCAA

King gui8es Bullets to 97-92 win over Nets

Vdey Dri.,., Point,..._~ WV~ (304) 11W3ola

'

'

PAYMENT

"Your Vehicle Saving Place"

VALLEY HOSPITAL

.

,.. i

BLUE, 2 DR.
1692

anyone."

PONTIAC, Mich. (UP!~ Rookie quarterback Andre Ware
appears to be building a wall
between himself and the rest of
the Detroit Lions .
Head coach Wayne Fontes was
annoyed Monday when Ware
repeated his Sunday comments
about being pulled at halftime
from his first pro start, a 17-7 1oss
to the Minnesota Vikings.
But a greater long-rang!' concern mtgh t'be that Ware seems to
be growing apart from quarter-·
backs Rodney Peete and Bob
Gagliano and the rest of the
teant"
·

BLUE, 2 DR.
1699

basketball champion. Arkansas'
hopes reston three jupiors -~
Mayberry, Todd Day and Oliver
Miller.
The Big East and the Atlantic
Coa~t Conference each pl;tced
four teams In the top25, while the
Big Ten and the Southeastern ·
Conference had three each.

Ware draws
Fontes' ire

RED, 2 DR • .
1700

feel we have as good a chance as

·'

.

soo.!.

Iitle, they'll do so with a formida·
ble lineup that Includes star
forwards Larry Johnson and
Stacey Augmon.
'"I think the biggest obstacle
lor us right now is simply getting
the opportuf!jty to defend our
title," Tarkanian said. "We have
a great group of talented kids and

Cooper. "When you stand back
there and time after time you're
getting_bl!!sted. He took some
shots, You've got to have some
time to throw the baiL"
Olive was selected the Big Ten
offensive player of the week and
freshman outside linebacker Jason Simmons, who had eight
tackJes, including two quarter·
back sacks, the conference defensive player of the week.
Cooper said the Buckeyes
came ·out of the game with an
unusually high number of Injuries, although tight end Jeff Ellis
is the most doubtful for this
week's game at Wisconsin after
respratnlng his left ankle.

STOCK#

General Pediatrics

International League lAAA 1.

back Jerry Dunlap, linebacker s ·
Frank Balkovec and Cordon
Weber, defensive tackle MUce Phll·
brick, · otrenslve tackle Mld'lel
Lamy a nd offensive gua rd Alan
Neufeld.

.

'

pl_rchers Rusty Meacham and Dave
Haas fran London of Eas1ern
League !AAl and pitchers Kevin
Ritz and Eric Stooe fran Toledo of

What

WHITE

Emy Olivarez·Orteza, M.D.

By Unhed PrH s lnAeraallonal
Bueboll
Det rolf- Purehased contracts of

L~ok

"We didn't play a particularly
great football game against
Iowa, to be honest with you,"
added Cooper. '.'As a matter of
fact, they pretty much manhandled us up front. WI' didn't
have anybody on the offensive
line who played anywhere near
the way we expected them to
play.
"A lot of credit goes to Iowa 's
defensive line," said Cooper .
"They were a physical football
team. They kicked our fannies
real good up front. We probably
were fortunate to win the .g ame.
"In the last two possessions,
Greg Frey did a great job of
evading the rush and finding the
open receiver," said Cooper. "I
don't think I've been around two
receivers who are having a
better year than Jeff (Graham)
and Bobby (Olive) are right now.
It's been a long time since eithl'r .
one of those guys has dropped a
pass."
Graham caught a 48-yard
touchdown pass from Frey on the
final play of the first half to cut
the Iowa lead to 17-14. The ball
bounced off the chest of Hawkeye
defendl'r Merton Hank,s into the
waiting arms of Graham, who
went In un Jouched.
Although Frey completed only
one of his first 12 passes in the
second half, Cooper said there
was never any thought of replac·
ing him with backup Kent
Graham.
"I don't think It was his
(Frey's) fault at all," said

Buys!

&amp;

Monday Spcwts Tranaactions

ll~~:t ~~~c..~:~":&gt;:*~

AND

EHS fall banquet

Transactions

Arizona State
Rels women's
coach.
Mercy !N.Y .)
Lenar wcrnen's
ball coach.

Georgia Tech jumped two spots
after victories. BYU hammered
Wyoming 45-14 and Georgia Tech
clipped Virginia T~ch 6-3 on Scott
Sisson's !leld goal with seven
seconds left.
Next was Texas, which vaulted
six places after its 45·24 triumph
over previously unbeaten Houston. No. 7 VIrginia moyed up two
places after beating North Carolina 24·10 and Washington wound
up in eighth after seeing its
national title hopes vanish in its
25-22 loss to UCLA.
No. 9 Nebraska and No. 10
Florida Statl' each moved ahead
one place following big victories,
and No. 11 Mississippi Improved
three spots after an Idle week.
No. 12 Iowa fell seven places
after Its 27-26 loss to Ohio State
(See TOP %0 on Page 5)

SOUTHEAST IMPORT
CENTER

Today,

UNLVon probation for violations
committed 15 years ago, when
the NCAA ordered head coach
Jerry Tarkanlan suspended.
Tarkantan and UNLV of!icials
have presenled comproml~s
that would allow the Rebels to
defend their title. One option
would be ·to .ban the team from
playing In the 1992 NCAA toul"nament . A second would be to ban
just Tarkanian and not the team.
"We should hear .very soon
what they've decided," Tarkanian said. "'And then we can start
the . season knowing exactly
where we stand . "
If the Rebels, who open the
season Dec. 1 against AlabamaBirmingham, can defend their

Cooper says Buckeyes were·lucky

Eastem. girls' hoops•••

Scoreboard ...

•

•

yards, the longest play from
scrimmage In Bluffton history,
while his other TD came on · a
67-yard pass.
·
Pritt, a senior from Springfield, Intercepted a pass, return·
ing !133 yards, and blocked a punt
for a safety In Wilmington's 29-18
win over Mount St. Joseph. It was
the third blocked punt of the
season for Pritt, who also added
15 tackles :

over Oklahoma State.
Colorado's clinching, along
with Notre Dame's victory' Sunday, guarantees a rematch of
last year's Orange Bowl, In
which·the Fighting Irish knocked
off then-No. 1 Colorado. That
allowed Mjamt to claim its third
national championship of · the
1980s.
"Go.ing to the Orange Bowl is a
tremendous accompllshmen t for
us," Colorado head coach Bill
McCartney said. "Notre Dame's
. decision to play in the· Orange
Bowl doesn't surprise me. Tradl·
lionally, thl'y always want to
play the htghest-raiiked team
that they can, and they're holdIng true to form."
No. 3 Miami also Improved one
place after a week off, while No. 4
Brigham Young and No. 5

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Defending NCAA champ UNLV UPI's pre-season ·No. I

Notre Dame, Colorado set for title game
By JEFF SHAIN
Notre Dame received 51 of 55
UPI Sports Writer
first-place votes cast by the
JIIEW YORK (UP!) - In a
59-member board, the largest
season In which ·no team has been number received by any team
spared from upset, things !lnally this year, and finished with 807 of
appear In place for a national a possible 825 points. Colorado
. champlon,shlp game.
earned three first-place votes
Colorado moved Into the No. 2 and 737 points.
·
position in the United Press
The Fighting Irish improved to
International college football rat- 8-1 with a 34-29 victory Saturday
Ings behind top-ranked Notre · at Tennessee, allowing Notre
Dame, setting up a potential . Dame to have a direct bearing on
battle for No. 1 In the Orange t!Ie national title for the third ·
Bowl.
straight year.
Notre Dame completed the
"I don't know about that, but
scenario late Sunday. The school we won the game," Notre Dame
announced It would accept an head coach Lou Holtz said.
Orange Bowl Invitation when
Colorado took advantage' of
olftctal bids are extended Nov. Washington's loss to UCLA to
24.
move up one place. The Buffa,
The Fighting Irish were a Ioes, 9-1-1, won at least a share of
near-unanimous pick Sunday In the Big Eight title and the
the latest balloting by the UPI conference's automatic Orange
Board of Coaches.
Bowl berth with a 41-22 victory

· Pomeroy-'-Middleport, Ohio

The Jets mad~&gt; It 2-1 In the
serond : period when Ed. Olczyk
and Mark Osborne combined for
their. first· score after being
traded from Toronto on Saturday. Osborne fed Olczyk, who
slapped It in at 5:27.
Toronto made It 3-1 at 17:46 of
the same period when · Daniel
Marois dug the puck out of the
corner, a~d sUd It to DBmphousse
who beat fallen goal tender Bob
Essensa with a wrlit shotlnto the
.,
lett cot:ner.
Essensa faced 33 shots, while
Toronto netmlnder Jet1 Reese
faced 23, the fewest shots the
Maple Ll!afs have allowed this
season.,

0

WID

Winnipeg came within a goal tn
the third period when l'jlark
Kumpel, on hls kn~, backhanded a shot past Reese at2: 22.
Toronto added a goal at10: 38of
·the third period to mai\e II 4-2.
Wendel Clark scored his sixth
goal of. the season when he picked
up a loose puck at the blue line
and beat Essensa to the low glove
side !rom the left !ace-off circle·
to make It 4-2.
Dave Reid scored his fourth
short· handed goal in three games
10 make It 5-2 when he scored Into
an emptY net at 19: 24. ·
1 The Maple Leafs Improved
their record to 3·16·1 . . The Jets
dropped to 7-10-2, and 2-6-2 on thl'
road.

( Contlnu~d from Page 4)
and Tennessee dropped !lVI'
p'Iaces to 13th.
No. 14 Penn State Improved
five places after beating Maryland for Its seventh straight
victory. No . .15 Clemson and No.
16 Michigan each moved up one
position.
No. 17 Louisville jumped three .
spots after improving to 9-1-1
with a 17-10 triumph over Boston
College, completing its best
regular season since 1972. Ohio
Stale advanced six places to 18th
after beating low~ .
No.19Southern Cal returned to
the ratfugs alter a one-week
hiatus followlng ·tts 56-7 blowout
of Oregon State and No. 20 Texas
A&amp;M moved up two places after
an .Idle week.
Auburn and ratings newcomer
Michigan State tied for 21st and
Fresno State remained unchanged at No: 23. Illinois
dropped nine spots to 24th after
losing to Michigan and there was
another tie for 25th between
newcomers California and Southern Mississippi.
Dropping out of the ratings !Ills
week were Oregon, Wyoming
and Arizona .

Enjoy che flexibility and liquidity of. a CD
which is aucomarically renewable and redeemable
at each 7 day anniversary
The 7-Day-Premium 'CD
is another example of our

Commitment To Customers .

Call or visit your' nearest
Central Trusr office for derails today.

S10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT •
Max1rnurn dcpus1t S99,9?9.99. Substantial penaJry for early withdrawn! ,
Interest paid to principal and compounded weekly. Rales efff'Ctlv:e Sept. 21. 1990

and qunJt'l't In l'h:ln~e witt)IXJI notice. Yield assumes that stated 'nH(• remoins
nmstllnt for 3 fu ll year with no wdtdnwals of ;.,,rresr or princi pal.

CENTRAL TRI.SI'
. 992-6661 ·
Middl•port

446-0902

.I

A PNC BANK

,Wember. FDIC

G•lH~olil

�-·
.hga 6-The Daitv Sa 1tio1el

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Service geared
to help families

Meigs Calendar
; cOmmunity Ollendar items ap-

pear rwo days ~fore an event and
tile day of thai event Items miiSt be
received in advance 10 insure publication in the calendar.
,
TUESDAY
: CHESTER
The Chester
UJwnship Trustees will meet
1\Jesday a1 7:30 p.m. at tile 10wn

hill!.
••

Run.AND • The Rutland VilJ,ge, Council ~ll meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the c1v1c center.

..

Aniericare'
its annual

.. POMEROY
Pomeroy will have

Ghrislmas craft

and · bake Sile on
Tuesday from 9 am. 10 4 p.m. The
public is invited. Proceeds will help
in providing dte residents with
Ghrisunas.
; POMEROY • The Pomeroy
&lt;:hapter of Aame Fellowship will
meet Thes!lay at 7 p.m . . at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
Vonda K. Lee, Marieaa will be the
speaker. Public is irivited.
'' PORTLAND · The Portland
PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
4te'school.
' MIDDLEPORT - · The Middleport Arts Council will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Anyone interesl,ed in getting involved with the
council is invited to attend.
. BURI.INGHAM • The Bedford·
t.odi History Group will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Modem
Woodmen Hall in Burlingham.

...
'

••
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE · The Third WedOOsday Homemakers Club wiD
meet
Wednesday
10
make
&lt;;hristmas irees. Items needed are
tjnsil, hangars and a round JliCCe of

¢1rdbnard.

..

; AACINE ·

The Mt. Moriah
&lt;::hurch or God will have revival
Wednesday lhrough Saturday at 7
p.m. Victor Holland will be the
~vangelist and there wiD be special
singing nightly.
•
; ·MIDDLEPORT · - The Mic;l·
citeport Amatuer Garden Club w1ll
weet Wednesday at the home of
lean Moore. This will be a work
meeting to prepare for the
Christmas Flower Show. Bong userut items.

•

$upport group to
ineetNovember 16

.
'

.

.

• Nancy Pierce of Legal Aide Services and Jconifer Sheets.• Pomeroy
attorney, will talk on legal concerns
fOt caregivers and victims of ·
Alzheimers Disease and Related
Disorders at a meeting of dte TraininS Session/Support Group to be
~eld Friday at the Senior Citizens
~e,nter.

i 1be two will talk_about powers

'f.attorney, durable power. of atror·
aey, liying lruSts, wills, living wills,
conservatorship . of
property.
gn:j!'dianship or conservatorship of
liCrson, property ownership, filing
lilx returns, consent, and appealing
4eilials of entitlements.
: •Sharon
Wright,
LPN is
eoordinator of the program.
~egistration will be at 1:15 p.m.,
tlie speakers at I :30 p .m. foUowed
by a question and answer period.
:fhe regular support group meeting
t--ill be held at 2:45p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Litaary Oub win. meet
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Wednesday at 1:30 . p.m. at- the Legion, is joining in the National
home of Eileen • Buck. Florence American Legion's Family Support
Smith will review the book, ''The . Network which is geared to assist
Name of the Rose."
the families of military personnel
stationed in dte Persian Gulf.
THURSDAY
The centerpiece of the Support
POMEROY · A Ilea martcet Nerwork, according 10 Richard
benefitting teen dances wiD be held R.usseU. commander, . and RusseU
in Pomeroy at "Locomotion" (forMoore, spokesman, is the toll fnee
mer Elberfeld Warehouse) on telephone number, 1"800-78.6Thursday and Friday. Spaces will 0901, where service is available 24
be available at a cost of $5 for both hours per day, seven days a week,
days. Refreshments will be for sale. When using that number calls for
To rent space, call Sherry at 992- assistance are then routed to local
3456.
Posts. Calls are also being accepted
locally by Moore at 992-2526 or
POMEROY · The Pomeroy Rossen at 992-3597.
group or A.A. and AIAnon will
The program is geared to provide
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. ai the. an emergencr, action line to which
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
military fam11ies can call if assis1 -~333-5051 for infonnation.
tance is needed while family mem'
bers are deployed or are on active
IR£EDSV1LLE • The Riverview duty.
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
Among the services which Posts
7:30 p.m. for a Christmas inay be able to offer under dte new
workshop. at the ReeilsviUe Church program are .· transportation, day
of ChrisL Members are w bring a care,
small . repairs,
yard
finger food and gifts for Americare . maintenance, light housekeeping,
pallenlS.
.
employment assistance , monetary
assistance for small emergencies,
MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
and referrals to agencies which can
dleport Child Conservation League provide specialized services.
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church. Plans will be made for the
Christmas dinner. All members urged 10 anend.
·
COLUMBUS • Communities
throughout Ohio and the nation will
MIDDLEPOR,T • Bobbi Karr be celebrating American. Education
wiD instruct a Christmas wreath Week, Nov. 11-17, tlie 69th obser!llaking class on Thursday at 7 p.m.
vance of this annual event
at the, Middleport Arts Cauncil.
The 1990 AEW theme ''Educat·
Cost is $20 and includes SQpplies.
ing Everyone Takes Everyone"
Call Susan Baker, 992-7733 to
spotlights the fact that we are all
register or for information.
• partners in learning. Not only
school employees, but parents,
POMEROY • The Meigs CoQnty
business leaders, senior citizens,
Democmtic Executive Committee health professionals, go~mment
wiD meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at officials ~verybody has a role in
tile Carpenter's HaD in Pomeroy. making sure each of today's
Public inviled.
students is prepared to meet the
challenges of the next cenrury.
Local affiliates or the Ohio
Education Assocation will be involved in a variety of activities at
the local level w highlight the observance.
OEA President Marilyn Cross
urges all citizens to make American
Education Week a time to visit a
school and make a special effort 10
become a part of the observance.
"Public support is vital to education. Our public schools need the
support of every citizen if dtey are
to meet the diverse needs of tod\ly's
students," Cross said. "Everyone in
every community·has a role to play
in. helping srudents achieve dteir
potential."
American Education Week has
been observed since 1921, and is
ct&gt;-sponsored nationally by dte National
Education
Association,
American Legion, National PTA,
National School Boards Association, and the U.S. Department of
Heidi Mae Gilmore. recently Education.
celebrated her fifth birthday with a
'The OEA and its national
party at McDonald's in Pomeroy, affiliate, the National Education
given by ber parents, Bill and Katie Association, also wiD observe "NaGilmore. ·
tional Education Support Personnel
Anending were Jackie Wamsley Day" on Wednesday to give special
and Cory, Lisa Hooten and Jessica, . recognition to dte contributions of
Jim and Barb Hudson and sons; $CCrelaries, maintenance workers,
Steven and J aines, Gail Ferry and · food service employees, bus
Tnsha
and
Dusty
Tobias, drivers, paraprofessionals, and
grandparents Bob and Jean Gil- other school suppon staff to the
more, and Callie Richmond.
public education process.

