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Pia•

E6-Sunday llmee Sentinel

A critical look at the ton ten Saturd~v
ki~t[.
~h9.rY'!'§
comuter~~sems~~
thcir~from,
~kids'
t9!3's'~inty

Ohio Lottery
'

Browns
humble

actuallyinsp!; the Ninja Turtles!}, theX-Mensurvived
most,:.;'"ft•l (
TV since
Dinlulld You"letqs
BJ Allocllted J'ral
.
.
·.
·
•
Marvel's popular comic book into the simp!~ w~ ~f ~·uelevision. era ~;;j~~ llllto a plastic s!)eet ovtrlhc TV screen: . .,
NBW YQ~ (~-- ,Tbc early IIIIJlp an: m on the netw~ hoacst
Jt'sateen-agewish-fulfi!lmcn~fanlasy, WJtlie~~y~~adults • 'I"Rcbooii" ~~in the cybcill*C campuiCr dty of Mainframe, stats Bol), .
Sabuday IIIOI'IIlllg children ssbows,l!lld the Top 10 suggest the kids an: all (i.e., teens) ~ing with~lationsllips~ ICSJlO!ISlllilibCS.._while savmg the a"guanllan pi,gram"iDotMatnx,a.smartyoungbusinesswoman,andherldjl
righL
.
.
world from nifty exp!OSIOIIS and eVil, alien ptril.
brothtl Ellli&gt; who idolizes Bob.
.
:
You don't have tobeyoungenouab to qualify fora Happy Meal to enJOy
Verdict: "'Evil mutants! Duck!!!"
villains &amp;.etude the demonic "viruses" Megabyte and his arch-rifel, the
~sbows suddenly.~ymcning"isrufio£offerings!IWan:asBp-:
4."Bl!tman&amp;Robin"~)-Thc~x.networkbroughtthe~y. wirch ~
fataleHcxadecimal. .
·· ·
DCIIin&amp; to adults as the)' an: to kids.
..
.,
.
. atmospheric "Batman: The An~ .senes ,to TV last year as a daily,
~~ heck witlithe kids: This ooe'samust-aeeforgrowD!IP,S·
• !:"Mighty MmpllinPowerRangen (Fo:w.) """:"OK, sott sanexce~on. aftanoon Slrip. It was the most distinctive, stylish ~llD:rY:
"BWIIJ)in theNiaht"(ABC) ThisiiOIISiop sklp-aclionanimllionis
Tbc~ofthii ~live Ktiollabowel~mostlldults-espccially
Criticsl~edtheserieS' ~~-~tten.characttl-drivenstllriel,ttssom~- , led by8 the frenzied Mr.llumpy,al~py. green moPth ClD legs withey~
if we ve shopped m vam for Power Rangtt ac11011 fi~.
..
huedpalcucand the ~~CJ~ that evoked the Dalman cunte s butnohead.Hc's
id,JOvcstoestdirtysweatllllCksandistotallychann.mg.
Nonedle!css. tbcPower~havebcena tyhit(andaretailingmega- original ~le. S~ly, kids loved tt, !00· .
, Hisbestp,als::CSq~bingioa,apolYJIIOil)ho~blobofbluegoowholives
bit) since their rollout as a syndicated weW!ay smp.
Verdict: The dark side of the hero, still magnificenL
· the
ocie andasweet,bedra,uled"cotiifortdoll"namedMollyCoddle.
Uling ~oocage from a1IIIJIIICI!' ~· abow,lhc
versionfeawres six
~- ~stravag~"·(Fo~)- Stalling Eetl the~ one of Sllllllday rtisfc:': the'l'obotDcslructo aRiJ thefan18SiicCioectMonsiCr.
teeDSofvanousgendenandedmlcitieSwbo"morph -«,mcwn~hose- lliOI1I1lll smoreabused toon~,whoabsorbsan~C:IIJ!IOUIIl!'fabusc
Venlic:CDeli htful. And he'd estGumby ..• AllVEI
·
·
from an ubilrarily hoslile IDUvene, yet nev« loses his opUmism, his sweet
''Wha'c on~ Is Carmen Sandiego?" (FI)l) _The eompu~e
1 inlo mCIIOCbrome lniOI' of red. blue, pink. green, etc., to baale evil.
9
Imprisooed in a studio watertoWtt since the
Mr. Bill.
a painless
'401,1bcaedueerecklolled,black-an-whitczaniesan: WIIIIICI"brotiK\rsYBkk?·
6. "The Tick" (Fo:w.)-Ourlill:Cchani:ICr~aseven-foot..41XtJIOIIIId. V- ~~=in·~·· World"
Wlkto and their Iiiier Dot. They periodically escape for some of Salllrday s ~ mass or manly mn-:le, a cnme;-fighter m pale-blue skin-lights whose ·
"Tales of the Cryptkeepcr" (ABC) 00
_This is anima~ spinoff or
10
111
IIIOIIl~ allliness.
•
.
jutiiJigjaw is three limes wid« than hiS brow.
•
.
• HBO'illve-actionseries whichwasitselfspmoffE..C.Comics' gory,classic
...1bis Jiiab-oc11ae hal£-bour
classic ~ gags will! the hip
What The Tick lacli:s in brains.. he~ up fm: wtt!J ~t-arrow Vtr· · • book of the 'Sill. The cartoon is a toned-down collection of miXalit):
lnetaea:e tbc '90a. Whae ci!JO can a ~~~!!'rmashed by a lull. enthusiasm and, well, .enthus11S111. His ~kby11 ~~:f·
. toppling allllle offilmnubr MarliJl Sccnese? """"'""·~·-ee
.
timiXOUSfOOIIttaccountantUJ.!mothCOSIUIIIe~vOJ..... ex·
Y
Verdict: Yawning graves? No, just yawns.
Venllct A dcligbL NOW, pay attmliool
Dolenz).
.
.
3. "X·Mcn· (Fox) - E.IIIOiiooally complex mutant superheroes (who
Verdict: SII)IC'lb.
1•
•

~y

'

Pick 3:

181

Plek4:

Jets

1352
Super Lotto:
14-20.24:25-28-38
Kicker:
645222

Page4

.
ent1ne

0

.

p.s.

r~~ ~

n~!n~ ~~:'~incc

~is

~ht::n=chMs.~~=ld~Ivy

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combines

or

James Thurber. a seff-proclaimed_.great A-merican humor1st
'

.

TE
Wit
EDITOR'S NO
-J
'
satlrist,poet,eurmndteOD, ames
00
Thurber surely left Ills mark
Amerleau l~tter•.: ge~us~
Maybe. T't ta~ter· Fay ,:r
Twain? C01a • boo. 0~~;' tb ew
Yobrltltto
us;,
;J1'0
0
0
w
new Ill
er Te
birthday retrospective or _:
who aav~WaUer Mltty a

stein that ha/earned the ire of
many Thurber fans, including his
daughter.
·
People who knew Thurber and thm an: some still around_
see him as a complex man, embittered by·a childhood accident that
ultimately left him blind, and
embittered too by what he considered unfair treatment at the New
Yorker, the magazine with which
his name is always associated
11 ~BaTLE'IT
7
although he remained on staff only
Writer .
d seven years.
Wal'hls~ast•ery~·W:.
They talk about his alcoholism,
so ~u 1h
'te~merica~ his penchant for Scorch in ))articuger a~s
gre~ k T aiit At lar but at the same time lalk about
umo st s nee ar ~ssment thc.ldndness he showed to up-andanyone comipg writers- provided they
ho .::d
were male. They also talk of his
w ThW:O
ad the centennial influence on modem writers, from
ts Y~ "! sand there is n&lt;t John Updike to Garrison Keillor.
of Thwtier
Roland "Rollie" Algrant was
0 s birth, ents b others
and
an early Thurber fan. He was
!' · s cunous wn
Thurber's driva as a teen-agtt and
1St.Thurber
America not only lster, when Thurber lost his sillht
. gave
b also read to him.
Walter
the
•'llf was always a calm and
and their gende guy and worked
a~;~g a
·
t turin a Algrant says. He recalls reading to
a
Thurber from Robert Benchley as
' ·
band and laid back weU as a chapter here 81)d a chapter
h!JS
· thm of new nonfictioo.
g.
,__ Dec g 1894
Algrant owns about 10 Thurber
Th.urber was ""'"
• 2 '1961
drawings, including the last dog
·
Thurberever ·drew, a gift from
·h,Y hometown of Thurber' second wife, Helen.
' ce0 rbllonohl' IS ell as in the Helen and Algrant's mother were
~ us, 1 0 ~·: c~nquer New close friends.
town ~ se u , Postal s' ·
It was Tb~'s habit to !"at.e a
r~ ~ty. re 1J.~~
drawing when the mood htt him,
18
~g a amesf ble bi91Pa· wherevtr he happened to be. As a
· h bnewJi!riorc
aK?:ey also is result. many of 1hc famous Thmbcr
1
pny, Y . son
. '
..• dogs and otber steu:bea were lost
~~ ::'fr~o~ ~~- ova the years. His daughter, Rose·

8::
m:d ·

J:j

:fl

APNewsfea~es

f
~~ba~ar~Jr10
nst!t
s~e ~ as~

~n-

Mi~ ~.ite~fcans
~ketbhe: ~h~~~e~ves
r::l:n.~!n~w'He ~y~g
~

very~·"

~~88:~~ony~:\ncludeS
:·b · ·

t

su!;ICC

From the barn to the
bathroom, toiletry
·products cross oyer

mary owns one treasure, a linen
tabl~loth he doodled 011 at Coste!·
lo's bar on Third Avenue. It was
covtled with grease from the steak
he had eaten, but the' lines were
em'broidered so it could be laundered.
·
Thmberalsodidsomesketching
in the margins of Rosemary's
Mothtr Goose book. ''Unfonunately I didn't know.my father would
be: famous and I JUSt colored them
all in," she says ruefully.
She is a bit bitter about how
some chroniclers of her dad !}ave
focused so much on his personal
life, including his sex life, and not
enolljhonthequalityofhisworlc:.
Michael Rosen, executive direc·
tot of the Thurber House in Columbus, Ohio, where Thurber was
born, agrees.
.
Rosen, himself an author, poet
and writer of children's books,
fe.:Is that Thurber is misunderstood
if thought of only as a humorist.
•'His fables dealt with the House
Committee on Un-American Aclivities, a very dark period of our
time "Rosen says.
/--&gt;
· Ii Is safe to say as well that
Thurber's works are read far less
today th.an the
of Mark
Twain, with whom he IS often comp&amp;red. In fatt, to many under 50,
James 'Ilturber is liUle more than a
trivia question.
If schoolchildren still know
Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, few
knaw Walter Milly. But to a g~eralion of readers in the 1930s, '40s
and 'SOs Walter Milly was a f~ilia: character ~ynonymous wtth. a
hcnpceked everyt!1811 _\)ut who, m
his daydream,.s, became a Navy

wor~s

\iotor

l:thllf'l '

'

t.'tllllfllllf\

commander, millionaire banker,
irresistible lover, world-famous
surgeon.
What Thurber offered, writes
Adam Gopoik in The New Y.orker,
"was a tone- CJ1!Sty !Jcm~ment
eventually resolvmg ttself mto a

wistfulpoeticinsig~t"Jb~r,he

says, " •.• sounded like the. votce of
sanity because.it took failure as a
~ven and ~onfusi?n as an absolute.
•• A dismaymg number of.
Thurber's pieces depend on funny
things said by colored servants,
immigrant workingmen and so
forth,:' Gopnik writes •.• " •..
Thurber's popular reputation w.as
asalovablecunnudgeonandin the
real world there is no such thing as
a lovable curmudgeon."
.
Thurber, llll!lllfentlf.. was not an
easY man to know or like.
But sadly, the image rem~bered most by those.:\'lhO knew him
is that of an old, blind and embittelCd alcoholic. He was bitter llbout
his New ¥orttr pay ·- from $200
to $400 per article - and bitter
about his
!Je lost one
eye as a boy when has brother,
playing WiJ.li!Uit TC;ll. hit him with ,
an arrow while trying to shoot an
off his hcsd, then
blind
m the othtl.
•
,
"By 1950, he was in total blind·
ness," Rosen says. "He had been
through fwo marriages and while
he was a wonderful raconteur and
completely genial, too many
scolehcs made him loud. and insufferable. Bot whatev« kind of per·
son he was we still have this body
of wort."
\
. ~ ltill - ~ ~ •
of Amirica's tiiiittost hUJ1101'1SlS.

m~ortune;

~pple

•

wen~

J:i/dit ' l '

llotfll' (

11111f111ll _
\ •

l~ose-limbed

1D

/:i/dwt ' \Iuton (

oi!IJHIII\

•

·

.i

1

\,;Oins Gaskill, as ~~1::1:;~h
Hartinger, 1911·12: and Pat
Holter as Margaret S. Hobart.
1906-07; seated; and standing
back from tbe left, Jeanne
Bowen as Belilab Burdette
Jones, 1960-61; Betty Fultz as
Clara Crary Hennessy, 1929•
30; Sister Fidelis BeU as Helen
Smitlt Lloyd, 1!163-64; and
Juanita Bacbtel as Francis ,
Hunker Klein,1968-69.
Recopized as tbe oldest in
years of membersbip (bottom
pboto) wu Helen Coast Hayes,
left, wbo joined tbe club In 1932
and bas maintained continuous
membersbip since tbeu.

i AnENTION: PUBLIC NOTICE f
:::

For Your Next .
Owned
Vehicle Call or StolP in
At The Bibbee Mot~r Company

'(;

EDITOR'S NOTE -To a lot
of follts, it's just pla~n borse
III!DSe. It • sballlpoo Improves tile
bair of a bone, wby shouldn't It
work u well on bumans? Tbere
bave been no scleatlllc studies, as
far as Is known, but bere's a
allmpse at products aoina from
tbe barn to tbe batbroom.
BySAUCHAN
.
Associated Preas Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- P_riscilla Casteel knows good
horseflesh, and when she noticed
horse shampoos and conditioners
made their coats shimm«, it started
btl mind racing.
"It made the horses' hair look
so good I decided to try it," she
says.
Casteel a horse trainer in Bluefield, va.', has been using horse
shampoos on herself for three
years.
.
.
She's not alone. Thousands an:
browsing tack shops and feed
sto~es 'for items earmarked for
hones, but which 8JlPIII'Cnlly work
ni~ly on humans as well·
.
At the Saddle Shop in

~
'

'

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;

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•

'· .,',I
.

I '

,..,,

-.. .

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Staff
A lrldilional silver tea was held
at the home of Jeanette .Thomas
Sunday afternoon to celebrate the
~ning of the tOOth year of the
Middleport Litmuy Club.
• Ora&amp;nized in 1894, tJpe club has
met without interrupuon for the
past 100 years on alternate
Wednesdays lian Octom to May.
·Its goal has been to provide an
aanosphere for the intellectual and
social growth of its members and
the encouragement of enterprises to
better the community along literary
and social lines.
.
Attending the tea were the 18
active members along with ~vera!

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By GEORGE ABATE
village," Johnson said, adding the
Sentinel News Starr
last lime the pennit cost was hiked
Middleport residents can easily
was in 1990.
learn .the basics of when a bui14ing
At last Monday' s council meetpermit must be acquired, someing, the boar\i clarified the roof
thing many may have not known,
permit requirements. Residents
the Middleporl building inspector
need to apply for a permit only
said recendy.
when structural changes are made.
Newly-appointed building
Putting new shingles is up-keep,
inspector Arnold Johnson said he
Johnson stated.
wants to educate residents to know
Building pennits and specific
when and how to get a pennit and
requirements
include:
·
·why the village requires this paper-REMODELING,
is
not
as
worlc:. ·
extensive
as
many
people
think,
he
"I understand people haven"t
said. "A lot of people think it's if
known. l'.ll be reasonable," said
you.&gt;re doing paneling or dryJohnson, who began this office
walling.
It's pot," Johnson said. A
Sept. l. "Just remember I dido 't
$10
fcc,
i)lus
75 cents for every 100
wnte the rules."
square
feet
of
living space, will be
People with grievances about
assessed.
l\ny
structural changes,
the'lfeqliirements should contact
such
as
installing
a IICW room or
cheir council members and &amp;hey
rernoving
aU
the
walls
on a floor,
will have the right to speak to the
need
a
permit
ARNOLD JOHNSON
planning committee, Johnson
- TRAILER, essentially has
" lidded.
space and underpinning rules. The
This 36-year-old Middleport and 11 p.m .• he added. ·
' front or the llllila must be 20 feet
man succeeded Harold Chase who
The building inspector collects from the road, while five feet from
had served as building inspector · no money- a $10 permit fcc must · the property line to the trailtr, and
through three decades.
be paid at village hall - in order to 12 feet- clearance between bouses.
"He was appoin~ 20 years ago prevent fraud, Johnson said.
A trailer for a family niust be
and was told he would hold the
The permits are needed to piaced on a minimum 2,SO,O
position tem)ioraril)' until someone · ·ensure safety for residents. make square-foot lot. Within 30 dl(ys, the
else took over," Johnson said of the property comply with space trailer must be underpinned to )lie·
Chase. "He told me they finally constraints and allows for improve- vent grass fires from •l!r~;&amp;ding
"
m
to be __ _. he.__..,....,..;.
the lllrill;,tlfta !iJ!d,~ lite
. -····-• ·• · . The
~$fO'fee-pays
- . for -~·an-fi~I.
. ;fc}lllld·arep~aceme,DJ
__ 'Iogc('dtepapal\!v.~~ror
paper rmg ~
building, Johnson said. Also, in
tbe pennit, residents can call h1s and the inspector's time.
densely-popula~ areas trailers can
home at any time between 6 a.m.
'"lt"s not a mooey maker for the
Continued on.page 3

Middleport Literary Club
observes 1OOth anniversary ·

...

, I.

Members of the Middleport
Literary Club, celebratbJg ."A
Century of American Literature'', were joined by relatives,
former mell!bers, and otber
· guests for a silver tea Sunday
afteriloon at tbe borne of
Jeanette Thomas.
Several members in period
costuming took on the persona
or past presidents and introddted theiuselves during a brief
program.
In tbe c011tumed group (top
photo) were Pbyllls Hackett as
Flora Grima Talbott, 1904-05,
Pauibte HortOilll

\/otul' ( ""'1 '11 11\

/:ihlwt '

-

Johnson wants to·
educate residents
on building permits

wa~
"Th~'s
v.:~uld

Th~rber

11pper.f411,

1 Seollon, 10 p. . . . . . .
A......._lno.Niwlplplr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 3, 1994

18~

peq~le

~e

Vol.41, N0.1ot
Copyright 11M

always to thiltk or him. as a 'OIJ!III
~in a small off~;CC m a b!f etf.Y
wtthalltheworldslillahcad.
,,
"His mind was never at rest, ·
White wrote. "And his pencil was
conn~ ~his mind by the best
conductive ussue I have ever seel)
inaction."
.
At age 13, Thurber Willie ,what
he described as a '· so-calle~
poem.". Eyen. at. tha_t a11e, It
revealed m tts utlc classiC Thmbcr
wit: "My Aunt Mrs. Iohn T. Savage's Garden at
·South Fifth
Street, Columbus, Ohio."
.
. In 1939 he wrote what became
his best-known work, "The Secret
Life of Walter Mitty.; " just six
pages, along with a play, "The
Male Animal.'' Miuy ~ent on to
become a movie starnng D~ny
Kaye - and a p8lt of the Ammcan
vocabulary.
Although Thurber had done
drawings in college at Ohio State,
his cartoons were done. usually as
afterthoughts. In fact, his fust professional drawing was rescued
from a
by White .after
Thurber had sunply doodled it. In•
time,
Doj!s." his car·
toons of mans best friend- or, as
Thurber
have it, man,'s
bemused cnbc - wm enough for
one volume.
But what might ha. ve. bee
. .. n v.al·
ucd works were .simply given
away, lost, or, as his daugllter puts
it, scribbled over. Only about 40
original Thmbcn surviye IO!I&amp;Y·
AlthoUgh Thurber lived m Con·
necticut for much of his ~tJi!c,
his ~ rwn•!Qed rooted m mid·
20tli cei1IDrY middle Amllica.
·
·

"The wit makes fun of other
persons,, the satirist makes ~nor
the world," Rosen says. The
humorist makes fun of himself, but
in doing so, ,he identifies himself
with people- that is people everywhm; not for the purpose of tak·
ing them apart, but simply revealing their true nature."
· Rosen f~ls that Thurbtl's best
work was done ~f!!ft11940. In the
last20 years of his life he often had
his work rejecled, even by the N~w
Yorker. His editor a\ the mag;azmc
was Roger AngeU, who happened
also to be the ste)15011 of Thurber's
close friend and officemate, E.B. .
White.
"It fell to me to tum him down
and that made him bitter,'' s~ys
Angell; still a New Yorker ~ttor
and writer. •'People he cons1dered
lesser writers were getting published and so wm
he didn't
recognize: He had become famous __
and fame was very important to
him.''
Angell does have fond memories of the .long.•
Thurber pla)'lllg hilarious~ of.
pingpong at
with his stepfathtz
Although White and
started out u the closest of friends, ,
their personalities wm vtty different. Wh* hated the limelight,
hated to give interviews. Thu~btl
was the opposite, and also pnded
himself on being BGCCp~ so well
by British humorists.
.
In a recwiem to Thurber the
Nov. II' issUe. White~
"I was~ of tbc I~ CIIICI; I ·
~hiln.t'lfole hllntm lilt bim,
before fame hit him and I tend

Low toalptla 4411, clelr . .
cooL Tllllday, IUDIJ. Hlp Ill

~-

I

.