AEW Nov. 11-1

Celebrates birthday

November

Ohio

Thlan R. RouSh · celebmted his
first birthday recently' at his home
of Forest Run Road He is tlie son
of Edward and Rebecca Roush,
Racine.
A Sesam\' Street dterne was carried out
Anending were grandparents,
RusseU and Bernice Roush, Racine;
and Wtlma :lluckley; Minersville;
Kim McClure and Nathan, Rita
Brewer and Melissa and . Kelli,
Nancy Russell, Joey Sands, T'unmy
Sands, Roberta Lewis and S~­
non, Sam Buckley, Sherry ThafOI'd,
Angehi' ·Teaford, Shannon Riffle,
Heather Smith and J;!dward and
Rebecca Roush.
Gifts and cards were _presented
by Ed and Mary Voss, Minersville,
and Bill and Becky Amberger,
Forest Run.

•

MHS competes
OU Buzz-In

~

'

Stacy ~Y:sell of Pomero~ who is
lnaJonng m h1gher accounting
tutnagement made the President's
_List at Mountaih State College for
t!Je recently completed summer
~uarter. In order to appear on the
President's List, students must earn
~ grade point average of 3S or
abQye.
1

Council meets
Esther SmiUI reported on the
friendship meeting in Belpre at the
recent meeting of the Chesler
Council 323 Daughters of America
Bulah .. lyfaxey conducled the
meeting in ' which the pledge to the
Christian and American flags were
given, and dte Star Spangled Ban·
ner was sung.
It was noled that Faye Haselton
is in Cleveland Clinic and Eileen
Clarlc underwent an operation on
, her hand. It was announced that
Sadie Trussell has a great·
grandson.
t
The next meeting will be held
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. and the
ways and means committee will
have a silent auction. ·
·
Erma Cleland had a reading and
the meeting closed iit J:Cgular form.
Attending were Butah Maxcy,
Erma Cleland, Esther Smith, Char·
lotte Grant, Elizabeth Hayes,
Everett Grant, Marcia Keller, Betty
Roush
Sadie Trussell, Lora
Dame~ood,
Doris
Grueser,
Kat.heryn Baum, Mary Holter,
Ethel Orr and Helen Wolf.

Flower Show schedules were distributed and members volunteered
for the reqUired arrangements, five
in artistic design, two in educationa! and the special class. f&lt;;Jur
members volunteered to bnng
coolcies and sandwiches.
The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
30dt anniverSl!J'Y open meeting w1ll
be held Nov. 28 at 7:30p.m. at the
Rutland Church of Christ
P!ans were finaltzed for .tile
Christmas dinner meetmg. lnvtted
guests and members of Sh~de Vailey Aoml Arts Club w11l JOtn Chester Club.
Thank you noles tor s~nshine
remembmnces from Buel ~1denour
and Dale Kautz were read.
A dessert course was served to
17 members. ,!'Happy Birthday"
~as .s~ng for Ada Holter, a long
ume member. Eleanor Kmght and
Kathryn Mora received the door
prizes.
The Christmas dinner meeting
will be held at Holly Hill Inn in
Pomeroy on Dec. 5 at 6 p.m.

Nov. 29 class set
Susan Baker will inslruct a class
in teddy bear making on Nov. 29 at
the Middleport Arts Council at 6:30
p.m. The cost of the class is $20
which inCludes all supplies.
[•
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Stall rJ

on.. DtPir1lntfll ollllwlra. Ctt1J1tea11 o1. Compl r&amp;nce-Till! """

1NfS9*1, Silolfonii!IOtfll rJ ~ Oll!lt Slitt ol ()In lilfm, Cl!lllbls IIIII
AUSmliiCNIIAMCE COol~. 51•• ct ~~ fiOil nas r:omotrecl W!l~
IM IIIII rJ IIIli Sllit applalill:l I hl 11 IIIIJIOIIIIII Oilrlng till C~ltftl )'ell

llliii/ISICI., 1lvs$Uitllt ~W~~V•Ci~~Jt~t»CIUIIIIIanct.lts ~ .. CCMItoon llll"oooon IIJU llllllitllllltllllrfiQ bll'll tJ.n HluiiDtrlll!' 0eetmotr Jl.

IMII

~ISSMI.Stt.QIJ95JC21)J , ~~5ti.WJt7JQ00; 5111*/1.

$.6~ .i¥591)J 1~ . SI3JMJt5.19900, f•Pf"d~Uift. Stl813, 1~1.0.
~ U$tlllo4.5.U.,11o55t00. C•tJII•. UOOO.OOO OO,INWIT~SS WHEREOF.

I ~ ~ s..llla•'*' ""f r~tme and CUM:~ "'¥ Ol!oi lol t.. .~,..., • Coiumb.S 01\.c. ftrl dav arod call. Gtorgt Faile. S..pt oll ruurJnce I)! Onoo 1•2!1
Stalf ~ On&lt;r Of!Nirllllll'f ct tnSU"IIICf. Cendcat! o! Cofl'll)l·ance-TPII! uflllfr1V"'. $uptrii!III'OU llllf~Soltii'ICIOftllt Stare G! Onro. ~ een,r~ t~
AMERICAN LWE. CUUAI.l'Y U.S COot ~ Mo-r.tS. $l118 Of • • ~as C'&lt;ll'lplrt(l • :11'1 tht M ol thll Stilt IDJlli(:~ 1(1 ~ IIIII tiiUII'IIJi rztO Oijl""!l tilt CUI·~ ytlr 10) llllrliiCI rlllh,.111!f lbtJII)JQpriiQJ b"''""' rJ :O iuranc.. lt$1Pilnelll
t(lldrrOn r1 SP'cwn by itiiM•il¥~....,.10 ba•e oetn lllilllooos ~ O.cllmblr
31 188~ '-CmrU..:IIIMII, $1~511.'8&lt;1 .00 ; l illllr.l&lt;on, I19(111.539J22.00. SIJr-

1=32

iiUiiities, d••asters, uansponation,

4grk:ulwre, buildings, ~n:ation,
~· or anything lhit depicts life
as it was over 50 yean ago in
Meigs County.
I'Qeadline for submission · of
photos and ordering of the book is

.· Dec. 8.
· Anot.hcr
copying session
will be bel Wedne8day from 1-4

lholo

p.m.

..

·--;·

Energy particles could signal fusion

~M hf!tllftl() tt.lb~ltblc! Ill! MrH n

Cfhjltd my !IIIIa b&amp; Ifill~ 1\

BULLETIN BOARD

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Col"""

~ .... Ono. thl1 H~ 1roc! dtll. Gto!Ot Flbe. S~pl all nuance~ Ottio (1!.))
Sllll rJ Onrt. Otjlantl'llflll olrn...-. CtrTtrutl or CO!!iDIIII'ICt---ftlt ..,.

Classifie

ottt'llf'ICl, Si;woi'IIIIIOIII! ollftSinl'ft or 1111 Swl or Ontil, ~ eer!l'res 1•
I!N!"t fP:UST UF! INI CO oll.ltt 'vrnt, Stall rJ ltrno~5. hi$ c~tM
aorltt lilt 11w1 t:J !hot StlltiQI:k.lliiiiD ~ ll!d 11 IIJirtDI•JfO ckmng Ihe Clll .....
y. .r IOirlnl.ll:l rn lhll l&amp;lltl rl!l ~ 111/ I&lt;III!S. gj rftlolil'tCI on lht
pltn lti~MW!oaj tOI'ICiilrOII &lt;t 5"-lly PIS aMulltl.l:ti!III'IIIC hiY&lt;II creen .,
10110w1 011 O.Ctll'hf 31 , 1\1119' MIM!ell a»ftt. $J.t2.1". 1~ 110. lllbiJIIIS.

"""'* ·

$21\133.~. Sillpi111,~~10Mt00 lncomt.U50~.00; E~II!II

$3lSM.9!600 IN WITNESS WHEP:EOF. IP I M - ~ 11'11' f\JIIIe
II'ICI Clustll"''' SfiiiO 1111111110 11 Colu11111.n. O~r0 11'11$ cay lrod ~lit GtorQt
FaD~. $'ijll ot lnliHIIC:t vi illoo (1120)
Stl" ot Ol't&lt;r, O.panrt~~~~~ ollnsl.r1ra, Ce&lt;tdc~ul Cornpt,,,.__Tht lilt
"""'*l-~......,.... ollftlllltrU oiiNI Slllt ol ()loo. hen~~'~' Cfltll'" IIIII
CON'IIH(IIhri.IMWRANCE CO o1 Contxllll . StMeot 1M ~......... w I;OI'PIplred • rll'l lilt ia"' I)! Iiiii Stilt ~~Ill d llld 1J IUV'O'tlld dliniiJIIIe C\11' •
·~ye..-lol lfMISICI rntt-.tllllttrbfll'JOPI,.bo&amp;rrtUIIrns...&amp;ro:e IIJ\IIIIfl(rai
CCH'dhon II Shown by tiS 111111&gt;11 u.mtn!ID ftMbetrt 1$!olloor!.on Oecarnbtr
lt, Ita!! h:liMitci»NNS . J2.m ,ltU2500, ~rues . $U99BS7.Q9SOO Surplu,, ~oo: lfii»Ttf, wn.w.a.oo:E~ tJ'H. $102Ul4.~1Goo.
Ne1 n1t11. ~22~st.7alll: ClpQI. ~OO. IN WITNESS WHEREOf'
I ~lilt "tttiiiiiC ~ 11'11-Mtl WIS«&lt; 11'11' $1!1lllliiii~-Nd 11 Coillm
bUI, Oh'!l, th il OIJ and dill, 0tllrg11 FaQI, So4JI ol ll1lllrlra Dl ()nlo (12021
St1" ol On 'II, o.,trll'llllll ot ~li'U, Ct&lt;trlrcat&amp; ol Cornplrtroct-TIIf ~n ­
d...S'Ir*!, S"PPI'rt'llll'ldlnl ollll$ol(lll[t althrt Sllle ~ 011(1 ~ ctrllflft Ifill

Pf:OPI.!S&amp;tQ.IIImUFIIIISCOoiO...m.n

tl~'

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
•

TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

SWtlli~Cidorr.l, twttm­

plrld wllh lht lawaol thrt Still agplitlblt to llild IS luhlllad dwllllljllht cur tfftl )'lllllltrlnllr:til'rlhrlltltl tiSI!IIIICIINIIMI'!Wol ,l l . l - fll!ri\Mt:oll
eof!dtiiOI'Itlltllawn by 1\1 111nWallllltfllllliiO ftM frft~ llil:fmOI'I Oletii'UII!II

l1. IM'J

AOIII~IIII&amp;MII , J2 ,tof,525.17~00: Lilll~~IH . J2 .11U1~--»'00

•

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Sur-

jt85.Z•I,91000, lncoru. $1.071.281,71200; Eoptrllllt~r n .
$1Dal.M5,62200! Nfl - ·- 51 • .1011,mlll0, Capilal. $-U~.90000 IN WIT-

NESS WHEA€01' I haot~ lllttiiUIIIIl lllbso•'*' my ~"" 11111 ~sea "') 1111
llllllln,IICJ II Columbus OfrrO. IIIII d.ty &amp;ri/UIIIo. Geor')!htll S\lpt ol lnlllr·
IIICI ol 01UD (110811

Meigt, Galtia or M11on countiei must bll! pre·
.,,;c;.,. 1.50 di1coun1 for adiJ paid in advance
_
-Giveaway and Found ads under 16 wordt wdl be
no ch•ge.
all capkll leneu is double priee of ad cost .
only ulld .

not rttponsible for enon after first dav . lChedl.

•Ads that mult be paid in advance ''e

KATYDID
'

PHOTOS NEEDED - This
Is the type of photos needed for
· the book, "Pictorial Hl8tory of
Melp County," being compiled by th!l Melp County Plone~r and Hlstorlal Society.
The photo· deplcta that Melp
County women have alwaya
done their ahare of work aa
thele women loa41' hay. ·

I would like to thank all of the ·
p~ople . of Meigs County who
voted 'for me in the ·election
~n Tues~ay, Nov. 16th.
Your support was ~eatly
appreciated.

DOUGLAS D. HUNTER, M.D.

Now you know

MEIGS COUNTY CORONER

By United Press International
New Mexico Is the most dangerous state to drive In, while
New Jersey Is the safest.

...... ___.. ..... ___ .,...? "'--.--. '*"':f " - ·

, .....

"1\. ··c··,...,... ..... -:-~.

+!::::~

·
.. r.

''"'"'·~

... '.:- · ""':"'·""·

~.

• ...

99(

· A 100% Pure Ground Beef Patty topped with Malted
American Cheal&amp; with Strlpi of Crisp Bacon on freshly
ahreclded L8ttuce, topped with a Slice of Tomato and our
Special Dreiling, l&amp;rved on 1 freehly Toested Bun.

-n

oAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
, -11 ,00 4 .M SATURDAY

- z,oo ~. M . MONDAY
- 2;00 P.M TUI!SOAY
- z,oo P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2,00 P.M. THURSDAY
2:00P .M FRIOAV

Classified pa~es .c6i-er the
foUtm:in/( telephone exchan~es ...
Meigs

Co~r~nty

Aroo Code 814

Are• Code 30•

446-Gellipolit

882 - MiddiiPOrt

07&amp;-Pt . Pleuant

317 -Ch•hir t

ZII-GuYin Din

371 - Wtlnot

·,rr .....~~ .... · _..,_... ... -"'t"!',..,.. ;-'. ""·'"'" ..!~ ... .,..,•..,. •..,,,,..,., .......,.,.Ar,--:·•,, ......

Rate
54,00
86.00
$9.00

10

16

e13.oo

Monthly

15

Over 15 Wordl .
.
.20
.30
.42.-

DIMI'-$69 IP

CUSTOM IUIT .
HOMES &amp; GAIAGEI

IEFilG£tATORs-SIOO "{
.IAKB.-Ga-Eioc.- $12 up
FRE!ZERs--$125;:
IICRO OVENs-$ up

"At ~ Prices"

.

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVI(E

'"· 949-2801

or Res. 949•2860
Day or Night

992-5335 or tiS-3561

...~ ......... Offke

NQ SUNDAY

.. .POMIIOJ;;GIIO. ..