)

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fonner members and lnvi~ family
members of both current and former members.
.
Gu~from out of town included Rose Marie Hackett of Lcxing• ·
ton, Ky., Melanie Franko of ~·
Calif., and Tammy (Mrs. B11l)
Hackett of'Picterington, daughters
and daughter-in-law of Phyllis
Hackett; Christine Coats Mclnlyle,
Morristown, N. I., daughter of
Maxine Coats Gaskill; . Sheila
Horky of Bellbrook, daughter of
Betty Parsons; Janet Carpenter
Young of Lancaster, daughter of
Bernice Ciupenter; and Kathy Morgan Moore of Newarlc, daughter of
the late Jcan,Morgan.
At Sunday's tea, several mem-

bers were in periOd costumi11g to
represent past presidents of the
club,
·
Pauline Horton came as Iennie
Bradbury Hanlin, the first president, serving in 1894-95; Faye
Wallace as Romaine Miller ·Downing, 1896-97; Phyllis Hackett as
Flora Grimes Talbott, 1904-05; Pat
Holler as Margaret S. H~bart,
19()(H)7; Maxine Coats Gaslilll, as
Elizabeth Hartinger, 1911-12;
Betty Fultz as Clara Crary Hennessy, 1929-30; Icanne Bowen as
Beulah Burdette Jones, 1960-61;
Sisler Fidclis. Bell as Helen Smith
Lloyd, 1963-64; and Juanita Bachtel as Francis
Hunka Klein, 1968,
ConiiiUHHI on page 3 ·

T(loni-. Hodson, left, during Glidden's inau1u·
ra\ioa ceremony Saturda1 in Atbens. GBclden is
tbe university's 19tb president and sacceeds
Charles Ping. (AP)

s. soldier wounded in Haiti

PORT-AU-PRINCE., Haiti (AP) two weeks ago. An interyrcter was time, the i,SOO U.S. Marines in the
- Haitians wi.th milil$J'Y w~ns wounded in "the leg dunng a gun- country will begin to withdraw.
$hot and wounded an Amencan baUle ScJ?t 24 at police ~~uar~e shooting of the American
soldier in the western city of l.es ters in the port of Cap-Haiben.•
soldier came after u.s. troops on
Caye•, hours after U.S. troOps in
Fugett said the soldier ordered Sunday dClained Romeo Halloun,
the ·capital rounded up leaders of ~ · two· to four Haitians to stop after .' who directed security for army
pro-army paramilitay group.
they scaled a wall. The Haitians · chief Lt. Gen. Raoul•Cedris and
. The assailants had Haitian mili- ~ed fire and the soldier returned . w11s once a member of a black. tary weapons and helme:ts, but "we ftre. Fugett said the soldier mllsked group of{lrivare militismen
Cannot definitely say they an: from . believed he hit two of the assaila~cs known u the ~·
.the anny," U.S. Army spQkesman before they escaped.
f.
Also arrest were ~alloun's
~- ICen·Fu'ett said.
-.
Les Cayes, a strongjtold o brother, Ram~s. and other men
'lbe soldter, a member of the exiled President Jeari-Bonrand · who U.S. officials said inclnded
Army Spoclal Farces, wa's hospital- Aristidc, is one of aevmtl interior other members of the "Ninja"
ized at 'the 28th Combat Support towns ~pcc.ial Forces uni~s ~e briaade.
.
Hospital in Port-au-Prince after occupytng to as~s.s h~\Uutanan
They were captured carrymg
being shot in the abdomen at aid needs. The Haitian military and guns as theY rushed down the street
around midnishL He was in stable its allied gunmen have launched toward Haloun's Famosa ketchup
condiliClD after surgery.
·
pet'todic crackdowns there in the facury, where a aowd was llllher·
"His JllOJIIOsis is great," said.· ~years since Aristid~'s ~ver- ing as if in preperation for footina ·
).L Gen Hu&amp;b Shelton, U.S. com· throw.
the planL
· mander in Haiti. • .
·
About 300 soldiers frcim fi vo
U.S. troops also searched the
It was the second lime an Amer· Carib!~Qn nalions wete to arrive in HaUC~~Jm' father's home, an e:w.ctu. ican was wounded by hostile rue.~•' Haiti today to form an intemati.onal ~ve~vate ten~ club and a clothsince U.S. uoops nved in1Haiti ~peacekeeping , force. At the same mg actory.
.

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INAUGURATION- Obio University President Robert Gllddea, center, was swont in Saturday by o(i· Board. or TrDitees. Cllalrmlll

If

SHOWING APPRECIATJON- Mlddl'· .

port oftlc:lall-tly tbankNI MeDould's OWII• .
ers ROKioe ud Sandee MDla, at left, for dooat·

ina plaJIJ'IItl.,d equiplllent. Mlddle.Por.t park
board members Bob McClure, s.econd from

•

rilht. alld Arnold Johnson, far rilbt. Drtaat tile
Gea. Rartl.pr Parll
play set bas been feac:ed in aad is targeted
toward youn1sters, JohnSI)n said. (Sentinel
p~oto by Georae Abate)
·

M'tlls with a plaqui. The

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Commerttar

Plgl 2 11Mt Deily SenU'*I

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WASHINGTON- A growing. warned that 15 percent of' the
number of government auditors money invested in the program .....
.•.believe it's lime to issue a pink slip or approximately $100 million to the Job Corps program.
· ·yielded "no measurable results."
At a cost of $23,000 per. student
per Ye&amp;:· the ~.ooo Jll!l1iciJW:I~ in
Jack Anderson
the nauon 's b1ggest JOb-tratmng
program could be receiving tuition,
and
room and board at many of the
,
,
.
nation's premieryo~ges and uniMichael Bmsteln
versilies.
r
•
Yet at hearings this week before Auditors also teponed back then
the Senate Committee on L!lbor that an average of one-third of the
and Human Resources, government Job Corps' participants drop out in
auditors will expose a program the ftrst three months;
that's wasting $100 million a year.
Four years later, the Labo(
~ut that's nothing new. In fact, Depanment is still fiddling while
Labor Department auditors in 1990 the Job Corps burns money.

By

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
· Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

\

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

General Mauger

LI!TI'I!RS OF OPINION m welcome. They Jbould be less than 300
words Ioos. Allleaen m subj..:t to editing llld must be signed with. name,
addreu llld telepbooo number. No unsigned !etten will be publiabed. Leuen
lbould be in good taste, oddreosing iaues, not penonolities.

,

Berry's Wprld

Letters to .the .editor
.,

A letter of apology

'

I am writing this letter of apology to the voters of the 6th Congressiena! district because of a possible
dissetVIce I may have unwillingly
perpetrated ikainst them by running for Congress in this year's
Republican primary.
.
Last Sunday in Marieua, while
attending the fii'St debate between
Congressman Strickland and his
Republi~ challenger; Fmnk Cremeans, my possible disservice
became pamfully.apparenl While
listening to Cr~means stumble
through his seeming attempt :o
avoj4l8nswering each question. I
wondered to myself why our party
dido 't have abetter candidate to
put forward than Frank Cremeans.
It was then I realized that we did;
Sen. Cooper Snyder (Hillsboro). I
then reasoned that if I had noi
·thrown my 118111e into the ~publi·
can primary hat, votes cast for my
·candidacy may have been cast for
Sen. Snyder and made the outcome
a little closer, and possibly11in Sen.
Snyder's favor. I had possibly
helped Frank Cremeans win the
primary. and In doing so perpetrated
a disservice to the people of the 6th
district by limiting their choice of
quality candidates in the November
election.
You may not accept my logic,
but there is one thing that isn't
debatable; Sen. Snyder would have
been a much better candidate to
compete with Ted Strickland this ·
November. I scored the fii'St debaie
a Knockout for Ted Strickland with
Cremeans permanently disfigured.
It wasn't even close. No wonder
Mr. Cremeans will only debate four
times; after his performance Sunday night, he probably wishes hedidn't have to ever debate Strickland again. I have never been
' embarrassed to be a Republican,
but! came awfully close Sunday
night. I was surrounded by people
laughing and ridiculing e,very one
of Crelileans' answers to. the very
easy and somewhat conservative
leaning questions. I normally
wolildn 't be bothered by this,
knowing full- weU that I must have
been surrounded by liberals with .a
vastly different ideology. In this
case however, I had no choice but
to apee with them.
~~cans probably had possible
answers' to probable questions written down before the debate. He fre.
quentl&gt;: referred to _his n~ while
answenng the quesuons. This probability made his II!ISwers seem even
more incredible. For a candidate
who ·claims not to be a poliliciad:
his evasion of each question sure
seemed polished. At one point,
'while trymg not to answer a questbn on the Nonh American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA), he
made the comment that if be was in
Congress and voting for NAFTA .
rather than Congressman Strickland, at least he "would get l/435th
of NAfJ:_A for my district". Considering that NAFT A is a trade
agreement 'it is hard to understand
what be meant by that cotilment.
Also on the NAFTA issue, Mr.
Cremeans mentioned that the
"price/earning~ ratio o{ the Mexican workers wages is not right".
When one considers that a
~ea(llinp ratio is a stoek per·
lOIIIIIIDCC ~urc which compares
a siock's price to its earnings per
share apinsl i~s particular industry
averase PIE ralio, Cremeans' commcnt apinscems off base and just
another attempt to confuse the
ilslic.

Cremeans' m.ost incredible co
gent was his remJ~Tk about Congressman Strickland's lack of any
children. ~means remarke$1 that
while he wolild ftght for the family,
his challenger, "chose not to have
children". His intent was .to make
Congressman Strickland seem less
of a family man because he chose
not to have children. This un~v­
ably stupid comment prompted the
audience to loudly harass the
~epublican challenger. It also
made me want to hide considering
my possible hand in helpin$ Cremeans defeat Sen. Snyder JD the
primary.
Although I am accepting pan of
the blame for Sen. Snyder's defeat,
I am not the only responsible party,
· The fact of the matter is that Mr.
Cremeans was no more aware of
the issues during the primary campaign than he was on Sunday. The
probl~ is~t most voters made
their deciso bas~d on his billboards an elevision ads. Now
they must live with their choice and
can't complain if Mr. Cremeans is
actually elected and embarrasses
Southern Ohio in Washin~ton.
If Dan Rostenkowslo, (D-lllinois), is the poster boy for term
limits, Frank Cremeans should be
the , poster boy for campaign
finance reform. Money talks and
uninformed voters who are. mesmerized by fancy television marketing campaigns and billboards
devised by,professional political
consultants 'll!ill vote. with the
money every lime. Cremeans laiew
tlLS and like the smart bUsinessman
that he is, spent what it took·to win.
Y &gt;U really can't blame him, be did
-Wnat he had to do and put his own,
capilill Ill risk. He t90k the gamble
and now can enjoy the fruits of his
wager. Unfortunately, this method
of winning elections hasl!'l been
working too well lately. The candidates who will in this fashion usually turn out to be an embarrass.ment to their districts by making
stupid comments in Washington.
Ar1 example of this is Congressman
Hoke, (R -10, Lakewood), another
mJiionaire who paid a great deal to
win in 1992 and who's public comments about women keep embarrassing the voters in Cleveland.
·The 11th commandment of the
Republican party is that one
Republican should never say any·
thing detrimental about another
Republican. However, this is no
time for partisanship. I strongly
believe that our wonderful country
is headed in the wrong direction
and that the next few years will be
very imponant to the future of our
children and our nalion. The decisions of the next Congress will
have ramifications long into the
future. This is why I !1111 offering
this apology. I made a mistake and
hope this apology will prompt the
people of Southern-Ohio to take a
closer look at the clllididates and
make an informed decision. in
November. The stakes are too high
to be WI'QI\&amp;,J! voters Ill least take a
moment to e~amine the motives of
the candidates and determine which
of the two is genuinely concerned
about the future of their district and
not justapout feathering his own
nest, we sliould be able to make the ·
best selection. The individual who
really cares about his constituents
will make the best Representative
regardless of party affiliation.
Again,! apologize.
Jim Weisman
Rio Grande

Today in· history,
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By The Aalotlated Press
.
.
. Today is Monday, OcL 3, the 276th day of 199( There are 89 days left
m the year.
·
·
Toda 's Highlight in lfislory:
·
·
•
On &amp;t. 3, 186~;. President Lincoln declared the last Thursday in
November TlullksgiYIIIg Day.
·
· ·
·
On this dlte:
.
'
·hi 1226, St Francis of Assisi, fOunder of the Franciscan order died; ..::
waacanonizcxlin 1228. .
• · ...
In 1929, the Kingdom of Sabs, Croats and Slovenes formally changed
its·llllllC to tho Kinlldool of Yugoslavia
In 1941, Adolf 1litler declared in a speecll in Berlin that Russia had
been "brdten"llld would "never riS&amp;again.'' .·
.
.
In 1942, ~ident'Roosevelt eslabl.ished the Office of Economic StabiJfzlljoo llld ll8cJrized conlrols on farm prices, rents wage,. and salaries
• ' In 1944, SO years
. aso. during Worl~ Warn,
troops cracked tJie
Sielfried Line nll1h of Aachell.lJenrwi '
.fn 1962, _aslronalJt Wally ~chirra b~ted off from Cape Canaveral
aboard the S1p Sev~ on a nme'ltoll' flight · .
·
"

u.s.

"Sarge, I'm having trouble trying to redefine
otJr role in the post-Cold War era.•

In Herman Mtlville.'s short
story of the same name, Bar1leby
the Scrivenef worked in a law
office on Wall S\I'CCL In lime, he
refused to follow his employer's
instructions, saying repeatedly, "I
would prefer not to."
·
A modem real-life ve,sioa of .
Bartleby is Enrique Oppenheimer,
an accountant at New York City's
Departn.ent of Housing Preservation and Development. Unlike
Bartleby, however, who never
explained his intransigence,
Oppenheim« has made very clear
his refusal to obey the orders of his
superiors.
He claims tluit the ~ovenunent, .
his employer, has no right to force
him to attend a sexual harassment
prevention training course. "My
religion,'' Oppenheimer insists,
"instructs rile as to my moral
behavior code."
Last December, along with all
the other staff employees of the
· Depanment of Housing Preserva.ti'!n and Development,· Opeenheuner was told to report for ' preventive sexuil harassment training." Refusal would result in
charges of insubordinalion - with
a resultant fine and reprimand,
demotion or tenninadon.
A PenlCCOStal Christian, Oppenheimer, during his 18 years in government, had never been accused of
sexual harassment or any other
untoward behavior. "If I go to that

' Sen. Nancy Kassebat•m, R- worse for the kids. Particularly
Kan., and ranking member of the those kids who get (to the Job
Senate Labor Committee, will . Corps centers) with high hopes and
assail the administration this week then find that facilities, or somefor throwing good money after bad • thing, is not what they thought it
by asking for a $500 million was going to be or what it has been
increase over ·the next 10 years. portrayed to be and they end up
Con4fCSS has approved a 10 per- leaving. That to me is the ultimate
cent1ncrease in the Job Corps bud- . loss.''
·
get in 1be Labor Department approUNDER THE DOME - House
prialions bill Pre~ident Clinton is Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash.,
expected to sign this week. Kasse· must feel tempted to tell 'fellow
baum says the Job Corps' dismal Democrats: I never pro!llised you a
record typifies problems with the. rose garden.
entire federal job-training system I During an interview last week,
- an octopus of 154 separa\e pro- Foley recalled a Democratic whip
grams costing nearly $25 billion a meeting held during Bill Clinton's
year.
·
1992 presidenlial transition.
"If the public ·knew what they
"The members were saying, 'Is
were really getting (from the Job everything going to be wonderful
Colps) for their money, they would now thai we're going to have the
'be appalled," she says. "The pro- inauauralion of a Democratic presigram is grossly overrated and dent, are aU our problems going to
, needs to be held to far higher stan- bt; solved?"' Foley told us. Foley
. dards of performance and cost- sail! he tried splashing CQid Water
effectiveness."
on House Democrats who were
Gerald Peterson, the former laboring under the illusion that life
assistl!nt inspector general for audit was about to get easy.
who led the current investigation
He said he reminded Democmts ·
into the Job Corps program, agrees: of the rociCy fJrst year of the Carter
"It just doesn't make any sense to. administration, but then noticed
me either as an auditor or as a tax- many •'blank loo!cs among the 80
payer to ~xpand something ·when or so members presenl" When he
you've got $100 million acknowl- asked for a show of hands of how
edged that's beinj wasted. At lhe many had been around durin~ the
very point in ume when they first year of the Carter adminJstrashould have been intensifying the tion, he said only about a ·halfmanagement effort on the Jtoblem, dozen people responded.
they're taking away fr-ilm that
"The point of that story is how
inte~ity to expand."
. much turnover there is in
· ' Labor Depanment officials are Cangress," said Foley. "The
unfazed by the program's poor ll!iSUIIIption of term limits is people
track record. "This is the most stay a long lime. But here ·we had
effective tool we have in the United only a handful of members who
States the most effective resource rt membered their service with
or stnitegy for helping young peo- P: esident ~r.. Their own experi_ple who otherwise appear to be on ence has ~n In ~last 12 years
a path to nowhere, to crime, to of Republican p~1den~. One of
poverty, to despair " Assistant the thmgs thlll IS J,llcreasmgly rare
Labor Secretary Do~g Ross told in the House ~s historic me!Dor'y.
our associate Andrew Conte. Ross Next year we re surely gomg to
· wlii be one of the witnesses at this have half the House with four years
week's hearing.
or less experience here." .
·
"As badly as I feel for the taxJack Anderson aad Michael.
payer," Peterson told us, "I do feel B1nstela are wrlterr for Ualted
F.-tore Syndicate, IDe.

training course, I will be con181Dinated by it," he told inc. ·"As a

Nat He11toff
bow to behave with my fellow
humans."

The stste, he continued, was 111·
ing to compel him to participate m
a code of behavior that "I reserve
exclusively for private religious life
instruction."
This interpretation of the free
exercise of religion as ~st the
commands of the state IDight have.
made an intriguing Supmne Coon
case- if it went that far.
Whether it did or not, ·Oppenheimer - in addition to saving his
own soul·even ifitFOSlhim hiS job
-wanted, he sayS. "to embolden
other J.lCOPie" to resist illegitimate
authonty.
Although he received conaiderable private support from colleagues, there is no record of anyone else in liis department absolutely refilsing to take preventive
sexual harassment uaining. Ten did
demur, but, Oppenheimer told Ray
Kerrison of tlie New York Post,
"ther were intimidated into aucnding.'
Oppenheimer meanwhile was
summoned.to a disciplinarY conference and \hen another hearing
where the depanment seemed to

Reassessing the virtues of 'self-control'
the political game ·as they have no penalties, at least none which •,
Discipline is an old-fashioned tion:
word jn dire need of present-day
Why the leaks? To subven the learned it over the past two are visible to the naked eye. The
rediscovery. Not disiapline as in . constitutional system of civilian dec8des. What is truly appalling stealth attacks grow bolder, the
order imposed fran above, but dis- ~ontrol over the military and about Bob WoOdward's most leakers progressively inore irre- ·.
recent book, ''The Aatnda," is Dot sponsible. When no one is held to
.cipline as in self-control. Look
around contemporary America, Hod'Jtng
its revelations about JSiesldent Clin- . account, accountablilty becomes a
UIJ
'B1 alJf Ill
ton's ihiflinJ priO(ities and uncer- word without meaning. Self-disci- ·
beginning with your neighborhood,
and supporting evidence for the reverse a policy chosen by the lain convicuons. Whlll is so chill- pline makes less and less sense :
proposwon is overwhelming.
· commander in chief.
in$ is the book's clem- DICSSIIgC that when the undisciplined suffer no
My neighborbood happens to be
But the Defense Department th1s is an administration staffed consequences for their behavi&lt;ll:. It .
Washington. Here, sclf-indulgmce leakers might understandably heavily by undisCiplined self-pro- is hard to require or expect wlica it. ;
and betrayal me the substitutions of believe that no penalties would be moters who are willing to say aRy- seems to ~ devalued at the very '·
choice for self-discipline. They are imposed for the disregard of the thing and reveal everything in pur- top, and self-discipline is. not a . ~
best illustraied by leaks, those chain·of command. The Clinton suit of their own aims. Backbilinl · wotd that springs automalically, to : .~
transmitlals of fact, opinion and administration is staffed at some of seems to be the coin of the realm. mind ia connection to President .'
slander from anonymous official its highest levels by people whose 'Men who devalue loyalty and Bill Clinton.
.;
sources to the public by way of the past and present careers were dodge resJ?Onsibility for theu verWhat is true for the ~elically ;
media's conveyer belt
·advanCed, nurtured and mainrained hal assassmations from the shad- · sealed world of Washington is no · :
As often as not,,the imponant by assiduous leaking in opposition ows are valued at least as fully as less true for many other American . :
Ieakers are high-ranking officials, to policies they were supposed to those who scrve faithfully and save n..ighborhoods. We are far- '.,
or people doing their bidding. be unplemeoling.
.
. their ,¢.vice and uservations for llllvaliecd in creating a society of :
Unable·to Jevail within tile COIIJI-.
For some, it began when they the president
individual free' lancen whoso pri- ·'
cils of govc:mment, to which their were young officials in the Viet- . Which t;aises an impo11ant q~- mary loyalty is to themselves. ·
position has given them ·access, nam War. Lacking the auts or tiOII.·Why IS anarchy tolerllled?ltJs Rules are for other ~Ie. Diaci- \
they continue the debate without m!181 conviction to resign and pub- not difficult to pinpoint most of pline in anythiiJI w1der or deeper
takil\g responsibility for their ' licly protest what they, reardcd 11 '\Vood~ard's Sl)urc~.~ in "Tile than the ~ursliit of self-interest is ,
wiirds.
•
a diaaslrously wrong policy, they Ag~dl." hia much ~elebra~d reprdcd m many quarters as 'seH- :
· As a recent example, the mili- fed their reservations on bact~ ·- deaile to·~ the identity notwith- de.feating ideali$m.
·
·· J
w .y establishment was almost ground to the American press slmllng. ID their ~y-10-day work, _
But what may wort in the short · •
unanimously opposed to the COI'JI'. They thereby won the IIIli· a number of Washington reporlaJ run for individuals is deslructive in · :
Hailian inVIIIOII. Mllny of us qree tude of tbe jOurnaliSJS and devel-. I'OIIlindy qudtclllcqround sources Ilk: long run for society 11 a whole. ~
willt lhlt poeiliOII. Bat bavinc !oat oped a keen ~ppreciation of the !'&gt;' ~ in the hopes of ~g A democratic ,epublic such as ours .j'
the intcmal debuc, l'a!IIIOD leak- . ~~ w~y to build a favorable repu- Julclef _reaponsea ~ b1ggez ~- is only as secure as the social comen refused to accept the verdict. tation m lhe Jnll. Today, l!OIIIO of A-president or White House chief p&amp;£t of n:ultual responsibilities . . l
While the official line was that thole with whom they developed a of Sl81f ~ ~ ~ «!efcnse who
HoddiDI Carter III, former . •
accurate predictions wore Jieither . ua,eful aymbiotic re1ationsbip in ~. to I!DJIOIC diacipli!,le ~ ~- ::te Department apoknmin : ;
possible nor useful, !boy began 'VJeinllll are amonJ the capital's mg 1!1 objeCt lesson of specific disIWIII'CI·wiludlla reporter, edt- :
carefully f~edin• to •~!~c:ted heavieat journaliauc hium, sliU loyalty would 11;01 be hanl-ptcascd tor aild pablls!ler, Is pfeslde~~t of&gt;
·reponers vanous dire predictions llappy to repay leab with public to find ·IIJIPI'OII1iale taraets for Jhe MalnStreet, a W...IDatou.-D.C.- !'
about the pospective fintincial and ,.-aile.
· '
.. .. exerc~. '
.
'. based television prudaetlon cbm·'~
human cost of military intervenFqr others, it is simply part of
But ~~doesn't lqlppen. '!~Jere are · pany, ·
,
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IND.

Around the nation

• fColuRJbul!64•

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Middleport...

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the ~onh, and snow fell io the IIIXthcm ~. wtdl !lip io the
·west.
40s across to Lake Supenor, l!qlBands of thunderstorms carried pmgl
• to the 30s 11!..-. ...... d MolitanL
lightning and 50 mph .winds today
Widcly scattered .showers· and
over much of Florida, where a tor· cloudy skies, along with highs in
nado toucf.ed down near Jack- the SOs and 60ii were expected in
sonville on Suixlay, uprooting trees from tho nonhern Midwest to !he
and damaging power and water Northeast. Dry weatiier and highS
lines.
in the 70s and 80s were expec;led
The rain was heavier further to west of the Rockies and souili of .
the nonh as the system hovered lhe northern Plains, dropping to the
over Georgia and the Carolinas 60s in lhe PacifiC Northwest.
today. Sunday. a woman in ValdosHighs in the 90s were forecast
ta, '(Ia. died in a car accident on a in parts of Texu and the Southflooded by more than six inchwest.
es of rain.
The nation's hot spot Sunday
Up to a foot of snow was was Death Villey, Calif., at 103
expecled ~&gt;: in SOlliC parts of the , deJfCCS. The coolest spot was Ely,
Minn., at 26 degrees.
.

roaa

ContlnuS,i from page 1.

69.
Each one spoke of the club president she represeQted after .being
introduced by. Mrs. Fultz •.a mem- ·
· ber of the centennial comll!ittee.
Juanita .Bachtel read a poem
which she had written especially
for the celebration entitled "Legacy":

'

--------Weather-----Soutb-Ceatral Ohio
, TonighL ..Mostly clear and cool.
Low 40 to 45. Northeast winds
· diminishing to less than 10 mph.
Tucsday ... Mostly sunny. High
65to 70.
.
.

'"-

"I still can see them siuing
there,

Dressed in their best, with hands
Extended forecast
Wednesday through thurs- well gloved,
· And wailing for lhe Collect to
day.;.Dry. Lows from the mid 30s begin
.
.
. .
tomid40s.
.
The meeting that they so sin'
Highs mainly upper 50s apd
cerely loved.
~.
.
'
It's eighteen ninety-four.
Friday.. .Dry. Lows 45 to 55 and
Wecan'tremember .
highs 65 to 75.
How seriously these ladies took
their vows
To further reading, art and
music
Roben 'E, Ro~ie, Pomeroy, and
In Middlepon, where culture
Clara L. Robie, Mason, W.Va., must arouse
Sept. 28.
The best in every small town
Divorces asted - Eric Priddy, mind and soul,
MidC!Ieport, from Debra Priddy,
And fo1 one hundred y,ears the
Logan, Sept. 12; Tamra·Heath, flame they kindled
-Racine, from Dopald B. Heath Jr.,
And cared for still stsnds waitQUincy, Mass.,,Sept. 28.
.
ing
'Dissolutions granted - Terri
F[X' us, a living burning goal.
Lynn Jones and Tony Ray Jones,
But times have changed, and
Sept. 19; Jane Johnson and Ken- slowly die demand
neth A. Johnson, Sept. 19; Rortnie
For dignity is lost. The hats and
E. Powell and Becky E. Powell, gloves
Sepl n;.:~'ill"!m R. Donohue and
Have disappeared; but in their
Shane"M.1JOIIOIIue.
place a vision.
. Of their enthusiastic goals still
stands. ·
One cenliD'y!
And now new hearts and faces
Revival announced
·
lfave
come .to catch the afterRevival se.rvices at the Red
glow
, Brush ChUJlCh of Christ will be held
Of those we cannot now rememWednesday through Sunday, 7 p.m.
caclreverung except Sunday when
services will he held 111 10 a.m. and
6 p.rn. Pastor Guy Mallory mvites
the public to attend.
BELPRE, Ohio (AP)- Living
I
next to the Shell Chemical Co.
Rutland FrO. to mHt
The Rutland PTO will meet at 7 plant never worried Dwight Barn-·
hart. A deadly explosion and fire
p.m TUesday in the l!Ymnasiiun.
there
this year dido 't chanse his
_
mind.
Open bouse to be beld
Barnhart, 72, grew. up here
Racine Elemen~ will hold its
along
the Ohio River before chemiannual open house 'Oct. 10 at 6:30
cal
plants
changed the landscape
p.m. A PTO meeting will follow
and
economy
of the impoverished
and a prize will be awarded to the
Appalachian
foothills
ofBOutheastclass with the most participation.
ern Ohio. He worked at the DuPont
plant across the river in West VirDAR to meet
glnia
and has· lived in the shadows
Return.Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
of
the
Shell plant on the Ohio side.
Daughters of the Alllerican Revolu.
"We
walehed both plants grow
tion, 7 p.m. Friday at Episcopal
Church parish hall. ~ae R~ynolds
to be the speaker.
·

Divorces,.dissolutions filed
. Tile following actions to end
marriage were.filed recently In the
Meigs County Common Pteas
Coon of Jud$e Fred W. Crow m:
Dissolutions asked - Mary
Kathryn Price and Stephen W.
Price, both of Pomeroy, Sepl 14;
Daniel C. Hensler, Racine, and
Patricia D. Hensler, Syracuac, SepL
IS; Debi L. Marshall and Roy A.
Marshall, both of Racine, Sept. 21;
Bobby E. Dill, Middleport, and
Betty Dill, Pomeroy, Sept. 21;
Kathy J. Milard and Raymond L.
Milard, both of Albany, Sepl 23;

· Meigs announcements

yield SOIIIC ground. A letter of rep- that belling room and holding his
rimand would be put in his file and Bible, did not have to deploy his·
he would be COIDin&amp;Dded to read, at witnesses. Among them were
his leisure, some material on sexual members of his church, including
harassment
·l
his pastor, and a woman who had
Like Bar1leby, Enri411e ~­ worked with him for years. She
heimer preferred not to. ' Why would have testified to his characshould I be reprimanded when I '1«, But·"aftti an hour or so of teS·
have done liOihing wrong?''
·
limooy and crc:lss-exiUnliiaiioii;' ~
A pre-trial bearing followed, at says Oppenheimer's attorney •.
which the head of that Uibunal tried Rlbert Lasaw, "the lawyer for the
to reassure Opl'enheimer that he department announced that the·
was makin~ a big deal out ofwhat department did not want to prose- ·
was CS8CIIIially ·a small issiiC. The cute Enrique any mm.'' Too many '
accountant, logical as always, said . otherS had never taken the course. ·
that if this was not a big deal, why
The stalwart accountant was
was 1111 here - Ill yet another con- told that he~would be officially off'
fronlalion?
.
. the hoot if only he were to stipu' He tried to mate his case yet late that he had received some writ- ·
again: ~·1 didn't have to wait 18 ten materials. He did not have to ·
years for the government to tell me take a test as to whether he had'·
how to behave toward women. I read the sexual harassment materi-·1
conduct my life according to my al. Oppenheim.er accepted the '·
religious beliefs. It is not a pan- department's surrender.
'll
time thing. It !s everything in·my
Erased from Enrique Oppenlife. I explained this at every hear- heimer's record is the charge of
ing, but it did not matter to them."
insubordination, which he would'
At yet anothei hearm~ in front never have acknowledged in any:
of an administrative law Judge, the ~.
judge admitted that he himself Nat Heatoff Is a aatlonally
an employee of the department renowned authority 011 the First , '\
had never attended a seminar on Amendmeut and the rest of the · j '
sexual harassment. It was further B:Uof RJchts.
:(
revealed that quiet as it was kept, a
(Por lnformatloa on how to •
sizable number. of department eommimlcate eledronlcally wltb '
employees had also silently avoid- ttis columnist aad others, eoned, one way or another, the training tact America Online by calling 1sessiOII$.
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
j
Enrique .Oppenheimer, sitling in

pra:licing ChrislianJ take from the
Bible the mandate from _God as to

By The Associated Press
. south.
•
A ridge of high pressure from
Tuesday will be similar to today
ceritrai 'Canada into the lower Great with mostly sunny skies and temLakes has 'brought, mostly clear peratures ·Broun&amp;\ 60 north and
skies to much of Ohio.
·
upper 60s soudl·.
The state will remain in a fair
The record high tempellllUre for
weather pauern for much of the this date at the Columbus weather
week. Mostly ~unny skies today are station was 89 in 1953. The record
expected over the north and clouds lowtem~was31 in 1888.
. will give way to sunshine this after.Sunset today will be at 7:11
noon across ihe south. Highs will p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at
1ange from near 60 north to the . 7:3J a.m.
upper 60s south.
Tonight will be clear and cool
again with a chance of some frost · A tropical weather system was
in the coolest regions over the dumping more heavy rain in the
nonh. Lows will drop to the mid- Southeast today following a night
30s in these areas and mid-40s of storms and minor floodin~.
Cooler weather was taking hold m

MICH.'

The ret~rn of B~rtleby the ·scrivener

.
-

Cool temperatures, clear skies expected this we•~~-~,· ~-

Accu·~ forecUtfor

Is it time to reassess ·the 'Job Corps?

The Deily Sentlnil PIIQII 3 '

. Pomeroy •ddlepon, Ohio

OHIO Weath er
Tuesday, Oct. 4

Pomeroy-lldd...,., Ohio
llonday,J)clober 3, 1894

/ The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Monday; OciOber 3, 1814

Melel B001ters to meet
the Meigs High School Athletic
Boosters will meet at 7:30 p.m.
tuesday at the high achool. Football coach Mike Chancey will
show films of the Alexandet game
and discuss this week's Ws:IIston
game.

Headqnarters to open.

Ribbon clltting ceremonies for
the opening of the Meigs County
Democratic headquarters, located
in the building formerly occu£.~
by Larry's Woodworking on
t
Main SL,I'I!meroy, will be held at
7 p.m Tuesday.
·

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 10 calls for assistance
Saturday and ·Sunday. Units
responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
3:50 p.m. Saturday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Delbert Pridemore,
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
7:04 p.m. Saturday, Mulberry
Avenue, Carolyn Taylor, VMH; .
3:25 a.m. Sunday, Brownell
Avenue)Diane Starcher, VMH;
4:46p.m. Sunday, SOiall Second
Avenue, Deborah.Barter, VMH.
POMEROY ,
8:57 a.m. Saturday, Pomeroy
Pike, Jessie Jarrell, VMH;
I :57 p.IIJ. Saturday, W. Main

Street, Alician Lee, VMH;
2:50 a.m. Sunday, Condor
Street, Lisa Haggy, treated at the
scene;

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Satul'dlly admissions- none
Saturday discharges - none
Sunday admissions - Thomas
McClung, Pomeroy; Downey
Kenned~, Middleport
·
Sun ydiscbarges-none

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•

•

Old Fa$hion
REVIVAL
October 5th • 9th
Chester Nazarene Church
-· 7:00p.m. Nightly
/
·"
6:00 p.m. Sunday
Evangelist ·
Rev. E. Guy Wright
Old Fashion ~reaching~··; :l-'

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!llld didn't think the eq~losion and fife -lackin&amp;· sons or dwgbten.do,'' he said.
about it being in our back yard," The resil!ents want Shell to pay for
"Without Shell, Belpre would
Barnhart said. "They've put a lot medical testing of people living probably be nothing," said Christi
of people to work "
near the plant and for a study to Williams, 25, who 'li!IIS among the
Mayor Lewis~- Vaughn said determine whether gases endan- evacuees.
residents have bad to decide gered their·helili'!.
The chemical companies have
whether the risks are worth the jobs . The U.S. En~ental ~- ) been in the area since the 1960s.
that seven chemical plants in the uon Agency said ~ tllan l mtl· ney came to the river town
area provide - 480 at Shell ilone. lion pounds of ~OXIC chemicals because they could easily ship
"So far the dollars have won were released durmg the fJre. Some materials on barges giving them
out," Vaughn said. "People realize chemicals were detected in the access 10 thriving industrial cities
how imponant the plants are eco- Phio River .bu~ !~!levels within fed· in Ohio and western Pennsylvania.
nomically."
era! safety lim1ts.
And they have put more People
One of. the risks played out May . The plant produces thermoplas- to work than any other industry. .
27.
t1c rubber for automouve parts,
Washington County had an
Barnhan was shaving that morn- wire, footwear, adhesives and cable unemployment rate of 4.6 percent
ing when he heard a rumble that coveri~g_s. It makes the rubber by in AugusL The average jobless rare
rattled the windows of his bouse. com~m1~2 stvrene w1t.h Nher for the four surrounding Ohio .
Thunder, be thought
chem1cals m one I:W'!' and, m a_ sec- counties was 6.3 percent. The
"I wasn't scared until I saw the ond tank, combmmg butadtene statewide rate was 4 8 percent.
Continued from page 1
.
black smoke rolling. That'S'when I with more chemicals. Then the
The Shell plant.also fuels the
not be installed.
- HOME. has. the same space . started thinking about my buddies c~ntents of both tanks are com- economy with tax dollm and P.ves
bmed. ·
money to schools and chanties
·requirements and permit fees. The down there," he said.
~hell said the~ might have. been Shell estimates it provides $58 mil:
75 cents per 100 square feet is for. . There had been an explosion at
only living space, not a garage, the plant. Fire spread to a chemical an Improper mtxture, creatmg a lion each year
·
atlic or cmport.
· storage tank area and ignited mil- reaction that c8used too much pres·
lions
of
gallons
of
styrene
and
sure,
and
then
the
explosion
and
-DEMOLITION, these perfire.
·
mits are mandated to make sure diesel fuel.
Plant
•
About
1,700
people
within
a
Manager
Arnie Ditmar
· when a home is torn down the
sewage line is capped. The rule . mile, include Barnhart and his· said the safety of employees and
also is intended to .reduce debris wife, were evacuated until mid· the community has always been
left behind. A structure must be afternoon. A highway was closed, Shell's primary concern and that
torn down within two months of and some schools canceled classes. the company has proper safety
· The fire burned for nine hours. slandanls.
acquirin!l permit, but an extension
Mterward,
the human toll became
Shell has its supporters in town.
C£D be pven for legitimate reasons,
clear:
three
Shell
wolkers
dead.
Some
residfjntS COUDtered the lawJohnson said.
suit
b)'
puttiltg yellow signs bcarin~r
Four
days
later,
12
people
who
- SID&amp;W ALK. ·Deeds permits
the
message
"We Stlppon Shell''~
live
near
the
plant
sued
Shell.
Most
only if they are near. the main
in
storefront
windows and in the
said
their
homes
and
cars
were
streets and for public use. A six
backs
windows
of their em. At a
damaged.
A
few
said
they
suffered
inch base of cinders or gravel,
town meeting, residents jeered
from iqitated throats and lun~s.
along with .at least four inches of
The suit, ftled in Washmgton ~those who filed the suit
concrete is required, he added. PriTb Bamhan and other residents
County
Common Pleas Court,
vate sidewalks, such as from a
of
this community of 6,800 people,
alleges
that
precautions
to
prevent
garage to a home don't need per·
Shell
is like a member of the fami·
ly.
nats. CURB, tbe.se permits are
"If we don't work there, our
necded•anylime a curb, is removed.
Thecurbmustbeatleastl.5inches
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)taller than the road to control Ohio direct hog prices at selected
drainage water.
buying points Monday by the Ohio
.-- ROOF, should get a permil
Department of Agn'culture:
for structural changes only.
BaiTOws and gilts:. fully steady;
-CARPORT, 11JUSl be ftve feet demand moderate.
from·the propCrly line.
U.S . 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
-PORCH, must be five feet points 32.00-33.25, a few 33.50;
'from the propeny line.
plants 32.50-34.25.
. ~ DECK, must b~ five feet
U.S . 2-3, 230-260 lbs., country
from thepropetty l4te.
points, 29.00-32.50.'
SIDING, if putting siding
Prices from The Producers Liveover woOd the permit is ncel!ed. stoCk Association:
.
But if removing old siding an_d
Cattle: uneven, 50 cents higher
installing new it's considered to 2.00 lower. ,
upkeep. ·
Slaughter steers: choice 59.00-;- 'POOL, must ~at least 10 67.~0; selectS~.00-63.00.
.
.
.
,.
feet rrom the property-line and
Slaughter heifers: choiCe 59.00enclosed in Ill leur a four-foOi-taU 66.50; select 50.00-63.00
f~nce to keeP children from stum·
Cows: steady to 5.00 lower; all
b.mg' in and droirming,
rows 59.00 and down. .
Johnson Said he lias warted in
Bulls: ~lihtly high..c'to 4.00
construcbOD' ·smce
· he was 12 .years 1.
all
rY
00 and~~d_:
ower,
J,.
own.
old, adding that be cares about the
. Veal calves:· steady to 15.00 ~
safety and appearance .of the vii· lower; choice 191HXJ and down.
lage.
' · I ,
· Sheep and lambli: steady to 4.75
••
"I'm not· going to hit someone lower; .choiee wools 6().00-75.00;
hard. 1 know there are hardships . choice clips 60.00-74.00; feeder
and sometilncs they -need leeway," 1 lambs 82.® arid down; aged sheep
he added.
'
4Q,00 and down.
througll the ~

LiV.eStOCk repOrt

StOCkS

11&gt;-y. Oldo 4l7159,•PIL 992•2ll6.