· ·..,. , '10/30/'19 tin

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

COAL

51 .30/ dey

aa~h

1- Card of Th.,ks
2-ln Memory

3- Annouc:emflflt5
4 - QivUWIV
5 - Happy Ad1

6- l.olt tnd Found

8 - Publ ic Sale &amp; Auction
9- Wan11d to Bwv

EIIIII Io y1111:111
Sl!rvrr:t!S
11 - Halp W1ntad
12- Situation Wanted

13- lnsurenct

14- Busin•• Training
15 ·16 17 18 -

Schoo._ • ln1truction
Radio. 'fV &amp; C8 Repair
Milc:ela.neout
Wanted To Do

61 - Houllhold Good•
52 - Sporting Ooodl

53-Antiqull

,

64-Misc. Merchlf'ldisa
66-BIIilding Suppli•
56-Pets for Stlfl
&amp;7 - !'1ullcallnttrumel'ltl
58-fruits &amp; Vaglltebl•

59 - For Sale or Trade

f;mn :,upphPs
&amp; L1ves1ock

71 - Auto1 for SaJ1
72 - Trudl.l for Sal a
73 - Vtnl &amp; 4 VV0 '1

74 - Motorcvcl•

7&amp; - Boatl &amp; Motors tor S•l•
'76 -' AUto P1r11 &amp; Acc•sorl•
77 - Auto Repair

78 - Camping Equ ipma,..t

79 - Ctmp•• a Motor Home~

773- MIIOn

Bzti-Lettrt
937-Butflfo

141- "•clne

742-Autllftd
II 7 - Coolville

41 - Hou . . tor Rtm
42 - ~obilt Hom• fot Aent
U - Farm• for Rant
•
••-ANttmtnl for Atnt
41.:.... FurnithN Room•

41 - apace for,..,.,

47-Wtnled to Rent

' .ti-Equipmtm for Atnt
41-For

le••

Ser v11:t:s

.,
11 -- Hometmprovementl
82 - Piumltlng • H••lnJ

13-Eauwatlnl
a•-Eitetricll

·lttfrit•ation
11- _G tnn Htuling

11-Mollite Home Reptk

17- Uphatlaary

SHOOTS nAIT
SEn 16, 1

tii'ID':I0-1 ...

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SEIVKE .

'SHRUB &amp; TIH
TIIM' .-.cl
REMOVAL

RHidentill end

992~2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

286.2689
·
111'24 I mo. pit,

992-6009

t0-1-1 mo.

The

,'
OVEN REPAII '

GROOM
ROOM

ALL MAKES ·

Bring It In Or Wi
_ Pick Up.
.

Grooming

for All Breads

KEN'S APPUANCE
. SERVICE

EMILEE MERINAR

992·5335 or 915i-3S61

&amp; O~ator

Owner

614·992-6120
Pomeroy, Ohio
' .
Public Notice
PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
The Vlllogo of Middleport
pt'OVidH taxi oervice with
••llttance pruvklltd under

SICIIon 18 of tho Urblon
M111 Tronoportotlon Act of
1984. eo emended end un·
der the Ohio Public Tren·
1f10rt8tlar\ Progr•m. ,
Due to Increased co111 of
opemlng tho oervice, the
vllloge wllllncreooo tho pur·
chooeprlce of tho blue Ea. H'
token to ,I O cent• 1nd the
red Oene111l . Public tokan to
11 .20 .,_tlveJenuory 111.
1991 .
.
, The vlllege lnvltoo com·
manto from the public on tho
JII'Opooed chellfleo In the
pt'Ogrem.
A public hearing will blo
hildon Oocomblor 10,1990
ot 7:30 p.m. In tho Council
Chambero ot Middleport VII·

IEWIIIIG AND
TIOUill SIIOOTIIG
CertlfW lllcltld••

BILL SLACK

Frl&amp;ltiMtH

l&amp;llllw

Sell or Trade
Gun1

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10.,5

742-242,1

:au" ..,. •• •a.

•o ·.

·sALES &amp; SERVICE

Now !Mtlon: .
IU Nortlt Soc....
Mid#tp rt, Ohio 45760
Wo C.,. Fllhlllo SuPIIfl•

992·2034

Your Phone .
BllloHere
IIISIIISS PHONE

11 00

Remington
Slug Guns
870 Remington
Slug Guns
l.thace Slug Gun1
11-13·1 mo.

cov-

or

Burge11 a. l\llple. Umltod
4424 Emer10n Avenue
Poottwoburg, Well Vlrglnil
28104
Coplol of the Contract
DOilumento moy be ob·
tolnocl ot tho office of
' lurgeu • Niplo, Umlt~d.
locotoit ot 4424 Emor.,n
Av111u1, Poottoroburg, Well
Vlrglnlo 21104 upon payment of Fifty
Dolloro
1180.00). NONE OF WHICH
Will BE REFUNDED.
i!ly order of tho Mllgo
County CommluioMrl.
Richird E. Jonoo,
Commlollonor
(10123. 30:
1111. I, 13, 4tc

·~odell..

c-par•

Stop &amp;
FrH Estimates

985-4473.
667·6179

10-01-'10-1 ....

911 Hysell St.
Middleport, Oh.

-.a

GUN SHOOT

RACINE . . '
FIRE DEn.
Balhanlu...i
·'
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 Plt.

.,

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

· CEDAR
CONStRUCTION
992-6648 or
698-6864

HILL'S DEER
CUTTING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL .,.· ·_, .:
SIDING CO.
__

NewH-Io!Ht
. "Free ·Estlmetea"

PH. 949'-2801
ar Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CAUS

•

CUTTING,
SKINNING,
WRAPPING
IA$HEN RD.,

RACINE

·949-2206
11-11·90-1

10-12-'90·1 ....

mo.

I ,..._
'~
.},J

Tuiiiu: 11 Rc,; tr Y
205

N. Second Str11t '

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO 4576
Office 614-992·2116 ,
" - 614-992-5692 ., .
DOniiS. ru•a. . _
. HOUSESoi.OTI•FARMI
•CQMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINGSI

11-5-10-lflt

Banks
Construdion
992-6009

~"a~ Gutter
~H~lrnet ·

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GUTTERS AGAIN
GUARANTEED I
FREE ESnMATES

SER~ICE

.

We can r~ir cind ra·
core ratl1oton · anti
heater corM. We can
al10 acid boil and rOll
out radiators. We aha
repair Gas Tanks.

. PAT'HILL FOlD
992-2196

MiddleJMI!1;

10-11 ••.

Hand

"SIITRACf' THOSE THIGS

614-992-2328

Say What Wa do. Wt Do. What We Say.
36 VAS. EXPER1ENCE ·

U·l -'10-lflt

GATIIRII·DUST,

...StoekU
,,...

"ADD- DOLLARS

992-2156;.

'

Stricttr Enford41
t-25-11-tlto

We

CLASSfiD·AQ
I .

.

Factory Clttllo

12 Gauge !holt• o.ty. ·

TuHinl

TO WUR POCKET ·.
WITH A

HOIWII

eGaragn
•Complete

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

PubliC Notice

&amp; BUill

CONSTRUCTION

See Ul Far Your
Sport!.. fiHd•

IUIUIII

992-6009

IISSEL~

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPUES
Buy.

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON . ·
10.11 . ..

8-12·90

MOVING SALE
CAIPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMMO

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Mllfll County Deportment
of Hurnon SOIYiceo
178 Race Stl'llt
Middleport, Ohlo46780
18ge Hall for public com·
81!&gt;erete
bide for
ment.
construction of •n addl·
Fred Hoffm111, Mayor thl
tlon to •nd the renov8tion of
Vllloge of Middleport tho Melgo County Deport·
(11)8.13. 2tc
mont of Humen SoNic eo will
be received at the office of
tho Melgo County Commio·
IIDn..-.,
Melga
County
2
In Memory
Courthou•, Pornoroy, Ohio
48789 untll2:00 p.m. flo..l ·
time) on tho 20th of Novem·
ber. 1880 and then II uld
In Loving Memory Of
office publicly o - d and
EVERETT SCHULTZ
1Mdaloud.
Who pa11ad away •
WORK
by the
Nov. 13. 1987.
Contr•ct Document• .In·
elude the following IUomofor
Sadly mieud .bY
which bldo will be accepted:
wife, 8euleh and
famJiy . Addition to and Ronovotlon
of tho Mllgo County
Deportment of Human
Service• .
A n - bulldlngocldi41on to
the ••iotlng Department of
Humon Service• with int•
rior renov•tlanl to~ eJdlt•
lng building ~ with
the neCIIIUry •ppet18inlng
woott.
lep•rllte Contracts for
111d Archltocto Eotlmeto for:
1. Gonenl. .... f818.112.00
2. Electrical. .... 121.912.00
3. HVAC .. ....... 142.771.00
4. Plumbing .... .. 39.880.00
The Contract Documentl
1111y be uomlnod ot:
The Office of tho . Mllgo
County Cammiuianera
Mllge County Caurthouoe
Pomeroy, 10hlo 48789

af

Commercial

"LIGHT HAULING

10·111

63 - liVIIIOCk
64 - HJV • Grain

Tr &lt;inSIIOrl Jl1on
2.1-Butin•• Opponunitv
22- MoniY to Lo1n
23- Pro. . lional StfvicN

12 ~Pactery
I only

Lump or Stoker

62 - Winted 10 Buy
Ftrt~i.ur

Take the pain aut ef
painting. Let mt . .
it for yau.
Very laa1011abll
haft ..........
614-915-4110

BANKS
CONSTRUCnON

&amp;1 - Farm Equipment

66 - S..d 1r

F.REE ESnMATEI

1:00 ....
SUNDAYS

"FIREWOOD

.05/ doy

Merch andrsc

INTEIIOI • EXTIIIOI

GUN SHOOTS

sso.oo per ...

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

diN as taparele edt.

AII II OUIICP.Ill P.lll S

PAINTING

UNLIMITED

Rat .. are lor con .. cutive run I. bra ken updl't'l will be charglld

· ftu

LINDA'S

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Commercial &amp;
Residential
•Roofihg
•Siding
•Windows
ltn't It Worth Doitg Riglot

.eo,

247-Lilort Folts • 882- New H.ven

O·et. Retultt fad
I•

3
6

Words
16
15
15

1

458-Loon
571-Apple Growt

Po,.,•ov

· 11&amp;- Ch .. ter
311-VInton
843- Portlllnd
141-Aio Grtnde
1M3 - Arabia Diet.

Days

M"on Co., WV

·

Gtlli• county
Aou Code 614

.

Pd. for by the candidate,
Dollfllas D. Hunttr, AI:D., Racine, Ohio
~

!"'

ONLY

•A clauitied adlrlertiMment placed rn The Daily Sentinel. le~ ­
cept-:- ciMtified display, Bu•m•• C1 r ~ 1nd legal notrce~l
will 1110 IPP.., In UUI Pt , Pla•ant Reg•te; and the Gall•·
polis Daily Tribune, reaching over 18.000 homes.. .

-

RATES

7 - Y•d Salefpaid in adv1nce)

Happy Ad•
Yard Sele:s

Card of Thanks
In Memori1m

THIS WEE-K ONLY
ENJOY OUR FAMOUS

:

'

erran firll d., ad runs in paper! Cell before 2 :00Pm
dltf aftet publ, ettlon to m•• correction.

~
~.,.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - l'he BishOp Mic hael Kenny of Ju· a nd governed by a series of
nation's Roman Catholic bishops neau. Alaska, and Archbishop moral principles" and It Is these
• told PresldeQt Bush It could be Francis Hurley of Anchorage,
prbtclples - known as the just
Immoral for the United States to Alaska, the bishops agreed to war theoty - a number of
go to war ,with Iraq, warning the debate an even stronger condem·
bishops feel the United States
president to exhaust all possible nation of Bush administration
violates by changing the empha·
peaceful solutions to the Persian
poUcy In
closed session · on sis o! Its mDitary presence In the
Gulf crisis.
gulf from defensive to offensive.
Wednesday.
Mahony's letter only suggested
At the opening .s ession of the
The bjJhops' policy on the
four-day annual National Confer·
the admlnls tratlon may run afoul
crisis, which threatens to escalence of Catholic BI-shops m eet- ate into an Iraqi-U.S. war, has of the prit'tclple$ while other s
Ing, the 300 prelates voted · been' based on a series· of. argued the pOliCy already viO·
overwhelmingly Monday to enprinciples, Including the "clear lates them.
dorse a letter to Secretary of
In addition, bishops such as
need to resist ( Ira.ql j
State James Baker sent last aggression."
Kenny want their colleagues to
week by Los Angeles Bishop
"We cannot permit nations to make clear to Catholics serving
Roger Mahony, head of the
simply overwhelm others by In the military that they have the
conference's International policy
brutal use of force, " Mahony told right to be "selective consciencommittee.
tious objectors" to any U.S.·
Baker,
But a number_of bishops called
But at the same time the . Initiated war with Iraq ..
for a ·stronger state ment Includ"We don't hesitate to tell
bishops said there Is an "ImperaIng · a statement telling Catl!ollc
tive to seek a peaceful resolution Catholic men and women what to
mUitary personnel they have a
of the.· crisis and pursue legit!· do ' about abortion ... or about
right to be "selective conscienmate objectives by non-violent condoms," Kenny said. " We
should noC ))esltate In speaking
tious objectors,; . to any U.S.·
diplomatic means." ·
out about their use of weapons of
Initiated war with Iraq .
The biShops said that even
right of self-detense and the need
mass destrUction."
Under the prodding of a group
' 'This not a time to be timid,"
to repel aggression "Is restricted
of peace-oriented bishops, led by
he sa)d.
· No bishop objected to endorsIng the Mahony statement, sent
to Baker last week just before
alpha
particles
and
protons."
GOLDEN, Colo. (UPI) - A
Bush
announced the huge build·
An
alpha
particle
Is
a
posl·
Colorado School of Mines reup·
of
U.S. troops , but several
tively
charged
nuclear
particle
searcher said Monday he has
wanted
the conference to go even
Identical to the nucleus of a
evidence that some sort of
further
In opposing the present
bellum atom, made up of !Wo
nuclear fusion Is taklng,place In a
direction
of administration
protons and two neutrons, aild Is
tabletop experiment similar · to
poUcy.
ejected during some radioactive
one In Utah that caused a furor In
ttansformat!Qns.
the sclenllflc community.
Energy particles escaping
from the experiment could be
'
another sign that nuclear fusion
can occur at room temperature,
said physicist Ed Cecil.
"We've found Indications some
nuclear reactions are taking
place," said Cecil, who said he
has been trying to replicate
solid-state fusion since University of Utah researchers announced March 1989 th~y had
produced nuclear fusion In a
relatively simple experiment.
Cecil and his team and electrochemists Stanley Ports and Martin Fleischmann itt Utah use the
same concept, comblri)rfg deuteFOR SALE IN RACINE
rium atoms In such tremendous
VERY NICE LARGE l«lME ON APPROX. 3\\
concentrations they claim the
ACRES - 4 BR. 3 baths, 2garaaes. rented I
atoms fuse together, releasing
BR apartment. Property .indudes pond, openergy.
prox. 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg. and mobile
home. Areel bor~n at ~ $84.900.
Pons and Fleischmann separ·
CALL 614·992·7104 FOR APPT.
· ate deuterium, a ·form of hydrogen with an extra neutron, from
heavy water and use a palladium
electrode In the heavy water DOMINO'S PIZZA
made from oxygen and deu te·
POMEROY, OHIO
rlum - to capture and compress
NEW WIN{ER HOURS
the deuterium atoms.
Sun. thru Wed. 4 pm-12 am
But Cecil uses pure .deuterium
Thurs.: 11 am-12 am
hilts gas form In a sealed glass
Fri.
&amp; Sat. 11 am- 1 _am
vessel containing a strip of
heated titanium metal. Tlta·
nlum, like palladium. absorbs
THIS l"xl".
deuterium as a sponge would
soak up water.
BULLETIN BOARD
The Utah researchers have
measured excess beat, plus some
SPACE AVAILABLE
I
[
.
' neutron emiss ions . and lowAP5.00 PER DAY ·
energy X-rays. Cecil, however,
said he has beeri measuring
" charged particles - charged

plul. Ull.m.l62.00. 111t.lliTII. $1!5 1 ,02~1161100, E•~ii&lt;H~I. S438.9~SSI-IOO,
~ I IMU, rn.!iiOMl!.OO: Cl.)tli. U63l40000 lN WITNESS WHEREOF, I

Meigs County
p~otos are ne~ded .
; :The Meigs County Pioneer and
fusiOrical Society 's seeking
~hotographs for its book, "Pictorial
history of Mei$8 County."
: 1he ptlblic tS invited to submit
oJtoto818Phs 10 be used in the book.
fhorographs are needed now and
ih011e having phoiOgrapbs that
~ ould be used should not wait until
jt' s,)OO late.
~-Dte society needs pic~ of a
way of life that no longer exiSts except in memory. Questions about
!he type -of photographs needed
tJtay be directed 10 the musucm at
992-3810. Ph0to1 may be left at the
thusuem during regular hours,
ju_esday through Saturday, 1 to
p.m., so they can be copied.
• Pholognlphs are needed showing
pnic or historic sites, early inllullries, ~ events, com-

90 lAY W AIITY
WASillRs-SIOO up

Is

Garden
club officers installed
•

Officers were installed by .
Dorothy Karr at the November ,
meeting of the Chester Garden
Club held at the home of Maida
Mom widt assisting hostess, Maye
TALAN ROUSH
Mom.
Mrs. Karr gave each officer an
herb plant, noting the significance
of each to the office. Installed were
Josephine Hill, sage, presiden~
Maida Mora, silver thyme, Maida
Mom; Maurita Miller, rosemary,
A team of students from Mei~s
High School will be participating m second vice president; Kathryn
Mom, lavendar, secretary; and
the Bobcat Buzz-In to be beld at
Twila
Buckley, pineapple mint,
Ohio University Thursday.
·
.
treasurer.
Mrs. Karr stated "Grow
Making up the team are Aaron
togedter
and
add spice aod season:
Sheets, Barbie Anderson, Thra Ger·
ing
to
every
occasion."
tach, Lucy Winebrenner, RObby
A workshop program, "Sachet
Wyatt, and Stacey Duncan. Meigs
Wreaths
for a Victorian ChristmaS,"
is one of 24 high schools in
was
conducled
by Edna Wood and
Southeastern Ohio to compele in
Bette Dean. They made large grape
the contest.
· The double-elimination . quiz · vine wreaths and chopped seven
toumainent funded by tit~ PrQvost's varieties of evergreen as filler for
office will test tlie ability of high sachet bags in holiday colors they
school students 10 quickly answer a had stitched.
Members answered roU caD with
variety of questions ninging from
bags
of pot-pourri, lace and ribbon.
madtematics to art.
The
completed
sachets were arranThe competitions wiU 'be divided
ged
on
the
wreaths.
They wiU be
into lhree sections by school size
·
displayed
at
dte
County
Chrisunas
and the gaines will be ·conducted .
Flower
Show
at
Royal
Oak
Resort
simultaneously and will consist of
on Saturday and Sunday.
two eight-minute halves.
Eleanor Knight gave devotions
The event is open to the public
and will begin at 9 a.m. Sessions by reading "Food for Thought" for
·
wiD take place iii rooms 201, 23'S, all born before 1945.
Pat Holter, Bette Dean and
and 237 of Morton Hall with the
championships being l!eld around 4 Maurita · MiUer anended the fall
regional meeting a1 Gallipolis.
. p.m.
Beite Dean and Maurita Miller
reported
on the County Garden
Quore of rhe Day
Club meeting. cou·nty Christmas

BISSELL-.·
BUILDERS

USED APP:IICES .

a

TOP STUDENTS Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary School
. recenlly announced Its. student ol the month for September, The
primary student Is M!lgan Harrison, left, daughter ol Mrs .. Rl!d
MrS. John S. Harrison of Cheshire. The Inter mediate s tudent Is
Valerie Spradlin; right, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Spradlbt
of Cheshire.