•-...,. ... - •

.

5;.21 a.m. Sunllay, Spring
Avenue, Thomas McClung, VMH.
RUTI.AND
9:08 a.m. Saturday, state Route
143, Saundra Scott, O'Ble)less
Memorial Hospital.
1UPPERS PLAINS
10:53 p.m. Sunday, State Route
218, Mildred Smith, VMH.

The Daily Sentinel

a,c-tor·-•-

Guests were greeted by Mrs.
Wallace and re)!istered by Brittany
Philson.
.
"A Century of American Litera,
ture" is the theme of the centennial
observance which will fcature ·several special events throyghout the
year.
'

Johnson...

EMS logs 10 calls

Doily s..uoel, Ill Court
,..,_,(llllo4!741!1.
. .
IAJIQIPI10NIA1'11

her
"
. "'- of Rae Reynolds , Eilee!l Buck,
But whose love of books they .)'Clarice Erwin, Mrs. Hackett, Sibleft us long ago."
ley Slack, and Helen Coast Hayes,
who has been a member of the club
Fancy sandwiches, breads, since 1932.
cookies, c.akes and mints were
Presiding at the silver teaserserved from the refreshment table vice were Mrs. Hackett, Mrs. Fultz,
prepared by the hostess committee Mrs. Honon, and Mrs. Bowen.

C_hemical fir.m a welcome part of life along·Ohio River

~ clotblnJ available
The Harrisonville Community
Churcb will bold a free clothing
offering from 9 a.m..-4 p.m. Th11r5•day at the church. The church is
located next to the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire'Deplrtmenl

no

, CENTENNIAL TEA - Loagtbne Middle- centeDDial plinniog committee, at Sunday's «J.
port Literary''Ciub member Paye Wallace, ~ { ebrati011 of the dub's tOOth year. ·
served tea by Pbyllis Hackett, a member or tb~
..
·

'

.

.... .

- - + - - - · - - - · ---·---+--,~--··---~-""'

.

.' '

• I

• &lt;
.I

�~

The Daily septmei

Sports

•

i

..

.

.

tMondly,.October3,
1994 •
'
.
.

'n otheF NFL actlori,, .. . .

'

the Browns have- yielled just 58
points.
.
"We felt we had the ability to
be a great defense," said Turner, a
fint-round pick in 1991 who has
four interceptions this season,
including one in each of the las·t
three games.
"I don't know if you ·can say
that we're far ·superior. I just think
we've added some consistency,
depth and experience," he said
. The Jets (2-3), playfng without
injured Boomer Esiason, lost their
third straight
·~I'm shocked that this hapr,;ned," coach Pete Carroll said.
'I'm 'shocked that this is what we
look like today. All I cari tell you
is, we're still standing. We will not
accept it. The players will not
accopt it. I can't. The coaches
can't We thought we had ourselves
\.·

'I

:rvc·football standings
Ohio DlvilloD

=~York.

. . . . .;. . . . . . . . . . . .~

t

Belp'e .......................................................4
Vinlllll CQunty..:.....................................3

.
Hockllll Dlvlsloit
EAS'I'BR.N..............................................3
Mi.Uer..........................................:••••.••••..2
Fedc:ra1 Hocking ..................................... I
Tr\mble................................................... 1
SatrniER.N .......................................... !
Alexa:ncler ................................................0

40
47
67
92
98

148

1
2
2
2

Wellstoo ..... nooooouoouuooooo:.,,,,,,,,,,,,, ..,,,,,,,,3
.MSios ...................................................3

lA

lE.

170

69
1S2
142
117

2
3
4
4
4
!5

71
121
119
152
309
206

4K

79
30
37
60

f'ddiy'a Dill
lfiU 6. !ld!csl•lc .
MEIGS 43, AlelUIIIder 8
Friday: Wellston at MEIGS;
. Wahama 34, SOUTHERN 15
· Nelsonville· York at Vinton.
County; AlelUIIIder at Trimble;
WirtCounty2K,EAS~ 16
Belpre 34, Federal Hoctilig 6
Federal Hocking at Miller;
Nelsonville-Yort S8, Trimble 0 W.-ren Local at Belpre
Saturday: SOUTHERN at
Wellston 52, MlllerO .

EASTERN

Sa"'nliJ'' am

,

Vinton County 3. Nowll!'k
· CatholicO

·
Hoard bounced through the Jets
New York spoiled what would like a pinball for an. 18-yard score
have been Cleveland's second w•th one minute left in the half.
Metcalf, who scored on a play
straight home shutout when Rob
Moore made a one-handed, diving designed to go up the middle,
call:h of a 24-yard pass from Jack instead bounced to the right sideTrudeau with seven minutes to line and then slipped into the end
play. It was the first touchdown zone behind a late downfield bloclc
allowed by the Browns dofense at by Derrick Alexander.
"Once I got outside, it was just
home in nme quarters.
·
"With the players tlte JetS have a race," Metcalf said.
In between, ' Matt Stover kicked
at the skill positions, it's nice to
a
23-yard
field goal, capi~ing on
hold lhem to seven points," Turner
said. ·:who knows bow good we Turner's 32-yard interception
can play? We want to ftnd out and · return, and Earnest Byner ran one
yard for a touchdown after Turner
contmue to get better."
Before that, New Yorlc had not ar.d linebacker Frank Starns sand·
driven inside the Cleveland 20, and wiched Johnny Johnson, forcing a
its best shot at a touchdown was fumble that stopPCd the Jets' best
ruined by rookie cornetback Anto- fint-half ~SSCSSJOn.
Byner s touchdown came two
nio Langham. He tipped a 25-yard
pass away from Moore in the end plays after James Hasty was whistled for pass interference for grabzone with 10 minutes to play. ·
Little else went right for the bing Keenan M~Cardell in the end
Jets, although Trudeau, starting zrne.
"I thought be ~s-interfered on •
because Esiason sprained his ankle
in a loss to Chicago last week, m~. because he. tiied to run his slant'
managed ·to complete a·five-yard through me," Hasty said. "You
pass to An Monlt early in the sec- can't try 10 knock a gu~ over trying
ond half. It Rave Monk 900 career to run your slant route. '
Another .New York penalty had
receptions - an ongoing NFL
kept
Cleveland's fint scoring drive ,
record - and 169 consecutive
alive.
Donald Evans gave ~ve the
games with a catch. Monk, who
Browns
a flnt down by givtng Teslater caught five more passes, is
taverde
a
shove a couple steps out .
nine games away from Steve
Largen(s record for consecutive · of bounds after Testaverde scrambled for five yards~
.
games with a reception.
Stover
addecl,_a
4S-yard
field
Otherwise, -it was all Cleveland.
Vanny Testaverde, exploiting a goal in the third ctfiarter.
Trudeau, who passed for 260
New York secondary that w&amp;S givyards
in a victory over the Browns
ing huge cushions to Cleveland
when
he was with Indianapolis last
receivers throughout the ftrSt half.
was 21-for-36 for 257 yards with- yt ar, was 28-for-46 for 288 yards.
with one to~down and two interout an interception. .
·
c~ptions.
"They pretty much had their
"I doJI'tlhink we can play any
way throwing lhe football against
w•&gt;rse
than that," Trudeau said.
us today,'' Carroll said. ''Our Pres·
"
-~
'·
s
not
shocking (lp lose three
Slile was not good on the quarterback. Vinny was clean almost all sLaight), becaus·e it's not like it
day lorig, which made it easy for doesn't happen. It's unfonunate
him to succeed in the air."
• because we had such a great start.''
The Jets began the season with a
The Browns took control by
20-point
win at ~uffalo followed
scoring on four consecutive possesby
an
overtime
wm agatnst ~nve~.
sions on their way to a 24-0 halftime lead, starting with Metcalfs They've since lost to Mtamt,
37-yard scamper around right end. · Chicago and Cleveland
The spree ended_when Leroy

By BARRY WILNER
APt'ootball Writer
·
.
'Mle Dallas Cowboys saw an old
· friend On the opposlre sidoline. Don
Shula saw his young son.
Tbe champon Cowboys and ·the
winningest coach in NFL history
~ got the edge Sunday. Dallas
ro!ited Washington, coached. by
Norv Turne~- the Cowboys' ·
offensive coordinator during the

ready to go."

Scoreboard
\

Football

NFL stancOnp

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

,.,

AMUIC.ui CONJ'IRENCI

-~----~lf~ iBM•
Bulfolo..---· 3 2 0 .1110 96 I""&lt;
Newllllfl-l ... 3 1 0 .1110 141 Ill!
N.Y. loll---~ 2 3 0 AOl 76 99
He : 1 .... 1 l 0 AOl 107 112
c.niJlliiii.p _._- _- 2 2 0 .!CD 'lO 17

CLJM!LAND_ 4 1 o.101 111 sa

·--

- ---- I 3 0 .250 65 93
CINCDINA11. 0 5 0 .000 71 119
Sol lllop--- 4 0 0 t.CIO 114 71
X.. C11J ...; 3 I 0 .7:10 14 to

-·---· ' 2 0 ·121 10
L.A.-·-·
I 3 0 .250 95 1:14
Doe. .-·---· 0 4 0 .000 92 U7

NATIONAL CONJ'IRENCI

'-"t;:r!_,____
. . ~ i .-1 ~ ffJ
N.Y. a-...,_,
PbD 'elrH· •
----·
W...... .....

l
3
I
I

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0 .7:10
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0 .2110

101
106
46
95

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MAC_standingi

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. 65
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121

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loiiii.•ToWo

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10220~

NOT TWS ~ - Cleveland cornerback ,4.ntonio Langham
(38) brew up a pass to New York Jets wide receiver Rob Moore in
tbe end·zooe la'tbe rmal quarter of Sunday's AFC game in Cleveland,
where the Browns won 1.7•7. (AP)
'

Marshall bombs
UT-Cha.ttanooga
in 62-21 rout
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) mind, but be said be had something
-Maybe Marshall wasn't seeking to prove against the Moccasins.
revenge for two recent losses to
"I was on a mission tonight,"
Tennessee-Chilttanooga; but its 62- said Parker, who ran for 109 yards_
21 victory left the Moccasins feel- and three touchdowns befOre going
ing humbled just the same.
to the sideline early in the third
"It was a humiliating defeat," quarter.
urc coach Buddy Green said.
"Last year I had one of the \leSt.
"Manhall could,move the foot- gam~ofm}'careerand they w~.: 1
ball·at will. We •were not~;:d felt I had to sh
them ·so" 6'enough to stop lhe drives,"
n thing:'' be said.
.
·· J · •
said. "Their defensive line went
'Marshall Jed 35-0 t halftime,
through us like w~ weren:tlherc."
~rinjl touchdowns on . h of i~·
Unexpected ltJSses of 38-31 and ' ftve ftrst-half posseSSion Tell'
33·31 to UTC in 1991 and 1993 nessee-Chauanooga (1-4, 0.2) ·
helped cost Marshall a shot at the not score until the fourth-quarter.
Southern Conference tides those
"In lhe ftrst half, we played as
seasons.
good as we've played stnce I've:
Marshall heaed coach Jim Don- been here both offensively and :
fiBD said be didn't make thQse lossdefepsive!y,'' Donnan said. ''We
es an issue for the Thundering Herd did a good job of rushing the passer
(5.0 overall and 2.0 in the conf~r- · ~nd executing our offense and we
ence), the No. !-ranked team m took lhemoutoftheirgame." ~
NCAA Division 1-AA.
' Todd Donnan, the coach's son,
''I tried to downplay that also went to the sidelines early in
because 5o many of our young guys the third quarter. Donnan was I 5 of
were not i~volved", in thoSe games, 21 for 235 yards passing, including
Donnan satd.
.
_ a 24-yard scoring pass to Danny_
JIJ!Iior,lllilbll;k,Chris Parker sa!4 White in,A~e first half, and als.o
be dtdn 1 have revenge on hts scored on a one-yard run. ·

Ohio H.S. scores

Am1111141 V...w.1116
Bayiow 41 Touo Clllloliaa II
·
Colorado 34, T - 31
NM!tc...&amp;o21,-Motii.:M
Clllabom.o 34,-... '
Clllabom.o St. 36, Naotb T - 34
SWT..•SI.S7,-St.7

Sam-ik.SI,Tau-0

ToauA&amp;M23, TauToolt 17
Toau-EIPuo34,Hanll21 ·

Geoff Bodine captures win
in Tyson-Hotly Farms 400

·'nli~.....

..........

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term from

29 tp S9 _months.

,I

Minimum deposit: $SOO.o6

'

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Minimum clepqsH: $2.500.00 -

.

•

No~ll

~~~.~~~~:::&lt;1~~~~

attempt with 5:0!1efL
No. 18 N. Carolina St. 21
Georgia Tech 13
Reserve quarterback Geoff Bender fB!1 for one touchdown~ Carlos King ran for two more' for the
Wmtpack (4-0, 2-0 ACC). Georgm
Tech (1-3, 0-2) commttted three
second-half turnovers.
No. Spac:U5e
28 :zo
No. :zo 21
Vlrgiaia T~b
Kirby Dar Dar's J.iyan1 touch- .
down run with : to play_ his
5 42of the game _
third scoring run
helped the Orailgemen (4-1, 2-0
Big East) send the Hokies (4:-1 2I) to their first loss in seven ganies.
TenLICSiieC 10 .
No. zz WaabiQpm St. 9 J
Nilo Silvan ran 62 yards with a
reverse for the first touchdown in
!6 quarters against Washington
State (3-1), and JoHn Becksvoon
kicked a 27-yard field goat with
10:15 left to give Tennessee (2-3)
the upset victory. ..
No.1.3 ColondoSt.38
NewMmmJl
Anthoney Hill threw for a
career-best 364 yards' and three
touchdowns as COlorado Stale (5-0,
4-0 WAC) equaled its best start in
t7 years. Stoney Case, who had six
touchdown passes last week, added
th= more for New Mexico (0-5,
0-2).
· Mkbipu st. Z9

·oU::·J:u~=~!~ed'two

1"

1999

t5

..,...,..,

·

~liZ

281f
69•

.:==~~-t~II"*L
.....
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· '
·
.
Big ll"on). Northwestern (1-2-1, 0- touchdowns for Michigan Sr,ate (2igncnd
the
mechanisms
to
possibly
!) converted the 'turnover for a · 2, 1.0 Big Ten) and tQok advantage
So
some
are·
wary
when
NIIL
TORONTO (AP) - The first tern our recent success will not
aven
the
trouble
they
claim
they
llll!chdown,
but Ma\( Finkes" lll:~e of four turnovers by Wisconsin (2owners
cry
the
financial
blues.
step toward begi!lning the NHL solv~ our economic and competi·
.
·
fotled
a
game-lymg
two-pomt 2, !-!).
They
contend
tlie
owners
have
long
arem.
....
en
on
what
was
suntiv':J'c:~~This
situation
must
season Was ...,.
.
.
.
'L
be
·
·arid
addressed
now."·
posed to be Day 2 of'the leagtie s
.
•
,
most successful year yet
This ecooomic mess wasn t supLeague commissioner Gary posed to be.
Dettman and union head Bob
In 1992 when owners and play·
Goodenow agreed Sunday to ers signed 'their last collective !&gt;&amp;r· ·
resume negotiations Ttlesday m an gaining agreement, the tv.:o stdes
effon to reach a collective bargain- agreed to form a commmee to
·
ent and get the season come up with a way to restructure
mg
agroem
started
by OcL IS. ,. the bUSt'ness and avoid lhe fmancial
The site and time of the talks plight owners say they face.
.
have not yet been set, although
A provision of the· collective
they are likely to be held in New agreement dealt specificl~y wi~
Yqrk.
_
restrpctutin&amp; t)to relattonsbtp
'Fourteen games were postponed between lhe NHL 111d NHL Players
over the woekend, and two· more Association.
were scheduled for tonight. Talks _
the collective agreement, which
broke off last Wedn~sday, and if ·expired Sept IS, 1993, said "the
Dettman feels their resumption NHL clubs have exP-ressed an
m&amp;kes progress, tbe season will intent to dev~lop and submit to !he
begin with the postponed games to NHLPA as promptly as posstble a
be made up throughout the seasoo.
proposal for restructuring with a
"We have wide differences, no sidary cap and a revenue-shanng
doubt about that,' • Goodenow said. concept along the lines of the NBA
"We have a lot of work a1lead of system.
.·
us if we're going to put this thing
"The NHLPA commits that, as
together. ••
·
. .
soon as reasotlllbly practicable af~r
At an NHL Players Assoc18Uon the Joint SUtdy Committee repo'n
. KODAK GOLD PLUS 100
meeting Salurday, 102 players issues, it will begin bargain~g in
35MM COLOR FILM
reviewed tbe situation.
good faith with the clubs tn an
24 EXPOSUF£S
"We're trying to find common effort to reach ~ent regarding
ground, but (the owners) keep restrueiUring by Si:pi 15, !993."
HALLOWEEN
THEATRICAL BLOOD
MASKS ASSORTED
1 oz.
moVing the target around," ToronThe-problem was that the Joint
to defenseman Jamie Macoun said.
Study Committee _, was never
Added Winnipeg forward Tie formed.
Domi: "The ball is in the middle
Soon·after the 1992 agreement,
right now. It's in nobody's court" . NHL owners began a successful
In a tbree-psge Jetter sent Friday . campaikn to oust .thell-prcside~t
to each player, BeUman stated.his John Ziegler, and hts suc~ssor, ~t!
C8IC' for lhe necessity of economtc
Stein, was too preoccupted wtth
change. He explained that il'l the running for the offtce of NHL &lt;:&lt;&gt;1_11·
last five yean, player psyrolls have missioner to worry about the JOmt .
increased $1.14 for every dollar swdy committee.
EVEREADY ENERGIZER
CASIO AMJFM STEREO
KODAK CAMEO
ed
When Bellman came on the
CASSETTE PLAYER
BATTERIES
35MMCAMERA
CBf!I.I ~l!are your concern that a scene, his priorities were to reshape
•M.• OR "AAA•- 4 Mel&lt;
W1lH AAITO REVERSE
FOCUSFAEE
delay in. the season will undercut an organization that many felt
much of tbe progres~ that our sport wasn't being run like a professional
has, made ove~ \he past year," sports league.
Bettman wrote m lhe letter, a copy
Meanwhile, owners never gave
of which was Obtained by The New playen the full disclosure of tbeir
York Times.
books the union says it needed
"We need a player emploYment ·bt.fore entering into meaningful
system that avoids making tllis a . disc)ISSions concerning restructur-_
league of haves and have-nots. ing. And they still haven't.
•
Until we develop that type of sys-

I 10

-...caon.

.

. an Goo enow agre·e to beg· in t.alk.s
Bettm

• .... 14·t•

·.

.

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~~.

·

J!.uarter.

SaUmlaJ'•-

.
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11, •• yt'l

·

MIKE

Soutnlll

M O I 2 I . 333 ,,
2 0. 2 , 0 .40) .
,2 0 ~ 2 ' 0 .40)

.

burgh.·
·
·
·
have any chance to win the foot!&gt;£111
Abo, it waa Philadelphia 40,
fdle this weclrend wert San game," ·Dave said. "We're never
San Francisco 8; Arizolla 17, Min- Diego, the only remaining uilbeat- going to get to the point where
nesota 7; New Enaland 17, ORen en team at 4-0; Denver; Kansas we're JOiDg lD win a fOOiball game
Say 16; New Orleans 27, New City; and lhe I,.os Angeles Raiders. if we make :he mistakes thai we
York Gianll 22; Chicago 20, BufDolpblait 23, Bell pis 7
· do."
q
falo t:J; Atlanta g, Los Aaaeles . At Cincinnati and on national
An ll•yard .,.s to Keith Byan
Rams 5; Indianapolis 17, Seattle cable relevison; the Benpls (O.S) and a 4-yarder to Mark Ingram
IS; Cleveland 27, New YcrltJeu 7; cot ~g quickly, tben faded.
tlisJiligltted Marino's night. He was
and Tampa Bay 24, Dclroit 14. .
' You can't spot the Miami Dol· zttror-3Hor 204 yards.
Tonight, Houston ·visits Pitts- pbins ftv.e turnovers and expect to
(See NFL oo Pace 6)
•

By
FLAM
·
In other top 10 games Saturday,
.
No. 1 FlOrida 38
for the l.ongboms (3-1).
Washington 37
Associated Preas Writer
No. 1 Aorida beat Mississippi 38.
.
Mlsslllslppl14
No.6 Arizona 30
UCLA 10
Colorado bas won its last two 14, No.. 2 Nebraska strug&amp;led past
TllrfY Doan threw for 292 yards
Oregoa St.10
Napoleon Kaufman's careergames at the end, and Alabama .. Wyoming 42-32, No. 4 Penn State a11d four touchdowns, and th.e
Tbe Beavers (1-3; 0-1 Pac-.10) tugh 227 yards rushing, highlig~ted
koeps winning when Jay Barker beAt Temple 48-21, No. 6 Arizona Gaton (4,0, 3-0 SEC) ~on. thetr ran. (or 18~ yards, the most aptnst by a 79-yard run, helped Washmg·
starts.
beat Oregon State 30-10, No.8·' closest game yet by ~nunumg to An~o~a 1R 28 games, but Dan ton (3-1, 1-1 Pac-10) ~t UCLA
One woek after the Miracle at Notre Dame beat Stanford 34-JS hold~~ ~~less tn the second Wh~te s thr~ tQuchdown passes (2-3, 0-2) for the ftrSt ume smce
Michigan, the Buffilloes ~kept and No. 10 Texas .A&amp;M topped half. Mississt~t (2-3, 1-3) had 46 amed the Wildcats (4.0, 2.0).
1989.
fans in suspense. lltey wwted until Texas Tech 23-17.
yards after b(llftirne. .
No. 7 Micltlpn 1.9, Iowa 14No. 13 Miami 24, Rutgers 3
one second remained beforaNeil
Also in the Top 25, No. '12
· No.1. Nebraab 4Z
Tyrmc Wbcatley had 182 yards
Ouis T. Jones's 82-yard touchVoskeritcbian kicked· a 2...-yard Washington beat UCLA 37-10, No.
Wy~IDg 31.
on 35 rushes 11!14 three fteld ~s down receptton and 116 yards m
- fteld goal, giving No.5 Colorado a 13 Miami beat Rutgers 24-3, No._ . _Brook Ber_nnger. replaced by Remy Ham~ton hel~ _Micbi- pe~al~es against ~utgers b~lped
34-31 victDryoverNo. 15 Texas.
14 North Cliro!ins edged Southern tnJured Tommte Frazter for the . san-.(3-1,1.0 Btg Ten) wtn Its 13th Miamt (3-1, 1.0 Btg East) wtn tts
Colorado c.oach Bill McCarmey Methodist28-24, No. 16,0klahoma Conibuske~ (5:0u ran for throe stratgbt conference C?J'Cner. Iowa 67th straight against an ~nranked
could deal without all the ex~ite- beat Iowa Stale 34.(), No. 17 Ohio touchdowns tn h_is JU:!t careers~ &lt;2:3, ().2),_ ~ 7-3 tn the second • opponent The_ S~let ~tghts (2) ment, except that created by the State held off Northwestern 11·15, then spent !he rugbt m the hospttal ql!8flCI', ~dn I ,make B!IOther lint 3, 1-2) lost thetr third stratght.
317-yard rushing performance of No. 18 North Carolina State,beat with a partially collapsed left lunj!. down until late m the lhird
No. 14 North Carolina 28.
Rashaan Salaam.
Georgia Tech 21-13, No. 20 Vir- The Cowboys (2-3) led 21· 7 late tn
No.I Notre Dime
Southern Methodist 1.4
· .
Slalll'ord 15 ·
Backup Mike Thomas' 67-yard
"I'll take a boring win anytime. ginia Tech lostlD No. 21 Syracuse . the ftrst lullf.
I feel like I've a~ed 10 years in 28-20, No. 22 Washington State
No.4 Penn St. ill .
do Ron Powl~u:wF~ to~ !Duchdown pass to Octavus Barnes
.
Temple Z1
wn passes
tg g .
with 12:17 left gave tbe Tar H~ls
seven days," satd McCartney, lost 10.9 to Tonnessee,-No. 23 Colwhose team bas three consecutive orado State beat New Mexico 38Ki-Jana Carter had 1?8 a!l:pur- (4-1) scored 24 ~-half polll:ts (3·1) the lead, but th'etr ftfth
victories over nnked teams (No. 24 31 and No. 24 Wisconsin lost 29- n*se yards. before leav,ng wtth _a to end Stanford 1 two-game_ wm turnover almost cost them. SMU
Wisconsin, No. 7 Michigan and 10 tO MichiRan State. Utah moved , illlocated nght thumb, and Freddie streak a~ Notre J?ame Stadtut;n. (1-4) recovered a fumble on t.ts 38,
Texas).
.
into the poll at No. 25 during off Scott caught three touchdown pass- Powlus htt IO of his first II passes but hurt .t~lf ~th two penalties on
Barker, often oyer!ooked for the week.
es for Penn State (S.O). Temple (2- to outduel Steve Stenstrom, who lhe ensumg dnve.
Crimson Tide, improved his record
On Thursday night, No. 9 2) led6.() after the ftrstquarter.
threw for 360 Y~ 0 two touch- -·
. No.16 Oklahoma 34 ·
to2K-1-1 asastarter,throwing.for 'AubumbeatKentucky41-14.
No.5Colorado34
dQwnsforlheCardinsl(l-2-1). •
IowaSt6
.
396 yards in No. II Alabama's 29Two teams dropped out of the
. No.l6 Texas 31 .
No.JO Texas A&amp;M Z3
The Sooners ran for a season2K vtctory over Georgia. And even rankin s Soulhern Cat. which wiiS
Salaam's 317-yard perfOflllance
· Texas Tech 17
high 334 yards to beat Iowa State
with Barke~· s performance, one No. 1~. 'lost 22-7 to Oregon, and was lhe biggest ever against Texas,
Rodney Thomas scored the go- for t~e 32nd time in the past ~
· that has been topped once in sc~ool Illinois, which was No. 25, Jost22- ar.d Colorado (S.O) also got three .abead touchdown with 6: II to play. meebngs. O~lahoma (3-1, 1.0 Btg
history, 'Alabama needed a fteld 16 to Purdue.
touchdown runs f~om- Herchell
E1ght) outgamed the Cyclones (0-5,
goal irl the final two minutes to
No. 3 Florida State and No. 19 TroubDan. Lovell Pinkney caught
No. 1l Alabama Z9
0-1) 460-231. '
·
Kansas SUite were idle.
two touchdown passes from Shea
Georgia 28
No.17 Oblo St.l7
• ·win.
·
.
•Nortbwestern 15
In effort to end NHL labor ddute,
· ·
Eddie George ran fbr 206 yants.

I • -

.,

-

s.ry Switzer said.

·Colorado .tops Texas in last second; Al_
abarila edges Georg1a

s..

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t9 ,
110

JIM
127
67
90

BowJ:iaa 0... 31,
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lollobilla 29,1owa 14
lllclliPn 51.29, WilconlioiO
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Noboub41W,.......32
Nooada :15, N. 1WacU Jl
34, Slaaf&lt;td I!
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W. llliooU 24, S.llliaoia 21
w. MidUpo 24,10nt 10
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.

last two Super Bowl seasatis - . too. We were just the beat.r team." and Shula's Dolphins beat Cincin"Once the game was 00. there
nati;~~ b~ ~son. Dave. ·
· was·no thought that ,Dad was ~e
· AtCJDCIIUiatl, tn lhe first profes'- opposing coach," -D11ve aatd.
sional match of father and son as ''There were too.IIUIDY other things
heail coaches, the old man got his to think about"
331st victory, 23-7. Dan Marino
The CoWboys weren't thinking
threw for two touchdowns for much ofTurner aa lhev romped to
Miami (4.1).
a 34-7 Victory at W~.
"We needed this one," Don
"They m nota really strong
said "I know Dave ~ it bad, football team," new Dallas coach

In Top 25 college football action,

Mldwat .

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·'

.

Dolphins beaf Bengars 23~7; Cowboys hammer ~edskin$

Monday, October 3, 1994

Browns hand·N.Y. Jets 27-7 setback
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) ·- These
Cleveland Browns haven't ye~
inspired 'lilY nicknames or flgUied
out !heir personality.
.
They'_re not lhe Dawgs. They're
not the Kanliac Kids.
'ftley're just winners.
Eric Metcalf scored on~ of
Cleveland's three rushing touchdowns and Eric Turner had an
interception, a sack and helped
force a fumble Sunday as the
Browns beat the Jcts27-7.
Cleveland improved to 4-1 for
the f~nt time since 1979- back
before they were the Dawgs, baclc
when the Kardiac Kids were in
their infancy. The Dawgs made it
to three AFC champiolisbip gama
in lhe 1980s but never started better
than 3-2.
ThrouRh frve R&amp;mes this year,

. Pomeroy ..dclllport, Ohio

I

6
'1
' I
~

'

10
II

,By MIKE HARRIS
• NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
~AP) - Even Geoff Bodine knew
Jt wasn't much of a show as be
raced away to a seemingly effortless victory' in the Tyson-Holly
parms400.
.. Bodi
'd
.: "Hey, wake up,
ne S8l
II'
a loud voice as he entered the
~ortb Wilkesboro Speedway press
box after Sunday's race. "I know I
· to4aY•" '
)vas bonng
•
,; · The race migh~ have put many
In the -crowd estimated by track
"fficials at 54,000 - a North
v
d
- d ·
.Wilkesboro recor - IR\0 oze
mode on the warm, gloomy afterJtoon. Bodine's FQrd 11tunderbird
led 33 s Of the 400 laps, including
ft
1be ftnal :Wl trips around the ve· '
~igblhs-mile oval.
. "That was pretty sweet," Bod·
iDe said. "It's not too often you can
""" a Winston Cup race and lap the
A:.a..•t start .... race
· with
ft"'tcl~·d We ........
""'
"that intention. We just startecYhe

Bodine's third of the season and
the 17th of his career.
. One thing that helped Bodine
run away from the rest of the 36·
car fteld was the fact that lhe flnt
328 laps were run under the green
- ~;We came to the front (from ·18th at the start) pretty quick,"
a· odt'ne said·. "Once we lOt out
and 1
· front, there were no r,eUows
was thWring it wiiS.li;ke two years
· ..._ ·1
..,_ ID .... Motor
-ago w•..,.. was-,,..., . ""'
craft car and would ·have be~t
everybody by a lap if Mark Mirtin
hadn'tgotpastmeL~~Wiheend.
"We ended up a lap ahead
:II
t,
before the f~nt ye ow came ou .
and that was a lucky ~ for us
+- bad fO( tile other guys: '
· Terry Labonte, who won the
·
North Wilkesboro and
April race ll
flilisbed second Sunday. said, "We
. ·~Ot outrun. Our
WIS really
on longer LUllS, but I guess the •
• 7 (Bodine) was, too."
·
Rick Mast equalled bis .best

'*

ADVIL IBUPRoFEN
TABLE'fS OR CAPLETS
SO'S

419

229

RITE AID TOOTHPASTE · 99~

BAKING SODA 5 OZ.

TARTAR CON'TML.

SOFT. MEDIUM OR ANGLED

.

·=l~R~449
OR NIGHT·f a CQLD 20'S

ORAL·B ArNNffAGE
TOOTHBRUSH

·

IMODIUM A·D

CAPLETS

.

FLUOAMINT OR F\.UORIDE 6.4 OZ.

311

ROBITUSSIN
COUGH FORMULA
OM, Cf. PE OR f'ED4olllRIC
40Z.

12'5

2"
•

flAY NOT BE IWAILABLE IN oiiU STORES

Ph o to Ce nter ·········~···~········

..•....... ~ •...................•.........•.............................

aDIET
COKE .
oz. CANS
11 Plt.CANI

COKE
12

COKE • DIET COKE
to OZ. Nllh PI(.

•

·-

$2 9§
$2 5
99
•

·

COKE. DIE'fCOKE
2UTER -

•

I

•

.

-

•

··
89
IOZ.
~~·
n.•• Vftl,.•·.•.••call1=100. 4-&lt;DRUGST_o,.s

HERR'S POPCORN

...:ll W. fiOfiiiCIH-fiiEAIIIOEMlB) PAOOUCTS ONL"V.

.

lWiso goOd." ,
-an
·~try~to-~lhe~WIS
~-~-~·~~- ~~~~~~~~~~~----~-·
1_::- ·The win was the 45-year-o,d ~-~~by~-inth~
followed by Rusty W aco.
. ~-~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~·~
• --· -·----'-'-~
--~--~· - - -- -~- ·-~,----,---'--·
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-~

�Pamero,-ddleport, Ohio

Sta·gnant .Steelers·.to take on
'f.resh-faced Oilers tonight

t
I

mew·

lri8l:i.

Gilbert. outdue~s Floyd to win
Vantage -Championship title

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138

Jess' Complete
Auto Upholstery

New Owners.

A

few~ en~

~'"::::playoffs~~~

. ',;

·r:========r-=========r========:-r:========'

· ·said, "we'll never kno:N. I do
know, this, thougb - there would for next season's ·
lionttact ·
bayc been 50,000 people there llld talks.
~ ifbow'rmls
we, .would have been celcbta,,ting,
· ·" I tiit't IIY'b)"IIOW much" die' gctung ready for the·playof&amp;.
s~: ConN
. o need to worry ilhout that
Instead, he is parking in New
...-.....
~..-•""
"'800
y L
•
...._
sultanta aaid SllR.~ay. "I don't ·· now, or the 669 games ·""-"'
or.., trym'
to·'"""'
up WI'th th.e
blow ·bow'ri~-'bueball 'or hock- million the owneri ~n~ players labor negouatiolls between base...,,~· .J.•.aJiv·iJo lad 1' don't have poured dO'!'iR the drain. AlrCidy, ball's owners·llld pla~. And the
ilin~ to~ at the ' handle. The thereareotherthinga"!ldelldto.
talks between hockey s owners and
foo..,.u ·~le, Qocl bless 'em;
"As soonu lhlrlfril!olllrfll!l, I playcrs.Forthetimcbeil1g, howev·
~ve tile "OIICI ringing off the wt.~~t outMd ~ fOI!r of,OIJt er, ~Youmetcrdoni;'t~~two·g;,.,.,..•to
llbot.", . i · .
minor league tea~~!•· ~ betwp,n, ~..-',. _ The IIUeball ~ ,says I've been 1111 FDI 10 .,._JI'IIIUOIIS go out at the IITIC time because it's
' . . ofhillrlcndl ba~ l!!lt their all over tho place; And~.:· never happened tief!R. But wheO it
jc!bl,;ploblbly rot.
lf saddens Lasorda said, "I'm 800!111? M· does, you'd better·not complain. ·
· hlm, li!lehoeoldierlon. f ,-.,,' • •
zona to look fl tome lids m tbc Bccauac the last thinuxsople Wlllt
: '' 'Just the ·othl!f'lliy· ~a guy inslructiOinalleliQeo
, ·". . •
•
to liear," Reich aid, 'II someBody
1 1
..
'
h
· lainin'g. "
...ho'd been uoand for 25 'JCUS • - Tbc agent '!'ill c ·~nts m e1se comp
,. laid
a !lOtqJ!e of my iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiioiifiill.lli'iiil.liiiiliiiioiiiiiili!illiiliiiiioiiiii••••
...iii-·'i·:._i
ii i i io.l"l!i"iii
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h!t~go~.
B~ut
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..
,.(o••let
I;'
1
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I

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1

Public Notice

STATBIEiiT OF
RemuurL Truet- OIW
OWNERSHIP=
R
C. P•oe, One RockMANAGEMENT
In
m Rd.,
8C
AND
:
Kray I eo.. One ActRCUI.AliON
nenctalfl*e,440 .. LISalle
1. TltleoiPublklllllon:llle St., Ohloego, IL- lotO.!S;
Deity llndnll, Plllllloltlo• GenftMILIIIIISIIIBI, 201
No.14WIO..
.
=:.'.III.RCL,~¥111e,8C
a, ~teo1FIIng:OqtoW
'L,..,..holllngnotooln
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Dllr-rthrOulhfrldav&gt; ln••btdllllu._.oiAIMI• .:_~,"!..', ,........
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'IDe, !llllk 'ol Wlomll. ~
___ _
Bank ol HlnH, r.ntt ot
B. "Annul •r•urlplll•
YOlk,
Pllol:ee&amp;IOIIilllell.ltwM.
llootll,...,..
4. Loo•art ol KMwl Qt. - Trull COI!It*lr. lllllqUI
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&amp;lfonj1110ourt·
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t:::'i::.*oltllw

Corelt&amp;ltooPh~Na!

llonll~a.tiU,Onnlll.
er..
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PUblic Notice

Public Notice

•
,.

j

CorPoniiH, CICNA In- . AQenta: 41L
- - · 11111., I!Aiul•llle
G. 10111: 11,100. .
en1

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Aotuel No. Copl•• oi l
Compar .1ohniii8MC!flll!l- llngleliMIPub..Md,._.
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10. Ellllnt 111111 neture ot ;
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•
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A. Totel No. Copt.. :

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Colllplnr or , end c-ter lllel: 4,7AG. 1
Amlrlol, T_..,alneunonoit
UldllullealpllaiM:ftL i
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C. Tollll'lrki,Ciroutetloll: '
Amlttoll:'lliiTm••"'- S.IIIIL
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D.fnlllladutlaab!fllll •
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•
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I'.CoiiiMNotlllalrlluted:
Prlntld:l,lllll.
·
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I. PlliiCinnil&amp;l~n~ ·
Unuuunlld, lpolad Aller:

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111411 ~,_

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Otno.ollheilllulrlllt.w:111 a.ntloiChlaiiiiO,PintUnlon
eoun 11. Ponlwor Ohio, NellonetlllnlloiNortiiCirollllgleoUntr...,.,:
llncluetrllllllllll ol...,
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LTCI Truet Coin1...... lwollgll O..llrVPrlnllna: 114.
.
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Wlnglft; l.rraeu"'-' Olllo fiiiiJ,IIWionlllnll,ll• ilillhl ~~~~~~~Yondor8
2, llottuma lroM N41we •
•1111. Edfior: CIHrt'lene TnlillfiiiiMIIO~DII, N!dCii!Unllrlllfjj:4,1M,. ' Agailta:ll1.
·
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t.lllll~nlfpl!o:l-.
G. ToW:I,IOO.
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•••&amp;::: eo• ._..,, .---=~
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Public NotiCe .

.__ _.,._;.,

:· ·ca..w-..tLC.-.
· , ......, u... ....... ...,. ....., "-Ciptll=•· .. (10)1,1...:1TC .
7. l'lrrlfle lul•nc 1 !!' -~N.A.,IwrJta•a , E, Tolll Dleltlbullon: .
·•.lllllnll
o.il'or .... olout~..nrl!fllll llnll,Ud'!.follllllllllc,Ud~ · l,oaa;' '
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F.CoDIIINot ...trlniJ IJ

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C.U JOt 11•1144 Ill IIIII. • - CadeiCo.,'d o•O.,ul ·UnlonBink,Wiehovlllllllll
1. Oftlal 'lllo .._.ON, Guor4AptltHitftl'rlces
...... of AIIH PN &amp; ) ...,....... PPO .
Tru~ ::.:-..: ;J;:hU.'!r, C::~~~~· .'!~ii =~: ~~~ lpalld Aller Ure The l:lcJSrlf/ed Sect,!Oft
. '·" ... :r.· ...~:'·: .,:1 1 ---~~:_==;_--·'··, ·,. .~-~-.__~ 1~~~~ P:_ Cllelnl,~:~o.n:
:L_:.•:':n•~lro=·=·~N=:ew::,·~·_::~=:::::::::~~:__
'

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chain

EVE~Y THURSDAY

EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:4&amp; p.m.
Spticlal e.r1y Bird

Come see

us at ... ·

Bolol'lt p.m. ...,. rnNIIIge.. '

Alfitr • p.m.
614-885-41.10..,.:.

1112411121in

'

MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury Rd . · 2 stqry frame home
on 5 acres . Home includes 3 bedrooms. 1 bath,
double· hung windows. carpet &amp; wood flooring ,
N.G.FA heat , c &amp; S electric, LCJ;O water, partially
remodeled and free gas. ASKING -$3~00

I •MIDtirLEIPOI~T. · Two unit Apartment building. both
un~s currently rented! Great rental opportunity! Good
monthly income. ASKING $13,000
MID!i&gt;LEPORT · Locatecl on 6th Street · · 1 112 storv
frame with 2 bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, gas heat,
fireplace . An older home with lots of possibilities, in a
very good location. ASKING $19,900 .
HYSELL RUN RD. · Lovely 1 1/2 story frame home
with 3·4 bedroom! , 2 baths, 27 + acres with free gas,
large deck 2 car garage, 52~ 40 barn. pond, pasture
&amp; hayfleldmostland fenced . Home is well taken care
of wllh hardwood &amp; carpet flooring , central air and an
unusually deep flrepl!li::e. ASKING $89.5o.Q .
HENRY E. CLELAND, ....................................... 992·6191
TRACY BRINAGER. ............................ ................ 949·2439

SHERRI HART.............. .. ... . . .. . . ......... 742-2357

HENIW E CLELAND 111 .......... ,................... :......... 992·6191
KATHY CLELAN0 .......... .. '................... ......... ........ 992·6191
OFFICE :................................ .....................-'. .992·2259

. H (

,,·

. ·' 4

• Custom Made

• Solid vinyl

•vtsrr OUR SHOWROOM"
,.,

flOW SJAiflfiG
Forked Ru•
Sportsma•
Gw• Club

BooutlluiAuttraAan

4

IIM7.
SonaM .... l Whit - . I

·11105

~·

Evening~ By Appt.

·

Envuoflamc of:=:_

s•oot

Wotko01d,I14-4*Z2113. '
Trot Blown Down ·You Haul

Awoy,l14-441-01137.

tlcating; Inc.·

Pellet Stoves

12 Gauge

386 State Rt. 160

Only

On
Colta&lt;
w.......
ii1.iM
IIMT.

!Jill: 11gof

949-2038
949·2749 .
l,.lc. No•.0182-27

TOP SOIL,
FILL DIRT,
LIMESTONE
992·3838

Now open for Fall
Season
Wed. lhN Sat 9·5
Specializing:
Dried Materials
Pot pourri supplies
Herbal Crafts

"1 11'"

•

The object of the
complaint Ia to obtain a
divorce !rom you end the
demand 11 that uld Plaintiff
be granted a divorce from
.
you; lhlt I 11110n1bl1 '
dlvlelon Ql the paraon•L
property be made; thaia '·
11110n1ble dlvlelon of the
marltel debta, II ·any, ba
Howard
meila; 1nd lor auch olhtr
12
Gaige
Excavating Co.
relief 11 may' be proper In .,
· law and/or 1qully be
Factory C~oke Oily
nulldtl/tiHJ &amp; B.:lckho('
grented.
1
St"VIt'l"
.Basltal B111diag
You 111 required lo
Comp \'lr_- H 0 ti'~·L' &amp;
1n1wer the complaint within
1128184
Tr :11le r S1te~
lwenty..lghl (28) daya alttr
[)rl\:er.'.1V':. ~·· plr r
1~1 laal publication of thla
S l" · l•.·n ~ -- \'.' '"'' ~ S · ·~-: t· r
notice, which will ba
D. lEARY'S
t Ill•' L md ctc. nm q
pubfllhld once each Wllk
TrtiC~IIlC llllli' C- h ) IH' r.
AnOIODY
lor IIX IUCCIIIIve Wllkl,
J,\1 011 1 T0 p ~o il
end the lltt publication will
1192-2CKNI
111',h&lt;'
ll.tl'k R.th' o.
be mida on Octofla·r 24,
ISO l'lgelt., •drl1p art
! .' tIll\ - tit "
19M.
.
F_IEI......_
:Fr2.Jfl3H
In paaa of your llllura to
7121Ain
enawtr or otherwllt
11111011d 11 permmlll by the
Ohio Rulli ol . Civil
NEW TRAVEL • . WHALEY'S AUTO
Proce•ura wbhln the ·tloiit
eteted, judgement by
PARTS
AGENCY
default will be rendered .
SpeclaHzlng In Cuatom
.egelnal you lor the relief
Rlverbend Travel
demllldld In the complllnt.
Fr11111 iiop.Ir
l.lnrE.Spe-,
· Adventures
lEI I USED PARTS FOR
Clark ollhe Court ol
Common
ALL IIUES IIIODELS
Pl.-a, Melg1 County, Ohio 701 Art Lawls St.
h2·7fUOR
,Courlhbu•iWeotSMond . Mld!'Jieport, Ohio
Slrlll'
tt2-65U OR
POIIIII'O!f, OhiO 45711
' 45768
TOLL fREE 1..0W41olt11
ly: ........ HI.,..,
•
'Deputy
• DARWIN, OHIO
Cll It, 2t:
· 7131111 TFN
(10) 3, 10, 17, 24; lTC

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
.SAT., 6:30 P.M.

Phone: 99!·6926

__________
,.
I

killen (tiNy,

nd all~ 304-f75.

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
5 Family: Home loll...,,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

::::-:..e c:vr

-CalMICIJon

.....

'1: ...

=· ~- VlrglM,-

Clolll-

lng, S.1art Jeep, - . . . .
Olhtr lilac....... 41 , _ Kanauga, 3nl, 4...

5 Forily: 1.111 On t..ft,
On Glllla
Counly((no, 110
T
Wllkvlll&amp;.
1t7l llallbu
$7!0: - · 1011, 1012, 1013, '1014,

Crr't!W2tfn

614-247-4035

2mo.

8

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENTER SERVICE
oRoom Addition•
oNewGar111111
oflectrleala Plumbing
-Rooting
&lt;Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting aleo concrete
·
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Co•ilie'sOitlo
River H•rlts •••
Everlasti•1•

It
114-4*-

old. ~
fiN colll&lt;loutth S1 l llalft\

Aow11d II
23111.

Delivered
Locally

ca1,-