Hysell
makes list
... .

Business Services

Bishops 'tell president war
with Iraq mny ·be immoral

Celebrates birthday

By United Press International
1\,bdullah Blshara, a Kuwai,ti
who Is general secretary of the
Gulf Cooperation Council, dismissing diplomatic efforts in the
Persian Gulf crisis as doomed to
failure : ·
"They will never withdraw
through the goodwiJI of anybody.
. They will · never withdraw
through diploma tic niceties and
the pleasantries of conversatlonallsts. They will withdraw 'when
they realize that there Is a sword
of Damocles at their neck."

Ohio

1990

MOBILE HOME FUINACES • HEAT PUfiiiiS
ALL FURNACE PARTS

MOIU
.

· HEAliNG &amp; COOUNG

Llmt.tl 111 SaHII'II Sdleal ltl. eff lt. 141
,...1 ......, • ., 1·100-171·5"7

.

�Tuesday. November 13, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio .

LAFF·A·DAY
3

44

33 Fanna for Sale

for Rent

..
___
_
.
.
.
=

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlpt

Apanment

.............
""

·

1114- Duonp~ . . . '

Announcements

35

Fti,N.

..__.. . . . . . c_

-:t

11711 Ford
3011 - .
........
,..u.o ..............

'!!'!•. - ,.,.__
""'"":t. -

""' _ . . -

a:oo Ollewe
w• w w•

~----Chny
PlciJ
..... ""' In . . . - ........
, _ malilr, , _ &amp;d ..... Nnl
...... 11W7W410a..,tp,m.

=·~'=~'~I
UIIIHioo In ptaoo, HI up for
mobllo or to buHd: Call
S..ndayo -.-14211.

Giveaway

o c.noon e•.,....

1114, 114-

6

watch found noor

41

"Uh-oh! Looks like we have
· · agam..
· "
mice

Lost&amp;Found

Lodloo -

==

He Ip Wanlad

11

8 usIness
0pponun It y

21

eon

3 mU• below dam. 3br, 2 Hlh,
cioDoo11 &amp; niloronco raquiNd.
IM441 0024, 114-211-1100.
4br, 2 both, Doulllowldo In
Sout-llom ' School Dlllrlcl.
114-241-1518.

4br1 _ ~ .. nNr Gallla, M..t e.a:col""' nilotonm, n:wmo.
pluo d_., ..~- callo only.
1108-788-3125. .
Fumlohacl Houlo, 3br, zv Nail,
OoiiiPDI.., 1225,
utllhlao,
114 441-441hftor p.m.

=·

E,........_- -lcalcl -

=::. r::.·

poiio- wlh - · - &amp; Auction
vtolon plllfomicl. -··
I - ...S aoac1
hllp
got I ~
Rlcii ~""'" Allctlon c-pany rwqulrod. u&amp;or1II
pocfJo
1·
,.., booking ouctlono. ••· Salory: .,..,.,_ YII"·
maUl lho c1n..nco. ·llfUII Hvo within 30 - - dlo011~ f!!!!tucky, Wool tanco ol Golllpotlo, Chlo, or bo
'11
wiling 10 _ . _ AI oppticllloM 111 poot-«•llacl
by 11120110. Bond .....,. to
9 : W8nted to 8 uy
Cacltta Sallar, P.o. 104, 31 Hpmes for Sale
Hortn &amp; Ponll•; ft4.441-210T. · J•ci1Mn, OH ~; ..... 0,.
• 114-N~-~~04.
;:portunii1=:::!-=E:::'m"'pi:;:;Oi;.::"=,·:--:::-:::-: 18114 Schuh .14z70, wi11pando,
.
•o
Bur:
Junk
.
Autoo Vloually
lrniiOINd ~ 211r,,l22 bolh, taRtrvo2~hoh o,fcPIA,
Wontod "
0
Plollllwllhftl
ICIO• •
··
wlth or without motoro. .Call'" ourr
P!OnD onor lnon
PI-nt. Elloolonl Condftlon.
Lorrj u..ity.l14 311 I I a3.
lrollo tor 111011ng. Contaot llno Fronch CH~IIo Homoo, 114·
Cu!','~
~~ 175-3313.
441-8340.
75-IH8. or 304Employment Services
~:."'·
3 bedroom houM, one •c:re
~-• leO R •·pri
Ohl
• - . oc- ngo,
o.
from homo 110 pot 100 014-912-5225 aftorlpm.
IIMl*'•'l mall. In-lion
11 Help Wanted
hauH, .. nd con-.
ot.p ta K.l. ~looo 3 beds
AVDN • AI .._ Cal Marilyn P.O. lox 51117-HNW NJ
5.
tract, 304-175-5104.
...... 104 112 2145.
3 lllloo tram Rt. 31 Pliny, ranch
atyle. 1800 ~ . n. t.nced )'lrd on
U lc,., 3 Sad-. control
Situation
IIJC, 2 oar
ootlllho oyo.
tem, cHy w er, need to Hll, atWaniad
tor 5 p.m. call 304-e3l'o3241.

'1:!:'.!1- -

e

Nloo 1br, fumlohod houoo; on
Rocooon Rood, Dopoolt I
Rotoronco Raqulrad. .114-441·

11H.
0no bodroom houoe, 304-675=27:1;,;;n;;;._ _ _ _ _ __

=

-

42

_,..

iiucc.m~~lck.~.~111~4;44~1;4~411~-~;,

...... 2 brdnom ....... hama,

Sltl~oy

CaroWP~y
~-.
·
Good
1 bonofho, - On -....
M.K.G. lo tor _roo.
For moro lnlonnatlon -

11:10

to M.K.O. Job Sarv.._, 54 Cloy
Uak Raod, Norl...p, OH 451511.

CUnolllly
oocopllng
opo
.,...._ for tun or 110r1~1mo
hyg- pooMion. lluot
._ Ia
' to met• In the
..... of Ohio. A••·mea -r be
: eta 018, c/o Oolllpollo
~ ,.,..,...,., 121 Thlnl Ava,

p ; Ra. DH 45131.

2 brdroom. nice eoe.tloM,
I room houoo; ono both, on 2 utMMioo fumlohod. 1~-848.

112 ...... "Audroy - n g
rooldanoo; Woot Point Rd.,
Harllonl1 W. VA. t15,000. Coli
_eo-:-:1-:-:"-:-:'':':o14121-:-:-::':-2·7.'821'-:l~.=-'--:-I
I roomo ond bath, 2·112
In
Harllord. t15,000. Call ... ,... 1·
1
OOVERNIIEHT HOliES from t1
.~
tu
(u

2 mobllo hon\11, and
walll" fumlohod, ,.roniloo ,.
qulrocl. At. 1. Loculi Rd, Point
P I - , 3IIM75-10lt.
.
2br unfumlohod, _
.. Homo,

-Business

- I a Doll:! ·
21rr, mobllo homo In Portor, y..,
property, •IP:ot 1 ; n1. Your - a l utlllloo. IM 318 II04.

Training

oroo (1) 80H87- Ell. QH. ~'
,4111_2..,tar,..c,u,..rr.,on_t..,ropo.:....:::llll;::._ _ ~ 1, , . prtvato 1o1. fur·
1
111111 Boll 3br houoa on op.
A211/m0. pluo

18

Wanted to

=-~~- ~.:.~·~.:0~0: ~4 4:::=.-•

Do

7"Al7

_ _ _ ' 811, 2 - . Hon.,.n Traco
1
or nnt. 3 bodroom Dlll~ot. 1300 110r month. 1_.14401
SDrlna Avo., 411-cJU~.
l'ar!laroy. 11414441-7311 dayo, 3br - l o Homo tor Rant Fur1141441-13211 ovonl,... Wll lin· nlohad or unfumlahod. ead aftor
ance.
zr,.m. 114 ue 0527.
Older home, one •eN more or Eltrl nice 3br, In PortW, eec.
looo, 0011o1IW'Oial ..-biiMioo doo.._ I'IJf raq., $27Simo &amp;
br Appta Onwo
offloa. 1111111-. ~81, 114-441-

Elm Ktr1

Chrlltm~~•

trlondo. oncl -

•·7110.

· Coli Kay 614Man~ger

lducatlol• • SaiM

-unity, lmmodtato
.....,.. lri klcal • •· Fortune
1110
limo-full .....
...- . ftoKiblo houoo. Tnilnlng ar.cwua,_beMflta tf you
.....,. Toochlng bockgrol.o!d
....,..,., .-d r.wne or )ilter of
lo: D. Komp, Rt. 1 lo•
271, Vincent. Ohio 45714.

co.. .....

- • _,r .

DPERIENCED Ploonbor Ia do
plumbing. . .
lUIIIhecl Compiny, berNillll &amp;
aoacl 1101L Sand ,_.,. to

Hou• cleaning,
304..75-71114.

refanncet,

J.""!

Magic
YMra
Contar
_
...._ Day Caro
doponclablo,
lloonoa, q,.IMy child caro. M.,.
day t~ru F~doy, 7:30 1• 5:30.
For more tnfonnltlon ot to
roglotor _ , .

~2114~~1VIO~Ingo

Palm c-.ty, Flo. I,_, 7111.
condo, 24 hr -umy, uc concl.
Pool, tonnlo club arid olhw ... - - t o r - . • •- a.. to b l o c h . - 0101or441-C1711.

='..=..- ..
~EDUCED,

75-a!IAO ": S..pw 2br, In Cantanary.
Sac. Dill. Rat. ~-· $300imO.

oil brtclJ, 3 bodroom, 114-441-t1n, 114
••s
ful ' I II menl, Qlrlr:..:rge lot. . , _ _ llobllo homo. Two
Somemlle AMity,
75-3030
or 171-3431.
• b 1droom $150. p1u1 utllltiH.
Dooooll. 114-1112-1732 or 114S.WTrade. 1187 Forrtlt Park Da-1111.
.

llloo Poula'o Day Caro contar.
· Solo, affonlablo, chi'*-". 11-F
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Af1! 2 ·10.
- . . oltw - · Dnlpolno
wrlcrme.l14-44f.l224.

Dbl. Wide, 3br, 2 bath1, new

I l l - . P.O. 801 II .locUon, .
DH48140.
S &amp; S' Cloonlng. Lot ,. ctaon
homo In ·limo for lho
IIODELI: a ywo to aduft. No l.'!\:l.._
~ Wo

114-245-14711.

Will
bolly Ill In my homo, · - -25113.
to ......
~.

Will~ In my homo

-

TYPISTS,

-

·

41112.

PC

.._..

$35,000

patantlal.
· ( 1 ) - Ell. ..

-- · =·~--

TYPISTS,

PC

. - · Ill

.._..

Wit llllryoll
port~lrno - ·
Rtf••
c11 on
prCW"Idad.

' All
US Cwt- DEA,
CaH (1) _ , .

llnll-.
11o. -linn..
_..._K-lOtH.

e-.-.

17114.

Will do bobyollllnt In my .......
CheiNN
.,..,
Chrllty

--.ntll.

IEIII. 1-

INTILLICIINCE

fllliiiiCIJI

JOSS.

.

32

0 to K l - 5,

21

Business
0ppo!1unlty

1

-

Talllna Applloo- at oa~

~··tor Drtv.ra. ......

--,...-tho~

THE BEST

for Rent

Ha-. 1 BR tum. 0111. In VInton. Dop.
rwq'M. I14 441M1!.

- · 111,100. - ·

1 Ill, IIIII 'mo.; a BR, ~:i

~IIIIi:"..J...:'~ti

Mobile Homes

:_

'lhn '*

::=-==fo~r~Sa-::le:.:........,..,..,..

..-...;..
, ...........
of41.77-Col• ..41&lt;4222.

~- Sohulll 121110, -.pi=~

fumlohod, air
, 2 • • - aportmont, ~· dra,.., otc. Hhlln,
W'l.
Launland

ro:o~-::..::. tijl =-~.:--~~~~.::::
· . . fum....
11'11 liM IIIIo mobllo homo an 1 .,.oct,
ptaygiour:ld
lor ciilkloon.
acn 1a1. 3 lA, 11x11 with •· c-. .. -~..,.. ..,,, •• &amp;

IIOndo. CA, Nral WIIM, tap &amp; - · lluiO ninl t111. Call
- · 11132~. 111124 aut• ~-3711. Equof - n g

-~ ... 11 :'L1~000·

'*

Opportunity.
a. fumloW a both,
1810 Po-lo traitor on 1 1/4 - · no IIIIL Rolon am 1

e.......,.

land.
T
- R04d. Calloondhlon.
114-81531711.

North Third · - · lllddloport,
Ohkt. 2 bulloom fwnishtd ·~·
111fllronco and " " - " ,.quiNd,
304-8112-25111.
One bech oom a,.e8. tor: ,.,.._
1225 iftonth. Dlpooft ,.quiNd.
614-111:!-2218 aftar I p.m.

Fruits&amp;

SWAIN
Vegetables
en
=,=
bo..:..,:::001
;:..:;
m.::·:.;lu~m:::IIol:::.,..:.;_a_pl, I AUCTION I FURNITURE. · 12
Dunrovln Fruh Form luol off Sr
oulllld~o Hondo.-, all utiiHfoo Olivo St., Oolllpollo. Niw I Uood 'I ll oaot of Alblny. Wo occopl
lnelu&lt;lod, $300. month, 304475- lumll~n, haotwo, Wootwn &amp; food ot.mpo. Virialy of apploa
1
7344.
Work -o.l14-446-31111.
amloh c~ ond bullor, mlua
nuta, honey or ~hum.
Small Fumlohod Efflelonoy, 53
Antiques
..
dolly,
IUhlble for 1 perwan, Gllnl:.... l .:.,:_ _;.:;.::.;.;;!;::.:;:....,._ _ Tuooday-SUrNioy
n•
hoot, parfllna. &amp; Buy or olll. Rlvortno Anllquoo,
Illlorarlco.ll4-{4fi.0338.
1124 E. lloln St-, Pomorvy.
Hoarll: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
f &lt;J rlll Suppltes
Ono bodroom. t130
1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
114-1112- 114- ·2121.
or114-1112-tlll1.
&amp; L1vestock
Unfumlohod 2 bodroom ~­ 54 Miscellaneous
mont In lllddlopcirL Nowly
Merchandise
61 Farm Equipment
..- d . All "'""'"" pold.
$2711
monthly pluo " " - "· 114- 1111 Gorogo
Door,
with
1141421l
hanlwoni, StOll. 114-24152.58
ml•or 4 .....,.
_ .
Upatoi
. ,., 2br ~part-• wotor 5 otort'od lmol•. '""'101011.
llo
llaclgor 71 hay bind.
&amp; trooh ~mlohld. 114-44..31140. Fronolo Rllo.l14 441 42._
good cciild. 304-:llS-4211.
Alum
_ lnum
roof coat Ina, Jlln'a Farm Equipment, SR. 31,'
45
FuiT!iShad
....,.... tor moblto - . - . wilt oatnDotto, 1114.o441-V77T;
IIIII. ta.H. Polnl Plut, 2411 Wlclo
I uoacl t.rm
Joclcoon AVII, Point Ptoooont, tractoro &amp; lmptomonto. Buy,
ootl, trodo, I :CJII.I:'IJ -dayo,
304..-~-·
. ·~-.
Sal 1111-.