~~~~~~~~

~' White),

Starting Sun. Oct.

8th Racine Legion
Post 1602 8:45 pm .
Thll.ld good for 1

pt, Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

!Jill: Daa, Flmtlr ..... Ton a w~ 0..0-

wiNIIIIonwlde lne.
Galllpolll, Oh.
446-7400
800-757-PEU.ET
.
7366

BINGO

_,

-~·.~

.:~Jre,
old,
wiohlldnn, 1 brown 1 b1w op.
304475-1134.

molo,

&amp;:"'~... c~~ ~
L-9~92:,-4.;.1~1.:.9.;;AI;.;;"'-:.::::.Ow;.;;;:ler::·~1~·8;;.0o-;..;.;29;.;.1·..;,S.;.60;.;.0_, · Trolned,
W......- o.-, .,..._

EvtrySu•dar
1:00 P.M.·

RONALD DIGANGI, WHOSE
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS ·
COUNTY, OHI,O
Courthou11, W11l Second ..
St111t, Pomeroy, O~lo 45769
Kenneth• t;llgangl,
Middleport, OH 45760,
Plaintiff
Cell No. 94-DR·38
Va.'
Ronald Olgangl, whose
ftlldence 11 unknown,
Defendant
Pl'lntiH haa brought lhlt
action naming you •• the
Defendant In lhe abcive nemed court by filing" her
. complaint on February 28,

••

3 llanlh Old Lab 1111, Ftmllo,
All Blldl, To -,
I--44Z!I.

110 Court St. Pom9tc;:, On.o ·
"Look for. the Red and White Awning"

IIZeiH

·Factory

814-2lf6.14U.

• $200 Installed
Call For Details

12GwgeO.Iy
Umlled: 740
lackhre, 680 Fro11

Gu•

QOILift WIIIIW IYI!IMI

window a
I Free Eatlmates

6:30P.M.

NOTICE

POMEROY . Old Union Ave. · Thos One family frame
home which is part of 3 lots has 2 bedrooms, slate
·roof and ~ouble hung windows. ASKING $9.500 .00
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!!

Goad Counlry - . Yen And
Whllo, U11ar Tralnod. hWG5573.

· replacement

UCINE
GUN ClUB
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS

TO THE DEFENDANT,

SYRACUSE . Roy Jones Rd . · 1968 Windsor Mobile
home 12 x 60 with a 10 x 10 added on room. Unit air,
F.A.F.O. heat Syracuse water, range, refrigerator and
hood . Approx. 8 acre lot. ASKING $12:000

YardSale

saw.

2 llllad loaalll, , . ...... 1
F..-, I Weib Old, Wormed,

FREE clrd.
Lie. No. 0051-342

•

7

Tllrl the pain out ol
painting. .... Ill cia It 1M
you. VWr r-...lt.
Fno E'ltllllltM

This lei good for 1

'

Anno unee rne nt s

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

llttrlor &amp;
bterlor

$100Piyoff

1814.

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

11 W•k Old IIIII Killin. .._.

Public Nollce

MIDDLEPORT · Located on S. 5th Street ·This 1 112
story frame home features 3 bedrooms,,.tamily room,
living room , kitchen with offoce area, utohty area, buoll
in book shelves. ceiling' fans, central air, NGFA heat,
nice front porch, also back &amp; side porches. C~ment
walks, privacy fencing and lull basement. Cute place
lots of room! ASKING $28,000

...

..,.\

FREE CARD

SYRACUSE · Nice 4 bedroom, 2 bath frame ranch
style home with ceiling ~tadianl heat , back patio area,
shed hardwood floor and carpeting, attic space, unit
air. cable hOok -up .. 30 acre. Located at Rustic Hills.
· neighborhood. ASKING $39,500

-......
,.., _.......,.,
B.,.._,..
•.,froa

PIINnNG &amp; CO.

addre11 ol the bidder and
the name ol the pro(tcl .
ahell alao be Indicated. •
Drewlnga and Bid
Document• mey be
obtained lrom the Archllacl
at 328 Front Strnl Merlotll,
Public Notice
Ohio 45750 lor 1 refundable
dapoalt ol.$10.00. • Frenklln lnd labor and . mlttrlll
payment bonda, In a form
Q. LH (814) 373-81141.
All propoula mol\ IIIIIIICiory lo.lhe Owntrt
contain a 1111 of propoaed In the emounl of 100% ol
aubconlraclora, and be the contract amount,
accomp1nled by bid guarontHing tho aucce11lul
·aacurlty In the form ol 1 completion of the work bid
aurely bond or certified upon and payment of 'all
check In the amount oliO% obllgetlona · arlalng
ol the bid. Failure of any therefrom.
Bidders are advlaed that
bidder to enter Into and
executa 1 conlrect lor lha thla , project Ia aubject lo
work covertd by lha prevailing wage roloa and
propoeal he h11 aubmmed, the payroll reporting
ahell cauaa 1111 bid aecurlty requirement• of Section
to become lorlellad by the 4115 of lht Ohio Revlaild·
bidder to lhl Owner AS Code bllld on tho
liquidated d81MQH end not aat1m111d colt ol
11 • penalty beoau•• of renovation.
auch failure on the pert ol The Owner rttervea the
the bidder, Bleil lillY not be rlghl 10 ICCIPI any bid, to'
wlthdrewn leal than 45 dl!fl Welu eny or all
lnlormaHtlea In blda end/or
alter eubmltted.
.
Each bidder ahall, )n the to reject any or all bldl 11
event he Ia the accapltd th•lr dlacrlllon.
Harold H. Blockaton
bidder, lurnlah perlormano•
Prelldtnt ol the Bcnrrd ol
Dlrtetora
Real Estate General
TUPPERS,PLAINS·
CHESTER WATER DISTRICT
(i) 21, 25; (10) 3; 3TC

992-2259

(No Sundly Calls)

LINDA'S

BINGO

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Slated propoaala lor the
lurnlahlng ol ell meterlalt
end performing aN labor lor
thaartetlon ol:
OFFICE RENOVATION
FOR
TUPPERB PLAINS·
CHESTER
WATER DISTRICT
3t!i411 BAR 30 ROAD
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
Bille will be received by
1\lppera Plelna·Cheller·
Wlter Dlllrle1 II 38581 Bar
30 Roed, Raedevllle, Ohio
45772, until 2:00 p.m.,
prevailing local time,
ThuNCia~ OC1ober 8, 19M,
end · opened publicly
lmmedletely therulter
Propoqla mey be delivered
or l'!'lled. 11 melled, 11nd
vii I'WI!IIt•red mall In tUne
for th• blil ilplnlng.
A alngle propo11l will be
received lor the enllll
project which will Include
the work of 111 tndll.
Eillmeltd Total Pro)ecl
$27,340.00
Coli
Bidder• to dallgnalt on
the envelope thai It It 1
111led bid. The nama and

OFFICE

614-992·7643

Weedeat~&amp;

PubliC Notlet!

Public Notice

, _
1

7

-

.

FREE ESTIMATES

Complete Chalu
Saw Service &amp; Parts
Echo Saw's in llloek
Christmas Layaway
Available on

Pom.oy, Oh. 45711

114-1112-7587

COMMERCIAL and REsiDENTIAL

a car.

. 949-2804

414M8Wct.Acl

Due to . recent eJCpansion, iwo COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTOR positions available to
teach community and personal skills to an adult
with learning limitations in Meigs County.
HOURS: (1) 40 hrslwk (live-in); 6:30 ·8:30am;
3:30 . - 9:30 pm, M·F; sleep-over required;
vacation/insurance benefrts; (2) 32 hrslwk '(Jivein); 10 am Sat. thru 8:30am Men; sleep-over
required; vacation benefrts. Various skill11 and
talents needed. High school degree, valid driver's
licens&amp;, good driving record, three years licensed
driving experience, and adequate automobile
insurence coverege required. Treining provided.
Salary: $5.00/hr, to start. If interested contact
Cecilia at 1-800-531-2302 no later than 10/6194.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

· · New Hornet • VInyl Siding New
Garages e Rtplacernant Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting ·

Mower Clinic

ONr 211 y.,. EJq»tfent»

·WANTED:

BISSELL IUilDEIS, INC.

RACINE

Hlldlllllrl, Cuatom
s.t eo-a c.rpot
Convortlbll Topa,
. A!rtlque Clll'l,
Bolt Seoll

1

- 111ae ~ •Y. ·be and
his tobOru wili ... to make do,

Bill Slack
992·2269

-·-

· Steaks, Sandwiches
Open Daily 7 am • 8 pm
Sundays 7 am • 5 pm

Bookmakers, advertisers finding
ways around current strikes.

° '

-Shrubl Shapped
and Removed
Mia. Jobs.

Reiso••ltR•te•
loei.S.yre '

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i

Ugflt Hauling,

~

• ' Win
•
Shu.a h a. ·• D0 l.PhInS
• t son 's cIub. .behIn
• d hlm
•·
a'"BinS

New Mason Family
Restaurant
Home Cooked Meals
.Dally Specials

TRl.,ING

AND REMOVAL -

Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal

-

a

TR~E

HAULING

-

NFL,action..._:_&lt;c_on~_·nued_fro_mPag--=-e__.:_5)--~--

/·

~

By ALAN ROBINSON
Dishman said.
"Any time lhe Oil~ play lhe
, PITISBUROH (AP) - This
An equally emotiOnal S~lers Stcclcrs it's a big game, if they're
J!Ued like one .of those can't-miss linebacker Greg Lloyd tried to 4.() or 0-4," Steelers safety Darren
:Mondays: lhe Houston Oilers and same tact following a dismal3().13 Perry said. "It's always one of
:tile Jiittsburgh Steelcrs, who never loss in Seattle last week, saying a those p,mes you circle on your cal&lt;4ven p-etend to like one another, in team called 11 Super Bowl con- endar. '
;a gam~ lhat often decides a division tender by some should begin play. So are Monday night games. ·
·title.
ing like one.
The Steclers were 3.() on Monday
: Instead, Monday's game may
"We have to start playing every last season and are 4-0 in prime
.determine only whether the stag· down (ticked) off,'' Lloyd said: ' time under coach Bill Cowher. The·
·nant Steelers (2-2) ·or the you- "You have to be (ticked) off from 'Oilers have won five of !heir last
:can't-tell-us-without-a-scorecard the fii'SI. play, like somebody stole seven on Monday, but most were
'Oilers (1-3) emerge as one of lhe your lunch, stole your money, with Moon at quarterback.
'
:NFL'sbigscstearly-season flops.
broke into your house. That's how
"You can't even compare
· "We've had some problems," you have to play from down one. (Moon and Carlson)," Woodson
·Steclcrs Pro Bowl eornelback Rod When we get everybody playing said. "Warren established himself
Woodson saicL "We've either been this way - offense, defense, spe- in this league on and off lhe field;
terrible or great. We ha~ to put a cial teams- nobody will beat this Cody hasn't. I couldn't even 1hink
whole ~ together, and hopeful· Steeler team."
of putting them on lhe same field."
ly we wtU Monday."
The Seabawks-didn't have to,
The Steelers ·hope to hurry a
Warren Moon has taken his largely allowing the Steelers to banged-up Carlson, who has a bro20,000' yard passing arm to Min· beat themselves as Neil O'Donnell ken nose and a sliD-healing shoul•
nesota, and Sean Jones and threw a career-high four intercep- der, into creating mistakes that
William Fuller and other key ex· tions . Afterward, wide receiver result in good field position for the
• INTO THE CLEAR - Cincinnati running Dolphlna won 23-7 in the llrst fatber-8on coaching
Oilers are spread across the NFL Andre Hastings complained he's Barry Foster-driven offense.
back
Derrick Fenner (44) breaks into the clear matcbup in major ADI!Ir.Ican professional sporta
map. StiU, more was expected from open but not getting the ball and
The Oilers want to disrupt the
through
the Miami DOlphins' defense during Sun- history. (BW Ross,pboto)
a team that Wo11 its IJ!st 11 regular- tight end Eric Green wondered why unsteady O'Donnell as they did
day nlgbt's AFC game in Cincinnati, where the
season games last year.
he isn't thror.vn to in ker situations.
Cinc~ti 's David Klingler a week
'
'
Without the resurgent Astros to
In other words, it s a typical ago by sacking him seven times
cheer, Houston fans quickly Oilers·Steelers game, excert for · and forcing three turnovers.
jumped off the Oilers' bandwagon, the records: There's plenty o talk- O'Donnell has been intercepted
pointing accusatory fingers at ing before lhe game, and bound to five times in two games.
It was a bittersweet nighi for lhe
WiYilirn Fuller sacked Young the Palriots (3·2) their.third consec·
unhealthy and unproductive quar- . be plenty during it, just as it's been
Does O'Donnell anticipate an · Shlila family.
f01 a silfety. Randall Cunningham utive victory and dropped 6reen
1
terback· Cody Carlson and the since ihey twice met in AFC title unusually hostile reaction from the
'1 was lhe only family member completed 20 of 29 lhrows for 246 Bay to 2-3.
defection-ridden defense.
games.
·
·
normally supportive Steelers cheerin$ for Don, and even 1 have yards and two rouchdowns. Charlie
Green Bay went ahead on RegTht&lt; finger-poin'ting extended
Two years ago, the Steelers crowd?
to adnlllthat when Dave's team Gam~, in his NFL debut, ran for gie Cobb's one-yard run wilh 1:14
"When we lose, I'm going to scored thjlt fii'St touchdown, I was Ill yards and two touchdowns.
even into the locker room, where stole the season opener from the
left Chris Jac:ke never got a chance
cornerback Cris Dishman chal· two-touchdown favorite Oilers in hear it and I shoyld. But we're 2-2, cheering for it," said Mary Anne,
"What happened was we used to kick the . extra point as holder
lenged a Mo[)n~ less offense to the Astrodome and never relin· not 0-4," O'Dolinell said. "It's not who married Don last lear, two our talent like we never used it Craig Hentrich couldn't handle a
~g off its early-season funk and quished momentum in lhe division like I'm out there doing noihing. . years after the death o his first before," Cunningham said. "This low snap by Frank Winters. begin playing like Oilers' wildly race. Last year, the Oilers unseated The liard part was having to wait · wife and Dave's mother, Dorothy.
game should give us respect and it
Then Jacke bungled lhe ensuing
successful offenses usually do. .
the Steclers by sweeping the season eight days to .play. I would have
Cowbo 34, Redildris 7
s~.ould be real confidence boost· kickoff, and lhe Patriots marched to
18
"I was trying to ligh_t a ftre," series.
li}.ed to have played this game last
At Washmgton,
the Cowboys er"
set. up Matt Bahr' s 33-yard field
~onday."
.
.
(3· 1) made life miserable for Heath '
The Niners (3·2) sustained !heir goal with four seconds to go.
I
Shuler, Re,$8it Brooks.and Turner.
worst regular-season loss in coach Bahr's line drive was ugly, but effilnnler
Dallas JUMped to a 31-0 half- George Seifert_'s six seasons and cient
"Sometimes ugly looks pretty
I"I"
time lead, $elhng two touchdowns warst ovemll smce a 4~-3. play~ff
from EmiRltt Smith before he left loss at the New York 'chants 10 good," Bahr said of his winning
kick . "I didn't hit one ball good
with a strained haiii,String. Troy 1986.
1
::J
Aikman went 20-for-28 for 181
"Not in my wildest dreams did I today."
•
·
•
"The special teams made too
"The- was," saJ'd Mary Anne 1ards, one touchdown and one think this could happen," San
By DAVE GOLDBERG .
against.his son." ,
ov
mtcrc:cption.
Francisco
safety
Tim
McDonald
many
errors,'' Green Bay coach
CINCINNAT1 (AP) - Every
Mary Anne, who married Don Shula, "a lot of lalt about grandShuler, making his first NFL S&amp;ld.
Mike
Holmgren
said. "That fumweek, after the Miami Dolphins last year. two years after the death children, things like lhaL"
start, completed just 11 passes in
Cardina1sl7, Vlltiup 7
bl,ed snap on the extra point is
play, Don Shula asks someone to of h1s wife Dorothy, Dave's mothThe second meeting was at mid· 31i attempts for 96 yards. Brooks
Finally, a win for BuddyBall.
something we might not ever see." ·
fmd out how the Cincinnati Ben- er, was the only member of the · field before the game·, a staged losttw.o fumbles, setting up 10
Buddy Ryan's Cardinals (1-3)
Saints 27, Glaats ·22
gals did.
S~ula clan rooting for Pop Sunday media event in which the exchange points for the Cowboys, and was got off the scbneid about a month
New York (3-1) was lcnoclced
He didn't have to do lhat Sun- mgbt.
was a series of strained platitudes. ~nched.
.
later~ the c[)81!;h ex~ted. . · ·
from !he u!)beaten ranks ~ leaving
day night when lhe.Dolphins beat , . That's ~use Dave n~ lhe The third was the Obligatory
· 'turner, the Cowboys' offensive. .
''I knew it was going to be the idle Chargers .alone in tha't'Cate~on Dave's Bengals 2j.7 in the · wtn more. His Bengals carne m 0- postgame handshake, again in lhe · coordinator in their last two Super there," Ryan said. "I just: didn't
gory - by an overpowering
fmt-ever meeting between father , 4, carne ~ut ().5.
. .·
middle of the field; the fourth a Bowl seasons, was disappointed in know when. But we beat the best defense. New Orleans, turning back
and son coaches in professional
Dave IS now 8-29 m ·~S career jOint television appCannce after the hia team's lack of intenSity.
team we' vy plared. There's no to the days when it was feared
sports. Don won, but it hardly and ther~ was speculauon last game. ·
"We weren't ready to pll!y;" doubtaboutlhal'
•
defensivelr.. bad seven sacks, and
seemed ~is heart was in it as be week, denied emphattcally by team
"Once lhe game began/' Dave Turner said. "The ball was od'lhe
The Cardinals forced four James Williams had a 93-yard _
spent as much time rationalizing president Mike Brown, that he '!as said. "there was no thought that ground. We weren't physical, we turnovers and yielded just 18 yatds interception return for a toucl!the failings of his son's lC8!JI as about.to be replaced by offens1ve Da!! was. the opposing coach. There weren't aggressive, and lhaJ's what or. the ground.
down.
praising hiS own players.
· ·
coordmator Bruce Coslet, former were too many olher things to think happens, you lose.''
'
''Nobody· runs on us, 110 matter
"We all went out there deter.
"Was this lhe most bittersweet coachofiheNewYorkJets.
abouL"
.
Eagles 40, 49ers 8
where we are. The '85 Bears, the " mined to do whatever it toolr;" ·
win you've ever had?" he was
"Please, Dad. NOt 0-S,'' said a
The first thing to think about
At San Frlncisco, the game was Eagles, the Oilers, nowhere - not
said after his fust-evet
asked.
• .
sian hanaina from the u!&gt;PCf deck wu about the oaly poaiti~ tl!illa , a J1!Ut from the outscL The Eaglca~ even Dallas-next week," Ryail Williams
touchdown.
"I was just out there to
• ~ 'didntt quito answer, butlt. atRiva:t'iUiniS1141um. · · -·' ~,,.
~~~Mill 1liJ"Diive hUla 'Sun~· ·,"Winners of three llfraight Bfter an said.
.'
· '
buy
.time,
and.
the .next lhing I
seemed to be. The bottom line,
Don Shula's will was l)is 33151 day
a 51-yard touchdown opening loss, took advantage of
But Cris Carter bad 14 catches I had the fOotball·and a clear shot at
however, was that emotion ,took a - die most in NFL history - in pass from David Kli.ngler to Dar· Szn Francisco's makeshift offen- ·· for 167 yards for Minnesota (3-2).
lhe end zone."
· backseat to wiming.
_ 496 games over 31 years. He's not nay Scott on the third play of the aive line, eve~~ driving Steve Young
Patriots 17, Packers 16
the Saints (2·3) held lhe Giants
"This is all team. You can't ·about to be replaced by anyone- game.
from lhe game in lhe third quarter.
A wild ending at Foxboro gave -. again playing without injured
ever think about anything individu- not Bruce Olslet. ·not Ji!ftmy John.
"I have to admit that I was
Pro Bowl running back Rodney
ally," Don said "My ~sibili· son, not anyone.
cbeering on lhat first touchdown,"
Hampton - to 202 yards total aRd'
ty is this footblllle4IIIIBid DaVe's
AU lhat made for a strained ram- Mary Anne $hula said.
50
yards rushing.
responsibility .is his footbell team. ily reunion.
.
But it was downhill from !here
Bears 20, BIDs 13 •
He· does the' best job he can and I
· Father and son got together four _: ftve turnovers, two field goals
.
At
Chicago,
lhe Bears (3-2) won
~y to do the best job I can. We times this weekend - the fii'St lhe and Dan Marino's two touchdoW\1
their
second
straight
against AFC
·were just the better team.".
most meaningful, a family barbe· passes made it 20-7 - and Don
CLEMMONS,
N.C.
(AP)
on
the
tour
lhis
season.
"Boy,
is
he
.
East
teams
after
two
embarrassing
But behind the Coac:hSpcak was cue at Dave's house Saturday was opting for a conservative shov·
defeats. Their reversal has come ,
considerable sentimenL ·
. night. The only lhiitg lhat wasn't el pass ·on third-and-9 from the Former cl'ub pro champ Larcy · a competitor.
Gilbert
outdueled·
one
of
golf's
floyd
lOde
a
free
drop
after
hitwith backup Steve Walsh at quar- 1
"It was'a very hard week," said discussed by the Shulas- f . , Cincinnati 15 IIi set up one more
clutch
players
down
the
stretch
ling
his
5-iron
tee
shot
on
lhe
183terback
instead of injured Erik l
Don's wife, Mary Anne. "Emo- son.and~ daughters- was.lhe field goill.
.
Sunday,
taking
advantage
of
a
yardpar3
I61h.holeintolhecrowd.
Kra!fter,
w~o leads the NfL in ~
tionally, it wlis very hard going obviona.lhiilg, footblll.
three-shQl swing on lhe 161h hole His fii'St chip feU shon of the green. passmg _effic1ency.
,
:
to win the Vantage Championship His second stopped,about four feet
But1t's been the defense that .
in record-tying fasllion.
from lhe cup.
,
has made big plays and ~ tile ;
Gilbert shot an 18-under-par
Gilbert pnimptly holed his 25· turnaround. It held lhe Bills to 204 •
1~~ at Ttheang)c~ forthis!J!s I!CC'lnd foot putt from the frinjle for a yards and forced lhree turnovers.
l
wm on .&amp;nia , our
aeason. bifdic avd Floyd lhen m1ssed his
Buffalo (3·2) was without Thur- Jl
His three·consecutive 66s netted putt and took a double-bogey to faU man Thomas, sidelined wilh a knee
hinl-$225,000 in the tour's richest three shots off the lead WIJh two injury.
·
By JIM L1'I'KE
busy as ever."
• ·
bolh baseball and hockey says he is evenL
holes tq,play.
. . Fakons 8, Rams 5
ll
AP Sport~ Writer
But not in the way he expc.c:ted. losing money. Lots of iL
. Gilbert was tied wilh Raymond
''It was like now I've lost the
At Anaheim, Calif., a battle of
The baseball .strike and hockey Had the baseball season played
"But that's the cost of doing flOyd at 17-under thrQugh 15 holes tournament," floyd said about. his substitute quarterbacks went to ,
lockout are threatening to fracture itself out, Sunday would have pit- · business," Tom Reith said from s~y. but it \vas floyd, who has . ilisastrous 161h hole. "I just went Atlanta, -which had its second I
1 woo 30 tournaments in his career
October.
ted } he contenders in all three hia hotel room in New York.
to sleep. 1 hit a terrible pulL 1 dOIJ' t stringer, Bobby Hebert, going
The chill in the air, instead of National League division races
He Planned to attend the Pitts- and is second on golfs all-time even remember hitting it, but you againstthird-sttingerTommy Madbuilding 111ticipation, serves as a apinst one another. The San Fran- burgh Penguins' home openers.-- ~
· lis\, who flopped when it can't do lhaL"
dox of the Rams (2·3).
,
sobering reminder thai one season CISCO Giants, wilh Matt Williams urday and spend some time wilh
most.
.
Dave Stockton firiished tied for
Hebert's 13-yard pass to. Ricq .-:
bas ended ~ly and a sec· perhaps 'stiU in the h = R?6f Mario Lemieux, the most famous
(Floyd) will bring out the lhird with Jim Dent • 201 despite Sanders with 3:14 left was the :
ond may never get Wider way. · ·
Maris' single-season
member of his 20-strong NHL con· best in you, or else,'' said the brealcing the course record wilh a game's only touchdown Starter 1
Still; life goes on even when homers, would h11ve bee!! at · tjngent. Once that season was
· k'
G' lb
h
63
·
·
8
ff.
·
'
, •.
,
. cigar-smo m• 1 crt, .w ose
on Fnday and a carding an - Je George left with a concussion ,
mos.1 of th'e games do no•' How ~Stadium.
..
WilY, Reich planned to track ~
.
y total.iied
, .the lowest score under7464 inSatunla
his final round. His. 2· in the third quarter.
!
much iLc:hanges dcpen4s on how
lllyone was 10~ to ·do it, under
down those members of his 50
- , -- did him ·
·
1
.
!te.was the one. Now, warda
baseball _.,.
• ·
.
·' ' . ·
.
. over on .
Y
m.
m,uc:h you· .,_ invested. ,
1

M:30.

E.--.

~~-a-.
30Wti5-3UII.

9

Wanted to.Buy

Cfoan Lllo llodll ca.. Or
11rue-.
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CONSTROOION
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915-4473

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~ On 814. -

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Slar w... and- Trwli-..; '

Olllfllallln,1114-012-JI41.
Aulao ·

7

Cocker~~~~!~
Bred for
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tor

301hllw -groundrM&gt;ol.aOodOot Sftl., 1 A.IL To'.,., 81. II.
only, ~~ 110, - · Olllo.
' .::;_;;__ _: - - - - . , - -

AMBERWOOD

-=

, _ y...,

Top-Mor.l-

71h.•h.

Oal

Coli '

Quality and
Temperament
Speciaizing in Part-colors
lor lhow ll1d comp1111ions.

Stud 18rvicl &amp; P\4)Pi8S,
young adlllllor sale.

48750 Mile Hill Rd.
Alclne, Oh
t14-04114487

Employ!T!ent Servrces

Howard L. Writesel
ROORNG

NEW-REPAIR
GuttersI
Downspoutsf _.
Gutter
.ning
.Palntl •

cie

FREE ES'

..

AJ:\~

949-2 68

'

PiW\TI'N

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&lt;, ·

fi

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'October 3, 1994 .

.

ALLEYOOP
.

'•
ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

.......

__ ._......,.
.........

-

BEATTIE BL VD.•w by Bruce Beattie
.

42 Mobile Ho"J''S
for Rent

llCLNIIIY. DIIMIII

llull .....
COL 1111&amp; Mit. , _ tend
~~ ...O. ...
~...,

141170 lbr. ~
-urlly ...........

5I

t

HoUHhold
Goode

J{IT 'N' CAitLYLE® by Larry Wr!Pt

tzCIO
polo!.

IIIM7NOIIt 1111114pm or 11to

at,Qolo

1277ol•llpm.

·

Mill 2 l1d~, l.ocl.led In
Ev.IIMn, 111 tV ,117 Aft• I
P.ll.
2 I•Jaoom -llollllll ...._ FurnW!od On
llcNid,

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'11112.

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86
99 8 7 6
tA K J 6
•A 10 8 7

72 Tnlckl for 8al8

~~~~~~--~1990 Ford F150, 351 engine, '·
trailer towlhg package, ·.

-.
•

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'I- III • Vk)RRIE.D'

automatic trana. excellent .

U'WNE'S FURI'I1\IRE::J
Clomploll

-

t Reduce
2 Michell J. Fox
role
3 Ha"'"l
4Doma811-.

1

condition. $8500. Phone 1· ·:

lumlohlngo.

Houti: llor&gt;llot, f.L 114-441,
0122. I mille out Bullville lid.
F,_llollvory.

0... 10 Pill. . . KH"'-"' Cllpol
In Stack. 30 Plllllllll Vinyl In
aao11. llolohln carpota, At. n

South
I NT
4e

N., 114-448-'11144.

BARNEY

PAW !I JUGHAID

.

54

Mlecella~

Mlrchanctlee

. . ---.Mwtr

-

&amp; L tves tock

Insurance
..... 1~ tend loll• ot 13
1« ... 32, llulllnd, ~AII=ER~IC~A~N:--'::N'::ATI:::ONA=':"'L~I::-NOIIIo 4ITJI:
SURANCE
1111111 1!i111i lilanlr1' II Fun I
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
..., With-. Cill Dlbblo Fer HOMEOWNERS 6 AIITO DIS-

c.nlllll.
Can1oow
lno. II
illltnl ~
..
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.....

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PEANUTS

15

Schools &amp;

Instruction

lqc)

.. 10751

- ........_

Chlln ........
llloln. to ..
...............
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NuiM Aid Trolnlng Progrom
- . - - - ... ,lml -oy
Nurolng 6 Rohlbl Ha. _ 110 . . ....... ~
- - Cllll ~ 1--oii-INI~ tton c.nt• will Ill on.~na train- - 'Nov. 1, 111M. Aplonl .,. now bolng

llocbprlns:· l:l'..

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a.. ....... - llnll
(3) , . . _ 1111111'1 ....
!*1llhcl with oppllclllon. lDaiY

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THEN A VOI~E COMES TO ME FROM
OUl OIF TJ.lE DARK, "WE APPRECIATE
. '(OUR ATTITUDE ! ''

SOMETIMES I LIE AWAKE AT NI6J.lT. AND
I TI-l INK A80liT T~E 600D LIFE TRAT I
~lAVE .. I REALLY ~-lAVE NO COM.PLA.IIII

COUNTS
UFEIHEALTH
304.aee.4Z57

llto'Jitlor~

-II In vlollllon of lhollw.
0111'1'1-11'1.-y
lnlonnodlhlllllll d-.go

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ta.. II" ...

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1720 AFTIER I P.M..

IIU'. 8tudonl1 lhol
_,...... the TCE cl111 will Ill
lllglble lor omptoymonl EOE

31 Homes for Sale

18 Wanted to Do

114-4-41-172L

Chl1d~ Unk occeptod, onr
...
5-108!.

~ ldlohln • dlnlna Ill&lt;., TV-. .................
- . . . . 4411r110 lawn. • Good

. . . For -

u-

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n.nr.

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

'1'

In Oolllpallo,

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Guno, Ill 1-. RIIIM - .
""'• autoo. "F1001 22 to U: Exc.
cona. 30UI2-3411.

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54 Miscellaneous
·Mirchandlea

Defense is tough; but with a lot of
counting and signaling, you can
most deals light. However, for experts
"most" isn't enouglr.,And..a new
-"A Switch in Time" by Pamela
Matthew Granovetter, iJ; aimed
them. The authors conc~ntrale on signaling. Bul their methods are, lo
mind, dangerous in the hands or less
experienced players. Yet all pairs
would benefit from reading about and
discussing the possibilities.
Every partnership should have an
.agreement about the situation in to·
day's deal, whicb is .taken from the
book. It is a trump contract, the open·
ing lead is a top honor and dummy has
a singleton .in the suit led. How should
third 6and signal?
·
North's four-heart response is a
Texas transfer.
First, you need' to know how many
East has in the suit. Ir we as·
he has s~veral, traditional methstate that a high or low card is
preference and a middle card
for a · continuation . The
IG~anovetl:ers recommend that a high
remains an encouraging signal.
use middle and low cards for
preference. It is a matter of
lfn'11ce. Here, Easht wants a se~h~d ddiato force t e dummy. • IS e·
defeatdour spades.

!. I!
.;,
I&gt; .. TS
T v~
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~

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32 Mobile Homes

lor'SU.
RMm~n 14IQO a w.
--lndudod
aFul
...... IIIII Pump
lEIConcltlol\,

· LOSER
uJTr" "()() .. , .... u &lt;q

You ""''-" ,, "'"'""
TV ! WHel W~ Ill£
' •c.T T u.r YOO ~·"

111,100,111 211 -~

M ·ctavton IIJ

m

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CMio,171o3411.
IICIIldJdl'ri-U\W t11Aa,_ W

Nort• .. Eas~
4•
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Phillip Alder

Farm Supplt es

-

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tarrlble

Tiptop defense
~r signalers

,..... .......... ~ ....b.

Dollilll,1-...._.__,~
.,... •••••-

7Exll~

lead: • K

ABOUT A GAME
OF CHECKERS,
OL' BUDDY?

JEST MADE $ 1.00
SWEEPIN' OUT
TH' FEED
STORE\\

West
Pass
Pass

SBaNbllll
equipment
6 Helpful

Port. 1111111. I

....v1

~~·114-'JID.

----.2. .

tr""'

~ 1.. Mrreli: Of F/\C.T, 1 .)051'
BOOK ~T W€EJ(.QII&gt;!

ltlf:.o.o ,._

Q\ ~ NI'D I&gt;ID YOU

·"''

Fit-It&gt; 1-JN..OO 7

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I'OiiiALE

1

this
thereto isa
Westlayout
switches
club at trick two. lf'South draws
trumps, he must force the dummy
himself, eventually losing a s~ond di,
amond trick. Whereas if So~th sets
out to establish his heart tlicks first,
Easl gets a club ruff.
The book is available for $14.95 from
The Bridge World, 39 West 94th
Siree~ New York,.NY 10025·7124.

IIOIIUE liOIIE

- , TOCII Elaolllo, Uo...Fio•
...... ll4lldr
To lot• On
eom.
IAI hill 1An1 lllolllll
Court. ........ T'"" ~ 114141 1101 or--.rm:

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by LUll Campos
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rrom
by 11mou1 peope,
EM:h
h Cipher . . . .
Todl(s eM: Z eQUMI W

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quoUitionl
lot tnOitlef.

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(JOYAGPC)

EOAI'BY

GP'B

BX

N P E0 K B ,
YXV

' A II E S 0 X Y Y 0 .
PREVIOUS SOLUTiON: "The grand essentials of happiness are: somelhillg to
do, something to love, and something to h~ lor. - AUan K. Chalmers.

'::~:;~' S@~4llA-~~~se
1411o4 loy CLAY ·1. I'OUAN
O four
ReQI1ongt ioffors of
. ICrOmblad word•

..••••.

low tc form four words .

EVICOD
. t--;.,..,...11~,-r-1...;.,.I:......,.12~
,

I
I I PI I I
FUNSF

.·

,..~~-:-:--::--::-...,,"

I

grow up no one
will tell me what to do!' the
~
teen yelled. "You'v.e ~rown
. . . . .
- up,' the dad lectured, when
you discover there are more
r --=r=-=o-V~D~U-=-E-...,, things you don't know than

MY L D I

~

I I. I I ;

l I I 1I I
5

G

Co,;plete ihe chuckle quoted

by f,fl,ng in the miumg words
L.......I.L-.J.--..1..--.L.--.1...~- you dew-elop
from step No . 3 below.

.

BIG NATE
CLEARLY, THE VatERS Of
H15 !&gt;CHOOL ONLY I&lt;.IIOW
HOW 10 ELEC.1 ,GEEKS,

OWEEBS ANI&gt; LOSER!:.!

Tran sport ation

You'll be (looting on a cloud with
the buys you'll find In the
classifreds.

..-

SCIAM..J.ETS .ANSWERS
Oblong· Ultra ·Ditto · Jingle· DOING'IT
The guest speaker at .our son's graduation told the
class that in choosing a career they should fiild soniething they liked to do and then find someone to pay
them for DOING IT

'

·'

)

Rent als

41 Ho11181 for.Rent ·
2...._142 ...... - .

:101. ori14-1112-41G.

Gtnlpah. .._., ...............,

~-NO

Financial

Bus111e11

l\LV..'IO\J GOTTA H~LI'
lilt ..YOU GOTTfo. 'ltlL
tf«&gt;N'T'I TO KiCk OUT

URGE I

Polo;
IIJc:Lt""'-FerRnln

BLEEPS f.
• lEST
~~ON THE MOUNT~I

I'I:IOAI'TIIII

;:~v:-

t I I
In Clltlnaor, 0...
........ . t400'11cellll
p...
Dlpllltll •••••

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.