-·
=

.--....,.114_...

=======---1

....- . o.-.

"i':o:'""'Y

con

Clulob•m

tnoo.

614-992-2156
.304-675-1333
. :614-446-2342b.'l!l.iJ
'•

-foil-

toaalng any

LivestOCk

Roorna far rM1I • WHk or month.
~:7:? at t120/mo. Oallla Holll.

Stl. Thomao .T'rio ~e':d 63
- ' 'loJd ·Chun:h,
- tram
7.;;;;;~;t;~;;1;n;;;;-;;m
8hlrlt
12
-oln op(,0gorwill
4041.
froohon 10 dioys, orllflclal

Slooofng roomo with - . . . .
l\tootrolfw · -· All hook-.
Call al.- 2:00 p.m., 304-77:111151, llaoon WV.

Cone- a plaollo oop11o tanko,
Ran Evano Entorarlroo, Jack·
_,, OH 1-100-6~1121.
.·

o

46

11180•

Space for Rent

CoUntry -Ito Homo Porfl,
Aouto 33, North of Pomorvy.
Lata. Nntala, parta, ...... cal
014-tBZ-lll'l'l.

·--·•
J1fJO!_~ ft. each. M50 e monUt.
ac~,,

Cillo. IM-2116o71M4,

211 211110.

Merchandtse
51

Eloctrlo - · 3 horoo poww,
220 volto. brand new, t115;, V
V1ory
la!JIO N 8cala Train Layout, ..10.
1~111011.
••
up~ omall pick up food $25. All
h o - 304_.lt-27U ar 11'1112110.

G~s
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solu and chaiN prlood tram
$395 to $1115. Toblao $110 and up
ta t1211. Hldola bodo $310 to
3111. Racllnoro 1221 to $371.
Lam110 $28 to tl25. D l $108 ond up ta $41111. Wood • &gt;HI aholro 1211 to $711. IMiup to hll. Hutchoo $400 &amp;
up, bUnk bodo ,_plato with
mot1,.. 1285 and liP to $381.
boby- t110 ......._
...
bol oprlngo full or- *"::::Jsrm
$81, and pa, OuHn ..ta
6
up, King $310. 4 drowor choot
$Ill. Oun Cablnots I, I, &amp; 10
gun. Baby matt- ... &amp;
Mfl, Sad lromoo 1211, a.-

CARPET
FURNITURE
~~-=:.,~~~·,A.'?":poto.

County Appl- 1111!- IIIOd appllo,_, T.V. oato. o1 o.m. to 1 p.m. llon.-8at. bf.
441·-oH 127 :lnl. 1M. HOOODpotlo,

USED

--411-IDo. ·

s=.::s:.- :.=

•.•

(2:00)

(2:00)
1:05 ()) MOVIE: The Cowboyl

(PO) (2:30)

lll•od hard olabo. t13 110r
bundlo. contolno •fiPil'l· 1 112
ton. Ohio ~IIIII CO., Pomorvy,
Olllo.~1.

•;•

...:

IM {XXt\JG FIELD

" •.'
...

~S~HdV ().R

onglno.......,.
Camaro. 304-t711-4312.

I

Servtces
Home

1 KNOW TI-lE ANSWER!

,.

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

- . . : : ...... Nd I n - ·
iHI
•
flrm. ·at
-.....oil,
Ohio on lr 124.

mo

.WIII-"'OIor.IM411 1117.
IIG

,.. . . ., 1100. Cliiii1WIIo1711.
Utility - · 4.e, with - . •

lnoh 11roo, 1 w lltch.
O.I.0.114-14114R,
olofln. 1100.
wa Moo llna
II
wlh

....:rli21.JD4S:uovo
•
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.14-IIQJig.
11a ~ c.n.ra. law mllnga,
. . . _ aood cand, , _ II,_,
-loo T·1000, 4 oyllnctw,

1400.114 -

.....

IIG Iuick Cantury

-a

OomPIII• -

..

• :C:."'·roofing,
- pl.=~~lng•
111~ 1

lNat Rlfel• ~ II
1114-2511-11111. .

-lon.

'
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" ''

Pumti and ......... 304Dido IIotta ... e . - -..sa
OOI!dlllon. Air, Pl. pbij!!'+...-_ Sapllc Tonk Pumolng $10..1.Golllo
anVIIn _ . _ l14-- al07. · Co. -EVANS ENlER..,.ISES,
'lab n. OH 1~3MI28:

-Vic ·Sorvlco,
CrMk Ad. Plrtl, IUP.
..... pla.kup. •ncl ct.llvary. 11._
Dlwlo

Qaa~

Tontpc&gt; 124111, 1NI·Chovr
Cavollor ~po 10- .....

=
,............
- - TIIU,._, Voa, 114-

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82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
co~

....

Plumbing
and Hooting

-andPfno

..

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BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

oantpolto. 0111o

Refrigeration

.....
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,...........
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AIIC

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=-=:-:.-:::r;:: .......
--IDinlot Pui. •

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UIIC lroolne Wllior C1c!1. .IIHat

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You could be extremely fortunate in t.hd
year ahead in situations where you dis·
semlnale information to others either
' through the spoken or wrillen word. Try
to utilize roUt talent s eHecllvely and
profitably . •
SCORPIO (00.14-Nov. 22) Today you
might have to contend witl\-an lndlvld·
~al agalnot whom you have an old
grudge: 11 you take measures to even
the scoro. It wl" make matters worsll
a!l&lt;f resolve not~lng . · Scorp_l~ , treat

youtsell to a birthaay g1tt. Send for your

TAURUS (Aprii20-May 2G) Your objec-

Astro-Graph predictions lor the year

tives should be lnore cle.rly defined In

ahead by mailing $1 .25to Astro-Graph,
c/ o this newspaper. P.O. Box 91428.
Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428. Be sure to
state your zodiac sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Think
your moves through carefully at this
time. especially If you're Involved In a

mailers that determine your material
si!cutlly. In some instances you may be
overly negative. while In olhers you
could be d!lerly opllmlstlc.
QEMINI (MaJ 21-.lune 2G) Someone
with whom you're closely •ssoclated
may feel he/she has a proprietary Inter-

new endeavor. There is a possibility thiS

est In . your personal resources. This

venture could end up costing you more mailer is delicate and must be handled
than you anticipated .
with extreme tact
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 18) You're CANCER (June21-.luly 22) Don'l make
inclined to be ambitious todar and this . a major decision today on an Issue you
is wen and good, provided you don'l fo- ha!len't as yetlhoroughly evaluated . If
c.Js on lhe wrong goals. Be sure that you rush to judgment wllhout consider·
which you strived so hard to achieve will lng all of the. ramifications, compllcabe worth the ettort once It's allalned .
lions could result.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11) Compan· LI!O (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Be very careful
Ions will find you dlfflcull with which 10 • when criticizing an aasoclate who Isn't
deal today If you are reluctant to let ' ' present when lalklng to othar5. What
them know what Is disiUrblng you. In- 1you say mlghl be relayed lo your target
stead of being mad and moody , be' · In a dlslorted form and open a DrM!=h
frank and lorthrlg
dltflcult to c:tote.
PISCES (Feb.
all A friend of VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) U1ually
yours who has proble
returning what you're rather con....,atlve by nature,
he/she Dorr s mlgh
lo put the Dlle but today you might be Inclined to take
on you alia n I
.
havelalled to rlskl or gambles on things that could
profll !rom your past experiences, ii•- COlt you morelhan you hope to gain.
P9C1 a replay.
·
IJIIIA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) One of your
AlliES (March 21-Aprll 18) An lndlvlcl· . moet odmlrab• charactorlatlca to your
ual who has been cooperative towards ' ability to treat those with wh9ft'l you're
• you In the past must be given more con- Involved In a warm, cordial man- ro· slderallon lor his/her efforts If you hope : gardlaas ol clrcumatanua. Unlortu·
.. this person will continue lo be so. Thli nately, today could be an exception .
'linkage Is fraglla.
'
..

,,

'

I

1aBecomes
furious
20Callday
21 Marry
22 From the

u.s. .

23 Panelist

26 Conse·
craie
27

b

II- ..,

'Jocobyca(lo!'IIGillfl6' (orr!IU.onllrAJ.I•IIIar. ~~
!he I•~B _,,., JocobYi ,,.. •nU.ble •• .. ~
botJbJorrir. llolb ,,.. poll,_ by l'flaroo .. ...

«1- _

......

,u.

.,,

.,

..• ..!"'-•

walk

DOWN

/

1 Gets up
2 Plenty
3 "Thua-

..
..,

• , l.r

.. i

Zara-

.

t~uslra"

26 Plant
diseases

14 Ovule

11 Ark·

su11ar

28 Mimics
· 30 en ihe {declining)
31 Gallows
feature
32 Ford flop
33 Bowling
alley
bunon
38 Actress
Peeples
311 Appla pie

baker

· ~·
t· ",.J

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......
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some
board

games
34 Museum

"'

Ubi act

de f

container
36 Pastora(
poem
37 Southern
tree
hanging
40 lukewarm
41 ' I'd have
-~to
believe~·

. DAILYCRYPJ'OQUin'ES-Here's bow lowortlt:

·1121• ,.._..,. onlght

121 8porta Tonight
llll MOVIE: WMWr! Union

One letter stands for another. In lhis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatioo of the words.are all .
hints. Each day .the code leiters are different.

(2:00)
11:36(1) Cheerl t:;J
12:00 (I). Into till Night Stereo.
ill
P.l.
.

iltim,

. T11k Show

··· ~

11-IS
•

a~·-a•
11allhvlk How .

ECB

0 L.ighlll' IIIII of 8porta .

DTW

~CF

...

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UWEBHZBHBV

TWFECBH'V

LUEC

121NeWINitlht
12:111 CIJ lllgltlllne Q
12:30 (2). 0 Uti Night With

CTQUEV
•

CTV

Davldu..man

ECB

CBWHG

(j) MOVII!: ............ (PO)

. .

0 POOl Looker llald .._
of Ill Monllt Arturo 8&amp;1't'i01
lnvilationll from Lot AngeleS

_,

CIIYPTOQUOIE

cas ute.

~';Twilight ~

11113

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

:=:n...
~Hguy'

.....

35 ~.Jnpow·

a

I

j)faied·A;Qof spades, he should bave •·
noticed the fall of the ni.Jte..apot. H~ j
could then bave overtaken bilapade- ~ •
queen with dummy's king and played. the 10 to drive out the jack, wblle be ; ,
still had tbe heart jack in dummy for_· .
an entry. With four spade tricltJ, two ·..
hearts, two club tricu and the dia-. .
. mond ace declarer would bave ...
brought ho~e bis cOntract. Here th4i:.: ::
lesson is to watch the fall of the spot~ · ;:
cards. Had declarer done 10, be _.ld ·
have
made bis game.
J•lfi6JII&lt;olly'sbot1b'J..,..,..,....,.,. .. ,.

30 ltem for

Q

a• •

.., •

chaw

11:30(2)8 0 Tonight Show
Stereo.
.
(j) Walking TaR
(l) Adan&gt; Smith's Money
WOIId
(I)
lllg!!lllna~
ill Night Court
.

&gt;

" ,n

&lt;-...,--------:---.....1

suffixes
2S-carte
28Cow's

(2:09)

all •

. ,,

Opening lead: 'J 2

entering
6 Grill
groups· ...
22 TV'5
wasta
7 Bl.urry
Thicke
8 How
23 Oedipus's
some ca~
mother
stop
24 Pretender
I Naveda
to the
(ndians
throne
10 Features 25 Bureauof
crallc
unmusical
annoy·
folks .
ance

17 Payal;)le

11:00 (2). CIJ (I). ill 01.
iiJl NeW.
(j) Night Court Q
(l)Newo-ch
all 1D ArMnio tlall
0 Mllmi Vlco (1 :00) Stereo.
1211 Churclt Street StatiOn
121Moneytlne
11J1 Big Bralllr Jake Ster110.

'

tra~ler

•

snake
fashion

need

F.wonl
(R)

• Jacoby

- ..

. .,•

5 Move in

16 Trevino's

10:35 ()) MOVIE: Coogan'e Bluff

aul-'lo,
nloo
Dodgo4 - · Aotory or cablo toot drilling.
117;000 Sti.OO. 010. 114- wotlo -plolod oama daY.
11111G or 114 Mt 2111

-

15 Wap~l

1D IIIII arec~tey, Mowing

'

I

2+
3"'
3NT

.

.... "

4 Corral

coast

RoblrtHn
10:30 Q!l C-'t and ChaM

.

!

cas Tueodel_ Movie

·Hope feels guilty lor shoWing
more attention to the beby
lhan Michael. Ster110. Q
(l) &lt;I)_ Korea: The UnkitOwn
Wlr_~
.
alle Star Trek: Tho Next
Qenenlllon
121 CNN Evening Nawo
0 700 Club With PI~

...'
•,.

Eltlntea.

Puo
·Pass
Pass

relinery

6Takaas
one's own
11 Drive
12 Mideast
rag ion
13 S.A.'s
nOrth

(J)NCIJ (I) . . tlllrtyiOIIIIIhlng

.• •''

1

- •.Ole. REM0DE['

2+
2NT
3+

Earl
Puo
Puo
All pus

42Scopes

. files

e

"

NcrtiJ

43Do

1 Coarse

10:00 (I) 8 1!Jl. UJW • Order
Stereo. t:;J
·

Homo ... upo

Hmftod,

--'1'114.

....,

"You think you're frustrated?! The
governor pardoned
a day before
I finished my tunnel!"

l-IARD ~ EXPLAIN I-lOW
THE !:lUMAN MIND WORKS,
l-llll-1, Mf,:. AM "?

'

-.loWmlloogo,
.
. .·
. . .•.•·ttl1
.

-·

-lol,

BUT NOW 1 VE
FORGOTTEN II.. .

W..t

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

Tueodey Night Flghll
Q!l Natltvllle Now
121 U.rry King Live!
~ch Heyden
9:30 C1J (I)
attends a party to fight his
depression over losing
Chnstine. Stereo. C
0 Expodltion Earth

1171 ~ pb. po, 1/w,
ac, oruloe, rodo, topo

- - . ; copy- 1011 1122

lna.!""'""-

~6ri:OOPII.

1

'

-lon.

Blbo, lllllllry
P1icllo. Sam vtlto'o, Eut .
Ran~~ Rt. 21. F'rf, ....
SUn1 Noon-8:30 PM. c.n Olhlr
dayo 304-27S-IOII.
n. Dllpllllll Couno,_all ton
lng,

by

(PO) (2:00) Stereo. ljJ
0 Budwlioar PreHntl:

....'

11711 Fonll LTD I 4dr, loW

2 bodroom Ira. ., air oondNionlllochod building.
~-- oltarT p.m.
IT ....... homo, 14slll, AC,

-Inti.

·MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP
.
·-

,.
,.

-- For C{
111 ... ~-·
Honda. CA, 1100, 81,310. B4
Electrical &amp;

""'"' 12181, 2 bodroom, ...
..... llr oond, vinyl
, . . wll datus 1 - . ~
willfumn ...... bll.

8uck'

Soittii

CROSSWORD
.
'

ill 1121e MOVIE: 'Uncle

11711
2 - . nloo, $1.000;
0.1.0, c.lll111. 0204.
_ _...

·

were

'·,.'

71 Autos tor SIIIe

""""'·

s..oe

a

t

81

On

QulnneU Recordl WOIId
of Sports
1:00 (2) 8 IIJlln Ill Heat of 11141
Night Gillespie and a lawyer
Investigate the murder of a
paroled convict. Stereo. Q
(iJ (I)
Ro-nntl
Roseanne visits the
principal's olflce after Becky
Is suspended. StoriiO. C
(l) (f) KOtea: The Unknown

2110~

"""lor-· ond _...
bofao. can 114-841-2344
attw 1
p.m.

1114
llooltll!
Ponlloo"hol
-ton
.

IPICIAL. """"' to you-, 2
• I ' ta:uMI7D ....... M
tile uMalaulbla . - of
tiUDO Mo- IIIII Ill up.
Cal , _7lll ..... .. -Ito.

0

(D'.JSlTRJflaJALLY
e.JPRAtJTE£1) Re\1 ..

· Accessories

Improvements

. ·.
W.ohoro, d,.,..., ~rofr9!nllBuilding
,...... aagae ~......_ 55
U - Rlvw Rd. . .
Slono
Supplies
Croot-I.Call_.,?a.
Hotpolnt"""" &amp; dryw, uooc1 a lllocii, brjoiJ, ""'""· winmontho, wtll Nil tot 1100. or · - . llnl!fl. aaUdo Wlnaffor. F1o1!or- - -· ~.!i,lo - . OH Cal 114-

tiMdvman'e . . . . .-L 12d0, Jbr,
114 ......,.., · -

a

t1t3Ua2

:MH-

Transportation

•-•••~s ~~tan':apm-·

~-

8:30 (j) (I) II Haad of 1111 CIThe class teams about
smaH·town America when
thalr bus breaks doWn.
Ster110. t:;1

' ::.

•·.·

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

South's two-no-trump rebid after
tbe artificial opening of two dubs
showed a strong balanced band of 22·
24 higb-eard points. North's threeheart bid was a Jacoby transfer,
promising five or more spades. Tne
subsequent three-no-trump bid by
North limited his spade length to five
cards, so South knew il was best to
plfh~nh~~:[~~g·brought the king and
ace, assuring declarer of two heart
tricks plus a probable dummy entry
with the beart jack. So declarer
.cashed his A-Q of spades and led a club
to dummy's jaek, hoping for an entry.
East won the club king and led a heart
to West's queen. West continued
hearts. Declarer won aummy"s heart
jack and tried the spade king, but tbe
jack did notlall. He now tried a dia·
mood finesse to his queen. west won
the king, .cash ed I be f our.th bear t a nc1
exited with a club. Eventually west
took the setting trick with the jack of
diamonds.
Declarer· had a blind spot. When he

121PrlmeN-o
llli MOVIE: Wettem Unlan

•r

tAQ83
+AQ72

By James Jaeoby

.

....

.-

• A 10 3

is blind spot

liJ Murder, SIMI Wrato t:;l
a Church Street StatiOil

75 Boals &amp; Motors

tor~

SOUTH
+AQ

injured at Daytona
Speedway. Stereo. C
.
ll]) 1D MOVIE: l'rrewiillcer tPOl

1117 Honda ZSOA, 4 . - -.
uc cond, oxtra porto, 30M75342l

-

+JU2
"K75
+65
+Kl013

Ul
+961

· driver and ·rescuer are

c - '':4~-'""' oontllllO!'J ' ''
liaYtlmo
. 711-5041 aMor l :ou

!"G-·

lno-_,,

=-

•

lor Sale
n.
•-ran TrH!ull
17
· 1211 HP, Ewl..- ~lno,

EAST

WEST
.Q9 8 2
t K J 91

(2:00)

211-3373. ·

1m

+JS

JAMES
JACOBY

(iJ (I) 8 Who'o Ill lou?
, Tony's en111ua111m about
becoming a volunteer
fireman causes prOblems.
Stereo. C
(lj Nova l'lobotic weapons
are explored as the wave of
tl\8. fUiure. Stereo. Q
(!) Appalachian Report:
School ConMiiclation
ill 112111J Rascue: 911 A

MotorcycleS

..'...

U-1&amp;-M

+to 12

.. 7:35 (I) The Jell-•
8:00 (]) B 0 Mattock Matiodk
delends a plastic surgeon
accused of killing his partner.
Stereo. C
(j) MOVIE: Johnnr Rocco

$AYIN(?I $/{Z •

1117 ~ lllloogo Convoralon
Yin, FullY aquli&gt;llod. 014-4*117!1, 114-4D-7570:

Round Balee. IM 118 3845.
5177.114-371-2213.
•
42
opon
llano
VInton
Auto
Sa!Yago.
Foroltn
&amp;
...... panto, ......., lop coot, Hay tor s.to. ~ • nmo4hr.
R011nd Sa._ In tMo Flotd. 114- Dom Porto buying lunk cars.
wtnter 0011. 114 441 ;s375.

bolho, lot.l · otoctno, olorago
building

-·ion,,_

1117 JMo Wranglor, vwy good
concl. 304..75-a864.

wotorbod. Solid ptno, Cfiuck Wllllotno, - - ·
310 Pontiac -or. Good -~
1u1
-.
12
d -. 64
Hay &amp; Grain •
lion. $110. 114.. 4:1-1310.
-boonl - - oncl 1.,.,,.,..-;,..;...-=-:--:-=-- · Groot tor Chrtatmu. $400. Alfllfl. Clcnow, . , _ Qraoo, • - T,.,_loolono, Uoocl a
, , _ , . . . aftor 1:00 p.m.
llbJod Hay lor Solo: Sauaro I Illbullt, -lriii at Ill; 114-245-

, _ .......... 14•'111, 3br, 1 112

~ 21rr, CA, ""' .......... lot In QoM
llotlllo """""· 114 411

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iw!:!

tte1711.

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.J61

13 Craullre

GOO I&gt; .s po~T II
THAT UOfl WI'T'tiOUT

171-41llt. .

NORTH

vs. Ali I

ftJHf ·. $HOUL.l&gt; &amp;f A

1011 Jlllar 810, 4x4, •'-"o. ~c.
AII-I'M, $4,200, 30+475-

R-od
~--- - •
• 1AI,.-n•Ft•l., : : •~" 22 1111 Wo Iiro -wtNTERIZI~IIOrliiilo
.,..
~
~ ·
..moe, accuut1t!e. \f• rmtt
l~1
SHRINKWRAP. ·
RIVERSIDE
Fob 11, 11181 llg Oolclng, ~ 112 MARINE Golllool-o':-1.DH. 114-448Halar Polnlo, ~710 Aprtl 2, 2424, 1.-121_, •
1111 llg Chlltnut ....., •
76
Auto Pans&amp;
won ~:ze~!::tu"' c.......

="II',_

'

~1117iif'ii:zso.~Ri44-;wihlhMeaihl•;;;r,'imtii:-5,~.:1.mV.-83.

what you can't do

BRIDGE

all18 ThrH'I Company
ID Super8otrte '73, Norton

'

11181 'ISO CUllom, $500.
30W7Nm.
1111 Honda lloano, 4,400 ocutol
mlloo,
mini
oondftlon,
wlndohlotd. Ptlood to - · 114-

..

...

a

"" _ , . ""' nloo ii,eoo,
o.•.o.; eah 114 441 _02ik.
.

74

.

. ,•

7:05 Cllllappy Deyt
7:30 (2). Ill iiJl Jeopardy! Q
(j) Night Court Q
(iJ 1121e E-..mant
Tonight Stereo.
(J) Mama'1 F1111lly

Kl~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

. .

..

~~,;,.":;.;f:;'"p.:,'·

=t.,
.

-

Racko, ll$3,~710.~1~14~~~n.;~;::;·

:0-J:..
:"\.":""~= t.Tm~c:t6l ~
nwtal ublnetti, "-dbollrdl no

lnd up' to ..5.110 dayo oamo oa
- h with a-vacl croclt. 3 mi.
out Bulawlllo Rd. o- I A.M. to
.1 P.M. lion, lhru Sat. Call 1144411-0322.

olloct bulle, ~om hord that
, ... _ 11.142 tbo milk. . . .lb
!.J!I1 1111 lb """""- t1,200. ooch.

Hondablacll,
ATY, bnC
310, poeelbll
414.
enow
can- Will do C..tam Unlllook Haul!WUIW, lng. (11ft. Ga•anuk T,.lllr)

"*•

Household

(yau pick

Fl..,_ 130. -

.....o... ,., ......... ......

IS.A
AD

Goh5!ndot

,.

11171 Plymouth ..- . , . . • .....
318 onglno, amlfm. or-. ....
pb. $1,2110. 114-1112-2108.
11171 Ford Convorslon Yin oulo,

-.'

•

OMocGyverQ

drtvo, A-1
114-4411-01119

ovonlngo.

~·~r~··~·:;qu~-~=-~4~41~1~~~~~·-~UPo~ld~·~~-~wt!"
...
~~·~·10~-~eae:"";J --~;;.;;.;;;;~·-----mon Into_...,..,__

INOIICII

OHIO VALU'f PUI.__ 00.
I
UU. lhll ,... flo buiiMOI-pooplofOII~krand
NOT 10 IMI'Id Monoy I
tho

Apanment
,

Small - . In -

-

44

C01pll In living · room, dining
room, 2 clacflo; otorago bldg.

olmto .,-1114-

ony11:::.

1851.

- . . homo 141170, 304-e7S,.

llochanlc
· llao-Diooot
tlllocl
CUII!!&gt;_g,
Woldlng.
No Car·
Engin.. Too Big Or Too Small I &amp;142.58..340.

11171 Ford 4 Shapol 12,200.

·- ·

OSportaCint&lt;ir
Scii1'11CraW ond Mro. King

vans &amp; 4 WD's

•

Philosopher to class: "Don't let
interfere with what you CAN DOl"

·

8

73

~·M·o

1 I I I I· l

I__

SCII.t.M UTI ANSWIIS
Pagoda - Notch- Drift-Alpaca - CAN DO

121~ytlne

~53::3::.0_ _ _.:..__

man.,

tolling Avon _ , . from tomlly,

- - --

g1s~eo:na~

'·

I .

For houoo,

,._waHour

'•

.c..
.,'*=212=-121=·==----1 -noer dopooft,
HIIC, no114 poto,
$1111/mo. 49
For Lease
441 311l
.;.;;._....;..:.:..==.:=--2 __... buiH commerat.l unlla.

mt.

14

Aoclno oroo. No - . t1711.00 a
moodi ..,. ulllltloo. 114-Mt2t IJIC4 IMt-2431.
.

i ._,

~fAR'(. ·

Rooms

tZIIII, 2br, 01110ndo, 0'-,
11,.
lot, __. PHI. wuhlr
dryor, hookup, Wool ...S of Bob

r.-·

Lloonood dor ..,. pnwldor. Hu
3 lull-limo _,,... H you llvo
In llolgo or AI._ Cou!J4l, Y'!"
mar bi 111g11:1o 1or lnio .....,..,.
ling thru tho Dooartmont of
Human Servlc• t=o.. moN In·
fannallon call Connlo at a14-lll-

RECA~~ .
I~VITI'-l&lt;S Of'PO~I~G:

~tt

Mobil H
e omes
for Rent

12110 2br, ltrae ltriwlt• lal,
wash«,
~
'hook-up, wattr
pold,flood.l14411 0815.

•n•

AVDN I All Araoo I
8paolo, 30W'IS-1428.

3-

lol=

304-,,...,...

wv

f.""

nnt,
roqulrod. Callfor
114-4*5
ftw P.m.
IIIDOLEPOAT·3 bodroomo, LA.,
D.R., Fam. R::!/gb o -. Nlee
aoacl
hborhood No
.bo-11 roquiNd. 114oW2·

LOMS BY MAIL
Up lo ...000 In 12 houoo. Wo

7:00 ~~" iiJl WhMI of
(J) I Drilam ol Joannie
(j) (I) 8 lnalde EditiOn
(l) (!) M1cNeil Llhror

r DOI.l'f

en•

-bit-

flolil.
Ngula- ...S ,.,,,,,. 01'

'*

3 a.droom
n~hborhood, 30
. 0 or
175-53111.
~3;;;.:.S;;;R;;;;,:...-,-,..-ft-lo-,-,,-,-d-:
-,-~
nimocftled. 1425/mo.,
,....,...._ 114 441

=·

.!'"'"':
1:.:

i) ~ic!~~~\Et LETTERS TO 1

8:35 Cll Andy Qrltflth

=-..·r:

~ ~

. A PRINT NUMBER1:0' LETTERS
W · IN THESE SQUARES

llig llroiMr Jeke Stereo.

required. $27!Jmoi

aloo:=tblo tond _,,,...,

now -piing a

=---ao,

PubliC Sale

8

:4&lt;44~1~-~:....:-'----,..,..·
3 bodroom
homo
Point
P I - t. 2 botho• t.mlty room,
_,._, Ill!- 304-4•1 !071. .

Pt"'ffUOivo
Foclllty _lo
oattoo.
tor
•-~ol
EARN $11,000 .
01 _
No •lllng, P.T., ..... local portor/Admlnlane CoardlftiiiOr ~
to MiYice nat'l bFind cendy
addMion to IIOclll lervloo il- ·
$1.000 cuh ,.qu1roct . 1·
poolotiCe, lndMdual mill! ,_._
- · ~~- oldllo In lllarloa!· -712-14114.
lng can.. Dr 11 ,_, • nRED OF VENDING ATE ADS?
;=.;=-===:;:::--=:::-:-~. CGmtnM~~Ifty
WANT
SOIIETHING NEW?
LOST: Hoovy donlm coat, - Carl. _..,....._ Sa
CALL 1__.31122.
otaldllnlngL~IInocotlaron
Po~
Aaulo, Local lor oalo
Ft1U1Dada
KGM~nur church on ftdentlll
RIMII'M l«&lt;d
to AIJ.
Sall!rdoy nlghi. I14-IIIH302.
minot-. Four Wlndo Nunlng CH
111111 ool quickly 1-100·
Avonuo, Jack· - -·
FacliiJc 215 41140·
7
Yard Sale
_,,
VENDING ROUTE: Locol. 0 SOCIAL WORK P08IliON: - h lnoomo. High trofflc
ProQrom c-dlnator F I Ilion locallono. Eaoy worft. Wll Train.
GallipoliS
..-1a1 1-R4 1383.
avallablo II '
&amp; VIcinity
prugnrn lor NODil with .....,..
1
tal rotanl!ltton 'and -•o..-.. 22 Money to Loan
ALL Yard Satoolluot So Paid In tal
In Oollla Caunty,
Advanee. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. . Cillo. Ro-IIIIIMioo lrioiUdio CREDIT PLUS. GOLD CREDIT
tha ilay botoro lha od Ia to ""'· tho day~C&gt;day oupoo · -· of CAAO. Vloalllaotarcanl guaronS..nday odltion • .a.oo p.m. thi progrom. """" ona •-· C-.h . . . , _ · no
Friday. Monday oc1M1!n • 2:00 yoo':.!"pooln1ooa-~~~ "!U'_JOOr -urlly - · no - "
P:m.'laturcll1.
deal~· lier1~ chectl. 1·100-221 0041. tlt.M

8 :

all. Andy Griffith
1D SpontLook

•·-·In wv
• .
304-773·611111.
.
2br, log homo, dopoolt •

reltrenci

.

IDe en

Houses for Rent

'----------r----------1 z•·•-room~

llnoll-.a115.

Pall
IAII: · Doa lOot ,_r
• ·
R-rd, $501 Anowwo to Namo:
Dun. Ooldon Rotrteow . &amp;
s-·herd
Mlt:lld. Okfer~
,..,.
to
wolgho 10 poundl, color
don; WIIMIIo ,.,. Bom
Ho
Togo. l14-311-

CJi

Abbott end ColteUo
(iJ (I) 8 ABC Newl Q
(l) Wild Allllfica Q
ill
Newo Q

~mg::1,d.,14-441-4222.
-==~ ~
,....,,..,_

Buttono
&amp; a- and tho Undor
110
~~CaN lho Dilly Son- I"

LOST, malo srmany s,.n111,
Ten
MISe Ad
• ..._ At. 12 aldll,
REWI,RD,
304-451-1127.

121 WOIId Toclily
llllllalman Ster110: Q
1:05 (I) Beverlr HlilbiiiJel
1 :30 lij!B 0 NI!C NlghUy Newo

... I WONDER

Rentals

p.m.

•

ID NIIA Todlly

•

HIM.

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ow

alltB ·ALF

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/U.co.,-r:c''"" &amp;ll""-Mii

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Ia
good homo. 114-111:1'7177 aftor 5

H 'I- KTET

(J) Chartnln:Jl:Q

·
-·
- ond
1 ......
-o
l d3
. Womiaci.
114/14Mf31.
Adonblo PuppiMI Port Ci»w,
11uo
H-. •
Gannon
Shophord. 5 motoo • 1 tamato,
vary playfu1.114-441-1111.

111

(l) 3-2· 1 ConiKt
(!) Moth Loamlng

R-.=D-1 -~
Aoyol

Dodgo
SE PI!!'- Exc.
lion, ~:triO. •
241 Iii!

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EVE NINO

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MUOtaaiWIJIIII.

to _,thing, fruit .... nut

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IIIIo.
- · P.O
. 8cni 11M3,Wltto:
Go~
I........ DH41Ut.

4

110'!!!. Jllon.
....
11,000. .._..,.,

&amp; Acreage

ADinx. 1 ...,.. . aIf I tate.
oftj
~
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__,,_

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Lots

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.

V.

lFHVE

F W 8 .-

CTVXUWV ·

Yaal ..... c:.,. u •• 1 1 N01HJNG HAPPENS
TO YOU THAT HASN"T HAPPENED TO SOMEONE
ELSE. - WllJ.IAM FEATHER
. e&gt; 111110., Klo'IJ F"'!""' s , . -. toic.

.... '

�Pie• 10-lhe Deily Sentinel

Beat of the Bend

Have you had the
'Gloopus' yet?

·' -, Tunday, November 13, 1990

Pomaov-Midclaport. Ohio

Hoople's
Saturday
matchups

Northeast Ohio records snow flt1rries

•
United Prea lnteraa&amp;tonal
of Ohio Tuesday night as high·
.Skies were mostly clear across ~ pressure .settles over the area.
the Buckeye State overnight, but The winds will become. nearly
northwest winds off Lake Erie calm, which will allow the
kept some clouds over the mercury to drop Into the 20s.
show videos through the dance northeast corner of Ohio. .
By BOB HOEFLICH
The Tuesday mornbig weather
which will . be 8:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Had thfi' "Gioopus" yet?
Some flurries fell over Lake,
map showed a ridge of high
By the way, Saturday night will be · Geauga an4 Ashtabula counties pressure stretching from Lake
Now, no doctor is
io
the 142nd dance staged by Iva Sis- In extreme northeast Ohio and it Superior to the Tennessee Val·
you that you
son and her group for lhe area was dry elsewhere.
have the " Ciaoley. A low pressure system was
.young people. ·
pus." l's sure
·Low -temperatures were · over the northern Rockies with a
there is some
mostly In the 20s but the clouds warm front extending southeast
scientific name
The.annual fllll Spi&gt;{IS banquet at kept feadlngs In the 30s In the Into the Plal.ns.
..
Involved for the
Eastern High School has been set northeast. Lows ranged from 25 • The ridge will move east and
ailment which
for this Thursday beginning at 6:30 degi-ees at Mansfield to 33 settle over the Great Lakes and
has invaded our
p.m.
. · degi-eeS at Cleveland.
Ohio Valley Wednesday and the
household -but n9t matter, it's
Bevera¥e, rolls and table servi_ce
The National Weather Service warm front will move Into t~
still the "Gloopus."
are provllled with each fam1ly said skies will be clear across all Midwest.
. This litlle plague slal1S with an ·being asked to take a meat dish, a
· aaack of extreme dizziness. If you vegecable or salad and a dessert.
Continued from page 1
malce it through that out of control
All cheuleaders, football players
.
'
situation, next ·comes the very and volleyball playerS will be plans are tar a director to be in nography and ill support of groups
WEATHER MAP- A large storm s:YStem wtli continue to move
. stuffy head, the sneezing, a sore recognized during the festivities.
place in early 1991.
.
In the Northwest; brlnrtar rain to Nevada and central CaiUornla
and individuals opposing tile sale
throa~ loss of appetite and upset
and snow to the blcher elevatlo118 of Idabo and western Mel!tana.
He
also
re~ that the Cham·
.
of
pornographic
materials
was
stomach and numerous aches and •. Pomeroy 's Harlan Eiselstein IS ber for the tupe being will remain
The rest of the country shoald see mostly sunny aides under high
adopted
unanimously
by
Council.
pains in variable locations.
pleased with !he foothall work of in the Pomeroy location and that
prell8ure. The Plalas will araln see record or near record hl«hs
During a discussion Councilman
I know. You're thinking "he his grandson, John Adams, a stu· necessacy repairs will be !"3de to.
today wblle the easter11 third of the couatry wllhtlll be fairly cool.
Dewey
Horton
talked
about
por·
·
should have gotten a flu shot". I dent at Sandusky High School.
the . building to make 11 more nography-infiltrated .. c;ommunities
(UPI)
DID that but it didn 'I stop li1e
Sandusky High • John is a stan· suitable. As for permanent quarters, as "dying commun.1bes" and sug· •
"Gioopus", which, by the way, I'm ing member of the team · is in the Eliason said that both Middleport
gested that if residents don't go to
sure is contagious.
. semi-finals of the state. The team and Pomeroy have offered ~e.
Continued from page I
places who sell it, they go out of
I just hope you don't get it. defeated Massillon last Saturday,
The questions of the develop- business.
You're just gonna hate the 27-7, and this Saturday at 7 P:m. ment director's salary and other ex·
"An alert notification Is not a
The possibility of putting some decide whether to bring them
--oloopus".
call
to active duty," Boling said.
will meet the Warren Harding High penses involved in the operation of money into remembering ser· back," Chupka said. "I was
I
"It
puts
the units at a higher
team in the Akron Bowl.
the coupty office were discussed at viceme'lr before or after the surprised to hear they were
stage of rea:diness in preparation
John is six foot, three B.lld lips length with Councilmll!', Paul !lolidays was discussed but no ac· thinking about delaying II."
Back to the happy side of life.
The decision will be made by for a possible call to active duty.
the scales at 245. He is·the son of Gerard expressing Council s ~­ tion was taken.
Dorothy Roller, long-time Mid· Kathy Eiselsteili Adams. lnciden- cern for development but pres~mg
Under the alert status, the unit
Again discussed at the meeting Forces O:nnmand In Atlanta.
dleport resident, marked her 871h Ially, John is also a good student for "more specifics as to how thm$s
commander
may call up to 10
Other
units
Involved
In
prebirthday anniversary last Friday, and was 8th out of 250 male will be handled and done." He swd was mandatory trash pickup in the vious activations we~e a quarter· percent of his unit to make
village. Mayor Hoffman said that
Nov. 9. She loved all of the cards, students taking the SAT.
that Council will be more "com· he is in the process of checking master unit from Marlon, three necessary personnel notlflca·
gifts and flowers that you sent 10
fortable about contributing" wilh other communities . for information maintenance units from 'Colum· tlons and prepare unit equip· ·
.remember her. You made it a
You probably' haven't heard of additional information,
on how ·mandatory pickup is bus and volunteers from three ment," Boling said.
lovely, memorable day.
The units- both medium truck
the Meigs Appalachian Crafts
Eliason respended that everylh· handled. The criteria for· licensing ,.Ohio Air National Guard units.
comp~ntes
- perform over-the·
Capt.
Jim
House • and small wonder· it isn't ing is Set ilnd that how much trash himierS .was also discussed.
Boling, Guard spo·
A Ilea marke~ yard sale and craft open yet
road
transportation
of heavy
.
money the' Chamber will have 10
Handling of !he Ohio Depart· kesman, said the 1486th Trans·
sale will be held from 9 a.m. to 5
equipment
and
supplies
using
Sponsored by the Pomeroy Mer· operate on is the concern now and ment of Develpment revolving loan portatlon Co. of Mansfield and
p.m. both Thursday and Friday at chants Association, the new craft that will partiallY deiM!Iine how fund
tractor-trailer
rigs.
About
360
payments from Dairy Queen Ashland, and the 1487th TransLocomollon.
Guard
members
are
affected
by
house will have a grand opening on much a director can be paid. He
portation Co. In Eaton and Piqua
Locomotion is lhe teen · dance Sunday afternoon, Nov. 25 • that's said mat the goal is $30,000 and was discussed and ao ordinance were placed on alert Sunday.
the
alert.
center on Mechnic St., in Pomeroy, the day of the Pomeroy Christmas that die Chamber is nearing that was passed establishing ~ special
and all of the activities both days parade. It will be operated in !he figure when ·verbal commiunents fund for that money in the village ·
will be held inside the building so former Bichman home at 119 But· are taken into consideration. Gerard budget
Council also passed a resolution
you don't have to be concerned 100 temut Ave. in Pomeroy. While again asked for more inf!l""ation authorizing the mayor to set policy
much about the weather. .
many ChriStmas theme items will emphasizing
that
Middleport and made decisions regarding use
The charge for participants 1s $5 be featured there will be many
of the revolving loan monies m acand they must provide their own other anicles offered to the public Council is "not against it but do . cordance with Ohio Department of
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Cleve· distribution plant that wUI em·
tables. If you want to take part, and the house is expect¢ 10 remain want it to work" stressing again !he Development policy and authorize land City Council Is backing a ployee 300 to 500 people.
.
make your reservation by calling in operation well after the need for more specific information. · the transfec 'of monies from the plan from the mayor's office to
Council .Monday night voted
The question of whether the per992·3456 and ask for Sherry. Christmas hol1.daYseason.
The Plain Dealer $15.9 18-2 In favor or a resolution to
.
son
employed would be working gerieral fund and other funds into offer
Refreshments will be available for
million
In tax Incentives to keep urge the city to offer Mayor
It's really not good 10 forget . specifically for Meigs County or the newly created revolving loan the newspaper's printing opera· Michael White's proposed tax
consumption on the site.
By the way, Power Express will about Thanksgiving. Why do I feel could accept work from other areas fund.
package, which Includes a 10·
Council coniplimented Bob Gil- · tlon In the city.
be on hand this Saturday night for that if we didn't have so much to be was again raised. Reed said the job more and the·American Legion for
Plain Dealer publisher Alex year, 50 percent tax abatement
the weelcly teen dance at Locomo- thankful for, Christmas wouldn.' t be would be full time . for Meigs the Halloween party at .the Marina, Machaskee, liowever, said the on the plant's tangible and real
Cowlly and .that there are residency
newspaper Is not seeking tax
tion.. These are the d-jays who nearly as nice? Do keep smiling.
property taxes.
requirements. He went on to state heard a report from the Middleport Incentives as It decides between
.. "The Plain Dealer has made
that the Chamber is asking for sup- Arts Council, and authorized in· a sites In Cleveland and suburban Its home and ·maintained Its
pan because "what's good for·any creasing payment for prisoner Brooklyn for a printing a·ild operations In Cleveland for 150
pan of lhis county is good for all of meals from $2.50 to $3 each.
years," White said. "We have
It was DOled that the John Fultz
·
the county."
offered the newspaper a proosal
Mitchem in 1968; three sisters, El·
As for the salary requirements of family has opened a bed and
Richard B. Mitchem
which demonstrates our commit·
sie, Misti, and Stella; and two the job asked about by Gerard, llreakfast house on North Second.
.
ment
to keeping the newspaper's
Richard B. Mitchem, Sr., 60, of brolhers, Herbert and Eu~ene.
Reed said thai increases over that the second meeting in December . · YOUNGSTOwN, Ohlo(t]'PI)-.
operations
In Cleveland where 11
Kerr Street in Pomeroy, formerly of
Graveside services will be held paid by the Chamber would coille which would .fall on Christmas Eve Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
belongs
."
MI. Rainier, Md., died on Saturday on Thursday at 10:30 a.m. with from administrative fees from was cancelled.
numbers:
at the V.A. Medical Center in Hun· Rev. Lesley Hayman officiating.
The mayor's report showed
grants generated by the director.
Plck-3
tington, W.Va., following an exten·
Burial ·will he at the Bradford
The county-wide organization receipiS of $4,743.32. Judy Crooks
4446.
ded illness.
Cemetery.
"
now has lOS members with finan- was sworn in ·by Mayor Hoffman
Ticket sales: $1,246,145 .
He was born on October 8, 1930
There will be no calling hours.
cial commitments form the Meigs preceding the meeting. She was ~ Payoff: $536,081,
in Wheeling, W.Va., the son of the
County Commissioners, Pomeroy ·pointed to fill the term of Bob G1l·
Plck-4
tiue Wilber (Sye) Mitchem and
Soudi Central Ohio
Village, the banks of lhe county, more who resigned. Others attend0082.
Mamie Mitchem. He was a veteran Nellie M. Vincent
Mostly
clear Tuesday night,
ing
were
Councilillan
Horton
and
and. utility compailies, as well as
Tfcket sales: $239,135.50.
of the U.S. Army during the Korean
with
a
low
between 25 and 30.
Gerard,
William
Walters,
Jack
Sat·
some other businesses.
Payoff: $44,200.
Nellie Marie Vincen~ 63, of
Conflict
Mostly
sunny
Wednesday, with
terfield,
and
James
Oatworlhy.
·
OTHER BUSINESS
Cards
He was a journeyman, affiliated· Township Road 175 in Middlepon.
highs
near
60.
A resolution condemning par·
four of hearts.
with Peoria l'ost No. 2 of the died Monday at home following .an
Extended Forecast
jack of clubs.
American Legion, the United Slate extended illness.
Thursday thro!lgh Salurday
ace of diamonds.
She was born on August 15,
and Tile Roofers, and Damp and
Fair Thurdsay and Saturday,
·
queen o(spades.
1927, the daughter of the laie Felix
Waterproof Workers Local No. 69.
With
a chance of showers on
Ticket sales: $80,036. Payoff:
Surviving are four sons, R1chard Lee and Nellie Thompson Boring.
Friday. Highs will be In the 60s
$27,200.
B. (Janos) Mitchem, Jr., of Wesley, She was a homemaker.
Thursday and Friday, and beSUrviving are three daughters,
Mich., Billy (Connie) Mitchem,
tween 45 and 55 Saturday. Over·
Point Pleasant, ,W.Va., Thomas Betty Staley, Shawnee, Christine
night lows will range from 35 to 45
(StaCy) Mitchem, Bidwell, and Napper and Kathy Yancey, both of
early Thursday, In the40s Friday
Herben (Lisa) Mitchem, Sanca Middleport; one son, George .Vin·
CHICAGO (UPI) - The mod· remainder . say values will
morning, and between 35 and 45
Maria, Calif.; three daughters, Be· cent, Middlepon; three . sisters; esll!ptrend In farmland values In decline.
early
Saturday,.
Dally stock prices
cky (Jefl) Haning, Albany, Mary several nieceS and nephews.
five Midwestern states continued
The availability of farm mort·
(Dale) Taylor, · Middlepon, and
Besides her parents; she was during the summer, the Federal gage financing appears to be (As or 10:30 a.m.)
Regina Mitchem, Balllmore, Md.; preceded in death by her husband, Reserve Bank of Chicago said rising among bankS and ltfe Bryce aad Mark Smith
or Blunt, Ellis 4 Loewt
three brothers, Wilbur (Frizz) Jacob Vincent in 1972.
Tuesday.
insurance companies .
•
Mitchem, Jr. and Ed' Mitchem, both
Funeral services will be held on
A survey of 450 agricultural
"Mid-year reports for com· Am Electric Power .............28~
. Veterans Memorial Hospi~
of Wheeling, W.Va.. and Ken Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewil)g banks in Illlnois, Iowa, Indiana,
merclal banks show that their AT&amp;T ................... .. .. .... ......33%
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Mitchem, Ft Hood, Texas; his Funeral Home with Glenna Rum- Michigan and Wisconsin showed combined portfolio of farm real
Ashland
011
...................
:
.....
29
Rodney Smi~, Pomeroy; Jed Will,
friend and former wife, Vivian mel officiating.
the average Increase was 0.8 estate loans was up 4 percent In
Mitchem Games, Pomeroy and a
Burial will be in the Bradford percent during the third quarter the five-state area compared Bob Evans ....... ............... .... ll)S Sr., Pomeroy; George Harvey, Gal·
Charming Shoppes ............... 9
lipolis.
long-time friend, Ellen Fuller Cemetery.
and 4 percent during the year with one year ago, and life City
Holding
Co
.....
.....
....
....
17',2
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Tucke~ Mt . Ranie~Md.
Friends may call at lhe funeral ending September 30.
insurance companies reported a Federal Mogul ............... ..... 11 'J4
Ill
one.
Besides his parents, he was home from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on
Most of those who answered · 6 percent Increase," ~njamln
preceded in dealh by Regina Marie Tuesday.
the survey expected the farm· said. "The Increase for these two Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. ...........14%
land market to be stable to lenders more than offset the Key Centurion .......... .... ......11%
somewhat stronger during the continuing declines In farm mort· Lands' End .. .............. ......... 10%
Limited Inc...... : .. .. ... .. ........15',2 ·
fourth quarter.
gages held by the Farm Credit Multimedia Inc..... ....... ... .... 53%
System."
Rax Restaurants.. .. .... .. .. .. .. . Yo
. "While farmland values have
Because of restructuring and Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 17',2
,.,. lloOuld be ........ - ' - "
,.,-..,
continued to drift higher, the rate constraints on new lending, Ben·
Now INN Ia:
of gain has slowed from that jamin said the portfolio of farm Shoney 's Inc.................. ..... 10%
Seven calls for assistance were anwered by units of Meigs County
experienced during the late r:nortgages held by the FmHA Is Star Bank ...... .. ..... ............... 16
Emergency Medical Services on Monday and Tue8day.
·
c-~e~·.--.
1980s," economic adviser and expected to continue downward Wendy's Int'l. ....... ...... ........ 6%
ill Auto pollay.
At 9:39a.m., Rutland squad .went to Township Road 175 for Nel·
·
Worthington
Ind
..................
20%
vice president Gary Benjamin through Dec. 31.
"you....,. hacl no vloiiiiOna or1t·
lie Vinson. Vinson was dead on arrival. At 10:22 a.m., Racine squad
..
said
In the bank's Agricultural
fiUit Ill ldintl for ...........d
was sent to Sixth Street for Thelma Evans. Evans·was taken to Hol... at ....t21-.old,you-ld
"Moreover,
the recent
Leiter.
zer Medical Center. At I 0:30 a.m., Middleport fire department was
MctU..I•ed to IIIGDme 1 "n f1'1 t
quarterly gains have typically .
dispatched to South Fourth Street to the Ivy Sleeth residence for a
policy
........ ctnjouintl IPII'It N•
fallen short of lhe rise recorded
smokeodor.
,
In most measures · of overall
At 12:36 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Nye Avenue. Jed Will was
w If you - noidch-1!1141 i4
tnnauon. In terms of inflation·
uansporled to Veterans Memorial }{ospital. Pomeroy fire depanment
141, '1011'11 till IN llltlllt r1to
adjusted
dollars;
II
appears
the
llrook of oil.
was sent to Union Avenue for · a brush fire at the Earl Pickens
!'rend In farmland values is nat to
'residence.
·
··Internal Medicine
perhaps somewhat lower."
·· · -•• Iriot
Mldlllll
On Tuesday morning at 2:36 a.m., Middleport squad went to
cyhalolor
you
.....,,,,pollfar
Bankers
In
Illinois
reported
no
fOUl firtt IDIIJ at. lllll'l .. lwllw&amp;
North Second Avenue filr Louise Terrell. Terrell was treated but not
change In land values during the
lmmodhttlv•.- . n...·anodlno
transported. At 4:40a.m., Middleport squad went 10 the Sronewood
third
quarter
and
Wii!CQnsln
_ ............. 1&lt;1 .......... Office
Hours
Apartments for John Metzger. Metzger was taken to Veterans
Y'!U 1 II ' '4t polloy.
repOfted a 1 perc en I drop.
Memorial Hospital.
Monday
through
Friday
'
Indiana and -Michigan land
Cll
••
lltOul
.... . , ......u............
..
.
••• u ........., .........
values were up 1 percent and
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
· Iowa up 2 percent during the
Hospital news
summer.
'
Suite t 3,
Holzer Medical Center
MUter representative
Nearly one-half of the bankers
Discharges lor Nov . .12
PVH Medlcai.Offlce Building
believe the demand for farmland
to visit Wednesday
Wyaft Akers, Jerilyn Belcher, by farmer and non-farmer InvesINIUIIANa!'lfiiVICE
' . (304) 675-7700
A representative from Con· Irvin Brumfield, Mllzlann tors during the fall and winter
992-6617
gressman Clarence Miller's office Friend, Emma Hall, Goldie will be unchanged from year-ago ·
·
:il4
EAST MAIN
Hundley,
Edith
Juhasz,
Regina
levels, and . the · rest generally
will be in Pomeroy Wednesday 10
POMEIOY,
OHIO
Justice,
Mary
Kline,
Kayla
look for a stronger demand.
conduct an open door session from
PLEASANT
HOSPITAL
McGuire,
Denver
Nelson,
Unda
Nearly three-fourths of the
ll a.m. 10 I p.m. at the Court
.... Tlte faml~.,/ ,.,-u~ona&amp;
House. Anyone with questions con· Rhodes, Sandra Rlppeth and bankers expect values to remain
C 5 I I
ccrning the Federal Government is Mrs. Jamie Wolfe and daughter. steady through the end of the
Births
for
Nov.
12
Mr.
and
spician~sal'lftca Products
Valey Drive, Point.Plealanl, W.Va. 25550
year, 24 percent think they will
invited to stop by and discuss them
Mrs. Kelly Hocker, ·a ·son, Pt. · continue to trend upward and the.
. . · Fa~ Sptelll Ptoplt
with the representaliv~;
Pleasant.
·
.

Ohio Lottery
Major Hoople's

Pick-3: 970
Pick-4: 4777
Cants: K·H;
9-C; K~D; K-S

Page 5

•

Vol.41 , No.146
Copyrighted 1190

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senti!lel news starr
Due to lhe failure of lhe 1.5 mill
levy the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities has voted un·
animously to close the agency in·
Sept 1991.
While taking the action 10 close
the agency at a meeting Monday
night, the Board also instructed

Supt. Lee Wedemeyer to meet with
the. Meigs Cotlnty Commissioners
this afternoon (Wednesday) to request that a 1.5 mill levy be placed
before voters again in early 1991 in
a special election.
However, Supt Wedemeyer said,
even if the issue is passed in a specia! election, it will not change the
decision to close the facility since
1991 revenues are already set, and

the money from a new levy would
not come in until 1992.
.The projected 1991 balance defi·
cit was set at $270,000. The levy
would have generated $315,000. It
failed for a third time lhis month.
According to the action taken by
the board, as Wedemeyec ex·
pJained, progr3ms for pre-school
and school aged children as wen as
the · adult workshop would cease

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

•

·. How passage of the five mill
emergency operating levy will af.
feet operation of the Eastern Local
School District was discussed at
length by Supt. Richard D. Smith at
a meeting of the' Board of Education Tuesday night
Smilh stilted that passage of the
levy which will generate. $1,54;6~9
a year ·means that the distnct w1ll
not ·have to borrow "as much" at
the end of the fiscal year. He we':lt
on to explain that in effect this
means that the district will be ap·
plying the proceeds from ..the l~vy
to "reduce the amount wh1ch
would have had to be borrowed in

-Area deaths----

Midwest fannland
values edge higher

Stocks

Hospital news

,,.,.,
...
,
.
.
"
...."••,.h,.. ,....

--Local briefs---""""'

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

Squads receive seven cy:rlls

"··•-•..

·-------------------Randall F. Hawkins, M. D.

_......

· ------~
. ------------.

·-~

RJI.I

VALLEY

.

.1!1.-_

'
when the agency is cfosed
in Sept. decision to make. We fully realize
1991.
lhe impact of our action on the enOnly · the legally mandated rollees and lheir families as well.as
positions of superintendent and lhe staff."
Supt. Wedemeyer told the 40
case management services would
be mainlltined with minimum sup- staff and family members in atten·
port in clerical and business dance that he is committed 10 do
operations.
what is necessllry to organize lhe
John Lentis, viGe president of the "leadership of the community 10
board, in commenting on the action . provide the . funds required 10
said, "This is an exttemely difficult operate the agency based on client ·

By Charlene Hoeflich

Lottery nUmbers

•

'

•
ID

1991

service needs."
11
. !0 the meantime," he said, "we
cannot compromise lhose services
at lhe jeopardy of client safety. On
current projected revenue that can
only be done through September of
the comipg year."
In talking with the superintendent Wednesday morning, he said
that it was the board's feeling that
Continued on page 6

Eastern board discusses haw
money will be spent in future

Cleveland offers paper $15.9 million

Weather

2 Section~:. 16 Paget
.
A Multimedia Inc . New.pap•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. November 14, 1990

MRDD Board votes to ·close agency

Chillicothe ...

;

•

at

Consul tants
· ...

Clear tonight. Low In mid
40s. Thursday, high near 70.

lhe future. He emphasized that the
levy does not solve all of the financial difficulties of the district. He
expressed his appreciation to the
board and others who worked and
supported the levy.
,
Arepon was given· on the recent
state competition of the Eastern
band and the superior rating
received with Supt. Smith extending his congratulations.
The Thursday night fall athletic
sports banquet at Eastern was announced for 6:30 p.m. as were
parent-teacher conferences to be
held in the district on Nov. 20-21.
Board members, diseussed the
upcoming eligibility for buildil)g
assistance from the State Depart·
. ment of Edcuation and approved a

second reading to amend the Staff
Conflict of Inlerest policy.
Mark Ullman was accepted as a
volunteer boys basketball junior
high assistant coach for the 199091 school year, and the resignation
of Jeanette Radford as substitute
cook was accepted effective
retroactive 10 Oct. 10.
The transfer of $6,900 from the
general fund 10 the unifoim supply
fund was approved and will be used
to pay for .workbooks' until fees can
be collected from the students.
Next meeting was set for Dei:. 12
at 6:30 at the high school cafeteria.
Attending were Ray Karr, president: Charles Knight, vice presi·
dent; and mem~. Bill Hannum, I.
0. McCoy, and Jim Smith.

Dr. Robinson nominated to
head Meigs Chamber in 1991
Of

ACCUSED MUI!.DEREk • John..Causey, far
left, was Ilound over to tbe Meigs County Grand
Jury at his preliminary hearing before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien on
Tuesday morning. He is accused or shooting and

killing his next-door neighbor Edmund Shamp
on October 27 near Reedsville. · Meigs County
Public Defender Charles H. Knight is pictured at
right. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)

At Causey hearing Tuesday

Judge ·O'Brien denies motion
to dismiss · charge ·oj murder
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
A motion to dismiss the murder
charge against ·a Reedsville man
was denied ori · TUesday morning,
and John Causey's case was !Jound
over to the Meigs County Grand
Jury.
Causey appeared before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien for
a preliminary
"probable cause" hearing.
.
Causey, who resides at Coolville .
Road, ·is accused of the shooting
dcalh of his neighbor, Edmund
Shamp, fo~owing an apparent
domestic diSpute on October 27.
Shamp was pronounced dead at
the scene by Meigs County
Coroner .Douglas Hunter.
At Tuesday's hearing, Assistant
· Prosecuting Attorney Linda R.
Warner testified that she was at !he
Meigs County Sheriff's Department

on the night of !he 27th wheri the
shooting was reported. Warner said
that when she arrived at 'the scene,
she found Shamp's body on the
front porch of the Causey residence
in a pool of blood.
.
Wartier also stated thilt she was
also present at the sheriff's office
when the defendant was adminis.
tered his rights and gave his first
statement 10 authorities.
Causey, according to Warner,
"readily admitted that he shot Mr.
Shamp" i'n the face, lllld stated that
he killed him with a .20 gauge
shotgun.
Warner said that, according to
Causey, Shamp came to the front
door of the Causey residence, car·
rying a can of beer, in an auempt to
speak to Causey about a squabble
between Causey's granchi\d and
another child in the community.
According 10 Warner, Causey stal.t''

Local ·briefs _ ___,. _. .""""'
Bates trial re$Umes today

·that Shamp said, "Come on out,
. John, and we'll see who's the better
man."
Causey fOld authorities that he
told Shamp to leave and then
closed the door of the residence.
Shamp allegedly put his foot in
the doot and Causey told' him that
if he didn't leave he would "blow
his (Shamp's) (expletive) brains
out"
According to Warner, ~ausey
told officials that that is when he
shot Shamp.
· Shamp's widow, Christina, told a
different story at the hearing
yesterday, staling that she viewed
the incident from a distance and
heard her husband call Causey's
name and say, '.'John, you had bet·
ter come· and see what (your
grandson) did to this girl." '
Christina Shamp then said that
she heard a gunshot and saw her
husband fall to lhe floor of the
porch.
When · aSked
about
the
relationship between tile children,
· Christina Shamp said yesterday that
there had been a "running baide"
. for the two weeks prior 10 the
shooting.

An Ohio· man accused in the shooting of a Putnam sheriff's
deputy will h;lve his trial in Wheeling instead of Winfield, a. circuit
judge ruled, according to the Herald Dispatch IOday.
The defense asked that the trial of Robert Bates of Gallipolis, be
According to her, Causey had
moved from Putnam County Circttit Court, saying publicity over the
threatened
several people in the
dealh of Deputy John Janey made ll fair trail impossible.
•
days
prior
to
the incident.
Putnam County Circuit Judge ClarenCe Watt agreed Oct 25 10
·
"Get
out
of
my yard," Causey
· move the trial. He said last week it would be held in Oh.io County •
reportedly
·
IOid
several of his
Circuit Court in Wheeling. ·
neighbors,
"I
told
you
I'm going to
Jury selection already had begun when Wan decided tO move" !he
kill
every
(expletive)
one
of you."
trial. It will begin again Wednesday in Wheeling, court officials said.
Knight's
oral
Public
Defender
. Bates is charged with first-degree murder in Janey's August 1989
.motion for dismissal of the case
death.
was based upon what he termed
ProsecutOrs allege that Raymond Huck of Hurrican hired Bates
"failure
·on the part of the state to
and Robert Gray .of Gallipolis to bum his house so he could collect
prove
death."
the insurance.
..
'"\..
Story stated that the probable
cause was proven in the case, stat·
ing that Shamp's body was "more
Four deer accidents .have been investigated by the Meigs County
than probable cause."
Sheriff's Department
.
Judge O'Brien denied Knight's
Tbe first report was received on Monday at 5:10 p.m. on County
motion; and due to the court's in·
Road I near State Route · 124. Jack Peterson of Rutland was · ability to preside over felony mat·
southbound in .a 1986 Escort when he struck and killed a deer that
ters except to set bond, bound the .
ran into the path of his car.
·
case to the grand jury.
Moderate damage is reported to !he front end of the vehicle.
to Story, secret grand
On Monday evening at 6:30 p.m., Carol A. Russell was
jury pniCecWtgs in Causey's case
southbound on Slate Roure 143 when she struck and killed a deer
are expecle!' to take place on ·
Continued on page 6
Thursday. .
.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Individuals nominated as officers
were. announced at November's
regular meeting of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
held Tuesday at Overbrook Center
in Middlepon.
Tom R~. who presided over
the chamber's nominating commit·
tee, announced that Dr. Nick
Robinson of Middleport has been
nominated to take over the
presidency of the chamber in
January.
,
Charles Kitchen · has been
nominated to fill the position of
vice president, and Dick Owen
received a nomination to continue
as chamber treasurer.
Election of officers will take
place when the chamber meets in
December.
'
Reed also reponed that the
nominating committee was in the
process of recruiting members in
the outlying areas in the .county,

and urged members 10 consider
possiblities for getting representa·
lion on the chamber from lhose
. areas:
The field of applicants for the
chamber's
executive
·direc·
· tor/development director position
has _been narrowc:d down to. eight
applicants, according ~o the director
search comm1nee chamnan, Lenny
Eliason.
.
Eliason told the chamber that ~
interView process should be genmg
underway in the ~ys ahead, and
!)fat the comm1.ttee IS now attempt·
mg to deiM!Ime !loth ~119: requiremcnts and salary availa~1hty.
That search has been ongo~ng (or
several months, and according 10
Eliason, the process of obtaining
financial suppon from villages in
the county is still ongoing.
"A huge, huge success from all
angles" is how Chamber President
Bruce Reed described last month's
Big Bend Stemwheelcrs Festival,
crediting J•m and Donna Dav1s

wilh much of lhe success.
The American Stemwheelers As·
sociation, whose members were
owners of the stemwheelers docked
during the festival , are looking
forwaxl to next year, according to
Reed . .
The chamber agreed yesterday to
_continue supporting lhe festival,
and set a rcntative date of October
12for the festival in 1991.
Mary Powell, of the Pomeroy
Sesquicentennial
Commlttoe,
which co-sponsored the event with
the chamber lhis year, reported that
25-30 boats are expected to be at
next year's event.
·
President Reed also reported that
the Ohio Department ofTransporta·
tion would hold a meeting with
officials regarding the PomeroyMason Bridge feasability study in
the weeks ahead.
Reed said that he had been in
contact with ODOT officials, and
urged those present at the meetirig
to participate in the meeting.

Blame deer on four accidents

Al:cordint

NEW MOTEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION Groundbnaldnl waa held Tuead_, for tbe new
·Muon Motel. The 24-lld faeiHty, aclleduled to be
opea by.lan.l,
llloeated beside FasU·U and will
.
'

'

)

employ appnxlmately alx people. Sllown are
(L-R) Fraak Herald, bolel owaer: Masoa M.,or
Aguea Rouah and Charles (Fritz) Sayre, contractor. (OVP photo by Michele Carter)

.,

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