ROBOTMAN

4 ........, AIIM"*" In
Raclno. DIOOIII oncf 11111Nnc11
llloull'ld. Coil Rick II 114-1112-

HIS 0\.1&gt; FAA1 BUDDY

N\OONOOG!

. .r::-,:;r. ~
.

•

iilfzod opl. lor oiHrty IIIII

=

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u.,-....,. 1210
AIIM-.
PIUI

2111.

Air, Klohan,

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DIDollt,
I~

Roome

I'LIAS? DFoRciR CMIIIITI
I'UA TRAP . .._
. . . . . lrtlJC1hlll11 1 . . . . . . .
GUAIWITIIIII Availiiltlo II:
YI\UIY WIIKR AND IIH

1'110.

.· ~

..•

_ __ _
__.

ence.
,
ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) "Today , a
clearer understandihg could' result in an
improved partnership arrangement. Ea~h
member will finally begin to .see things
from1he other's per&gt;peclive.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Newly
established obj~lives have better proba·
bilities for success at this time, despite
finaliZe. Once you see the signals, begin their ambitiousnesS. Progress, However ,
BEDEOSOL .tying
up the loose ends.
, .
could be a billardy, so be patient.
· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) A GEioliNI (May· 21-June 20) II you're an
number o'f interesting developments unattached Gemini, something tantalizing
could be in the ofling for you over the might develop today w~h a person whonr
next f41W weeks . New friendships might ·you've always had a platonic relationship
be 'involved that could beCome more sig· - with - up until now. Fonder feelings ar~
mhcanl )VIIh each pass1ng day.
indicated.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 11) € Hher CANCER (June 21·July 22). Make an
through choice . or circumstance, new 1 eKort todaV'IO assess your invoM&gt;ments
•
ambitions will be arouse9 in· you at this ·so tlia.t you can begin to discard those
1994
Tueeday, Oct. 4·
. time. Gratification is indicated in -areas whlc!\:~ave proven to be unproductive.
Don't be reluctant to assume a&lt;ldilional. · where objecljves are established. ,
Aepi8a.them with S9'ft8lhing new. •
responsibilities In this approaching year , AQUARIUS (Jlln. ~ell. 19) Make an LEO (di'IV 23-AIIg. aa) New ideas o ~
where your career Is concerned . These effort from this day fOflh to study l'!bjeciO concapiS ehoukl not be treated with lndif·
new delietopments can be handled effec· that'll a4&lt;1 to your slorehouse of kiJOwl· . terence today. Your Ideas mlghl hav~
lively, which may 18ad to advancement
edge in your chosen field ol endeavor . . morl', merittha.n you're.capable of 1180·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) An endeavor What you learn now can be ,prohtably .ing, so discuss them wtlh someone. you
. In ·which you're participating has ·been used later.
.
•
.
trust
•
· ·
&amp;tructured in a manna• that has inhibited PISCES (Feb. 2CJoMarch 20) Over the VIRGO (AUII· 23-S.pt. 12) There are
)lou lmm asserting yourself effectively . • next lew days you might be exposed lo certain measures you can take •llhiS
.. Thi&amp; may now be' changed for the better. seilenll interesting Investment proposa~. . ttme that could . put you In a r!ceptova
Know where to look lor romance a'\(1 · Each could be worthy of further , ln-~· m.o d, .tof makong or saving mQney .
you'll· find 11 . The Astro-Gr~plt gallon ~ so dort'ttreatthem .wilh lndrffeJ· Fl~urethe~outforvourseH .

ll~~~~~~~~fi:;:!;~
signs are romantically pe~ect foo·you .
Mail $2 to Matchmaker. c/o this newspa·
ASTRO-GRAP ..
per.' P.O. Bo~ 4465. New York . N.Y.
10163.
•
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-tjov. 22) The end
could be in sight today pertaining to an
arrangement you've been a.nxlous to
BERNICE

Fumlihed

•

-

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'

•

'. .

"

,,
• I

I •

.
I

~~~-·~----

.

,.

•

I

. - ...-r

_____._
.. _ •

\..
/
I

"

�By.The Ben.d

-

.....

.

·.

~

..

direction of Nancy Swartz. In the. ne1·fm·ml,n!!l
group wiD be !tfegan Johnson, Cayla Lee, Abby
Stewart, AlisOn Woods, EmUy B,abbltt, Nicole
Wrltesel, DIDleDe PblUips, Decca Haustlne, IDd
EmUyDavls.

TO PERFORM - These members or the
Daalla&amp; Doll tots clasS will perfom at the Big
Bead Stei'IIWIIeel Festival at 6~45 p.m on Satur·

daJ at the Pomeroy parklna lot levee. In the
pooilp are tbe four, ftve 1Dd six year old young·
sters who started lessons last year under the

Meigs Junior High, teacher rec~ives a.ward
.Ruaty Bookman, scienoe teacher
at Meigs Junior High Sc;hool, 1tas
been awarded a Krecker Science
Department Award by the Ohio
Acidemy of Scienoe.
·
This is the second lime in the
put four years that Bookman has
been aelccted for the award.
This y~ he was one Of 13 Ohio
teacbcn and school$ selected for
outsWiding achievements in malhematlcs anJJ science education. '
The awards - known as the
Jerry Acker Outstanding Teacher
Awards $nd the Frederick H.
Krecker Outstanding School
Awards - are designed to stimu-

late and recognize excellence in
science and mathematics education
in grades 5 through 12 in Ohio
Schools. .
The awards qualify each teacher
or school to submit a proposal to
the Academy to compete for a
$3,000 Battelle Award for Professional Development to fUrther their
education through partnerships
with community agencies, organizations, and COlJXIlltions.
The Krecker school award winners were selected on lhe basis of
educational level of ihe faculty,
nature and quality of malh and sci-

B1 £d Petenon,,

Partial benefits may be payable
when you 're employed and eligible
for retirement benefits (ihe earliest
Want to "keep on truckin'" and age is 62) or widow(ers) benefits
coUect Social Security benefits at (at age &amp;! or older). If you're under
the sime time? You may be able to age 70, you 'II be subject to an
do It! If you're over 62, it's-possi ~ · annual earnings limit. If your earnings exceed lhe limit, pan of your
ble lbat you could collect partial
Social Security retirement benefits benefits will be wilhheld.
In 1994, the earnings limit is
while continuing to wotk full-time.

Social Security Manager

'

Officers were elected and
instaUed when the Women's Auxil·
iary of Veterans Memorialllbloilll
met Tueroay afternoon in the l!ospilll conference fll!&gt;m.
lnstaqed by member, Mrs. Clara
Burris, were Mrs. ·Libby Fisher,
president; Mrs. Ab.bie Srratton, vice
president; Mrs. Betty Sayre,
recording secretary; Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy, cooesponding secretary,
and Mrs. Jessie White, treasurer:
Mrs. Louise Bearhs was named
schedule chairperson.
. _.
During the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Fisher, the a.Xiliary
made plans for a jewelry sale to bC
he~d at the hospital on Friday, Nov.
18, and for a craft and bake sale,
also ai the hospital, on Tuesday,
Nov. 22. Mrs. Stratton and Mrs.
Jeanette Lawrence were named to
head the annual Christmas door
decorating Contest at the hospital .
Refreshments were served at lhe
close of lhe meeting.

Lowery winner -

Community
calendar
.

The Community Calendar Is
JIM)Illahed as a free service to
--profit aroups wlsblna to
'antioanee meetblp and special
eveatl. T•e caleadar is. not
dealaned let promote sales or
luadrallera of aay type. Items_
are printed as space permits and
cannot be paranteed to run a
. spedlk n~ber or days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs High
Band Boosters, Monday, 7 p.m. in
the band room.

Refreshmenls will be served.

. MIDDLEPORT - Regular
meeting Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the
Masonic building.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Community Association meeting
Tuesday 5:15 p.m. at Peoples Bank
featoring Q&amp;A by county commission candidates.

Next year,' if you were still
working, you could be getting even
more money. The annual earnings
limit rises each. year. Therefore, a
smaller amount of your earnings
wo!!!!! be withheld if you exceed
the limit. And, because Social
Security refigures benefits each
year to consider additional earnings, you could get a h,igher bene- .
fit.
.If you're.at least 62 and want to
find out if you can worlc and coUect
Social Security benefits at the Satlle
time, c8II this toll-free number 1800-772-1213 (between 7 a.m. and
7 p.m.) to mlike an appoinunent to
talk with a Social Security representl'tive. You can call that number
at anytime to have a Request for
Personal Earnings and Benefit Estimate Statement form sent to you.
Y9u'll receive your statement
about four weeks after you complete the form and send it to the
Soc'ial Security address on the
back.

Vel. 41, NO. 107

I.

Pratt horse show set Saturday_
include log slcidding and an obStacit: course wiih a separate obstacle

Next Willis movie
due oot Oct 14

Johnson td speak
Ed Johnson, well-known television .and radio agricultund commentatc.", will speak at 7 p.m Tuesday at the Carmel United
Melhodist Church on Cannel Road,
Racine, at 7 p.m Tuesday. There
wiD be a carry-in dinner at 6 p.m.

JAFRA ~ANAGER •
Clara Day IIIII been appointed
as a manager for the BidweU
area with Jarra Cosmetics.
She bas been a resident or tbe
area .for 30 years and a bus
driver ror 20 years ror the
Gailia County Local Sdiool.

LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at the
office building.
LONG BOTTOM
Fall
revival; MondaY through Saturday,
Faith Full Gospel Church, Long
Bottom. Rev. David Dailey, speaker, special Singing.

••
I•
••
••
...

.._t,.,_,.

POMEROY - United Fund
kickoff, S .p.m. Monday Pomeroy ·

atqe on paiting Jt)L

POMEROY :.... Salsbury To'Wftship Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m. at
. the Rock Springs haD.
. ·
RACINE -

Racine Village

Counciil regular meeting Mond8y 7

p.m. at Star Mill Pin.

TUESDAY
- Syracuse PTO
m
Tuesday at the school Par·
ena · IIUdcnls involved in apms
or ~edi"' are to meet at6:40
p.ar. with npJar ineedn&amp; 7 p.m.
Ball Old Willlllk about ibe- upoom·
~'£USE

. ..
RA'ClNJI;

!ti.'t.,.;.:,
~ '!fl"'1• ' . J,l. ' t
, .\.
' '

.

--;

- · Bd Johnson,

-~Ilion ll&amp;riculture com-

me • •,Ipat at7 p.m. Tuesday
af Carmel United Methodist
Cliliith, .Carmel Road, Racine.
Cirry-~ dinner 81. 6 p.m.

KICKOFF DONATION- American Electric Power made the
initial donation or $1,000 to the 1995 United Fund campaign at a
kickoff ceremony Monday afternoon in Pomeroy. Here, Chloris
Gaul, representing AEP, presents tbe check to campaign chairman
Paul Reed. Shown are, from left: Vicki Morrow, United Fund vicepresident; Gaul; Susan Oliver, United Fund president; John
Riebel, United Fund board inember;· Tom Dooley, United Fund
treasurer, and Reed.
&lt;t
..

By JIM FREEMAN
work'iogelher for the goal of mak:
Sentlael News starr
ing lhe fund drive successful.
MeiJS. County residents were
"It all starts wilh the fust dol·cltl11er.iid;~ ,'·'~ll!ile - ~' tar," he c~l)lded.•~ • · •
&lt;tnel'&lt;• a kictoff ceremony tor 'the · Followmg Reed's address,
J99S ~eigs County United Fund . Chloris Gaul, secre~ of the Unitcampatgn held on· the Pomeroy . ed Fund Board of Directors and
Parking Lot Monday afternoon.
representing American Electric
Following a flag-raising cere-·- i'ower, donated that first dollar...
mony by Pomeroy Boy Scout and 999 additional dollars on
Troop 249 under ihe direction of behalf of AEP.
,
Scoutmaster Don Frymyer and perRev. Kennetli Baker, director of
formances by the Meigs High · the Meigs County Cooperative
School Bam! under direction of Parish, delivered the invocation
Tony Dingess. Susan Oliver, presi- and ben'ediction.
dent of lhe United Fund Board of
"United Fund for Meigs County
Directors and director of lhe Meigs was formed in 1993 to provide a
County Council on Aging, intro- local agency to solicit funds and
duced several guest speakers.
provide financial assistance to
Museum director Margaret county non-profit groups and agenParlcer commented on United Fund · cies," Oliver said.
benefits to the Meigs County His"Every doUar raised through our
torical Society which included the annual -fund raising campaign is
purchase of additional microfilm to awarded to Meigs County groups."
assist in genealogical research.
Board members serve on a volun·
:·we appreciate lhe support of fary basis and there"are no paid
Umted Fun~ to helJ? us better serve staff members of facility costs,"
our pan:ons •. ~ said.
.
she added.
. DaVId· MtUiken, adult sem~es
Last year, United Fund raised
director~general manager of Metgs $6,000 to assist several local orgaIndus!£1e~ Inc., ~omm~nded t~e nizations including Meigs Indusorgamz.atmn for .•ts ass•s.tance m tries, lhe Meigs County Cooperapurchasing a spec1al exercise cycle tive Parish the American Cancer
built for people w~o are unable to Society, th~ Meigs County Historiu~.a regular ex~tse cycle.
caT Society and Museum, Boy
. W~ like to lhtnk lhat we ha~e a Scout Troop 249, the Serenity.
~t . unpact on about),500.Jives House shelter for battered and
m Metgs County alone, he said.
homeless women, lhe Gallia/Meigs
He !~en challenged those pr~- Cpmmunity Action Agency, lhe
sent to Do all the good you can...
Meigs County Council on Aging
Next, Ohve~ mtroduced Farmo:s l!ld Big Brothers and Big Sisters.
Bank and S&amp;VIII8S Co!'lpany .prestThis year's goal is to raise
dent Paul Reed, who ~ servmg as $12,000, Oliver said. . ·
lhe 1995 campatgn chairman.
. Serving on the United .Fund
. ~eed set ~ ih~e for the .fund board are: president Susan Oliver,
ra1S!I!8 ~PII!8" as accentuare ~ vice-president Vicki Morrow, sec~stbve ; notmg IIW!)'. of the post- retary Chloris Gaul, ~urer Tom
!•ve f~atures of ~e1gs Cou~ty Dooley, Cathy Crow, Lesley R.
mcl.udmg a low ~nll!e rate, high · Gibbs, Debbie Haptonstall, Scott
fatntly. values~ ~ghbors help- Lucas, Cindy S. Oliveri, Emma
ing neighbors.
Paugh, John Riebel and Sieven L.
Reed then chali~!Jged ~thers to story.

A ~ immunizatiOn cOnic for

clliichii will be on Oct 10 from 3

· 10 6 p.m. at Reed's Coun1ry StllR
In Reedit~. The clinic II (II'OVid·
ed ·bJ lbe 'Obio UDivenity CoUego
of Otl~ic Medicine E:hild· .
bo04 Immunization Proaram's
COIIIIIIuni~llcaltb Unit and

t of HealtH in
I:Cii@ldon .widllbe Mcila·County

die·Obio

-........

IMIJdlc~:e,:unent.
Tlie clinic
from
.....
___ birth ..._.....
nUdlla lcllool. 1..., !!ltH!t!ing are

FLAG RAISING - Boy ·Scouts or Pomeroy Troop 249, under
tbe dlrectJoa or Seilutmaster Don Frymyer, raised thedU.S. flaJ at
· Moaday~ afteraoon's kk~ff or the 1~5 United Fun ampaagn.
The scouts raised die flag to tbe tUJie or "l'be Star·Spugled Ban·

110 t1to tJieir child'• previoils shot
·record1. For more information
· · · lbout llle JIIOPIIII, ~dents may
ciiU 1-aoo-;1144-654, or contact the ·
. ...... CountY Helltb De~tijltlll. .

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t Section, 10 P...-e "~*!Ia
A Mulllmeclalnc. ..-..,.._

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News St~~rr '· "
~ore than I 00 Meigs County
restdents vehemently complained
Monda)' night about 25 miles of
potential power lines to connei:t a
ReedsviUe hydroelectric plant to a
Ruiland suhllflition. ' . .
, The resklentS i. ·'lllong with
municipal powet .CAJiipjny officials, attended a pitbjjp:bWing to
. learn the environmental impacts of
1he project - which i~ 'set for operation by July 1997.
The Federal Environmental
Regulatory Council held lhe meeting to decide if the power COillpany's preferred route should be
allowed. This preferred route runs
norlh. of RCedsviUe through Fotked
Run State Park follows state Route
248, cuts across Chester near the
future state Route 7 bypass, norlh
of,the county fairgrounds until state
Route 143 at Ruiland
.
Citizens from Rutland· to
Reedsville voiced their disdain in
lhe Meigs High School gym for the
project lhat will h1101ess the Ohio
River to provide long-term, economical power to 42 Ohio communities - most located in Norlhwest
ohio.
•
' J&lt;!SCPh Loftis, who owns property along state Route 143, said
he's mad because surveyors walked
on his land without his permission. .
"I spent 10 ~F in lhe Navy t.O
protect your property. You're trymg to steal my 'land," Loftis said.
"EMF wiD hurt you. I've got a .couple piec(l! of property, but I've
worked hard for iL'
•
_Fl!Rc muat choose .one of five
lines as the best avenue be.tween
lhe hydroelectric plant and sizable
substation~. Three of the five routes

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are located in West Virginia.
Scott Williams, AMP-Ohio pro- ,
ject engineer, said the 12-mile-long
West Virginia lines were not
sought·because of the proximity to
higher-density populations and
environmental areas, such as fowl
nesting sites..
Earlier lhis year, lhe West Virginia governor vetoed a law passed
by lhe state house and senate that
would have taxed out-of-state
power companies. This legislation
could be proposed again.
"(The legislation) did have an
effect on our decision," American
Municipal Power-Ohio (AMPOhio}· President •Kenneth Hege·
mann said.
The olher Meigs County route is
longer - following an existing •
AEP line soulh toward Pomeroy but costs about the Satlle as lhe preferred fine, Hegemann said. But
lhis alternate Ohio route is not the
best since it comes close to higherdensity populations in the county,
he added.
Williallls said the preferred
route is not a suaight line, but
accounted for people and environmental concerns.
Chester resident Chuck Kni~ht
said he is concerned about the lme
since lhe county will get no benefits from it and it should really be ·
built in West Virginia.
. Many of the properties, particularly Knight's own, have arrowhellj!s and olher significant histori·
cal items, he added.
·
Knight questioned the county's
ability to grow and develop if it

POVVER LINE FUROR - Chester resident Chuck Knight
addresses the Federal Environ!IJ~!i,tal Rtlll!llllllry' Couacil at 1
meeting Monday night. More than 1!)0 residents from Rutland to
Reedsville angrily stated they opposed the power line because it
would reduce property value and taxed land, cause health bazards· •
.and endanger the envir"nment and historical sites, Knight said.
(Sentinel pboto by ,:;eorge Abate)
worked his entire life to acquire his want to buy a home or land wilh
propeny.
huge wires strung across it. Also,
· "They don't care about Meigs' many senior citizens are especially
County imd Meigs County citizens. sensitive to the electromagnetic
They're just interested in lhe dol- fields linked to these lines, he
lsr ," Barker said. "The citizen added.
.
.c:Gatlnues 10 be lllnlddled 'Willi lines doesn' t have' no n)!ll~110 more.ft-"
- ~ ,J&gt;ale''Kalift saiil lhe value of his
lhat benefit people in other parts of
Barker also questioned how the property would plumllfet. .
lhe state.
lines would affect property value
"I anticiJl3te ibis will be in use
Resident Herb Barker said he's ·a~d whether people would even
Continued on page 3 ..

Pomeroy council mulls rental housing quality
Mirroring Blae~tnar's com- !he Qld Liberty bar on Main Street.
1 p.m. to begin its ninih"annual toy
ments, stemwheel association pres- Councilman George Wright voted · run.
ident Jim J?avis said lhe association against a~proving .lhe transfer.
During open discussion, Wright
c!'at'ges ~tgher pnces for ~er to
. Council met w•lh Rought and at ·, brou~ht up lhe topic of rental hous·
discourage people ~m commg to his request voted to remstate Larry
ing mspections and·asked how
lhe fesbval JUSt to drink,
Hudson as a part-bme patrolman to
come rental units were not being
"WG,Jiave less problell!s in ihe be empayed on an_as-needed basis.
inspected.
parking lot dunng the,fesuv.allh~
In addttton, counctl appmved
. John Anderson, village adminis?n regular weekends, Davis S81~. spendin~ $1,000 on ne~ umforrntiator, said some units have been
'They can buy beer way cheaper m related Items for lhe police departinspected and two .houses have
4 bar."
ment and aP(Jroved lhe use of extra
been condemned. Part of the probBottles ~d cans are not ai.Iowed pohce secunty m the parkmg lot . lem is the number of rental houses
at lhe festtval and, accordmg to durmg Thursday, Fnday and Saturin lhe village - more lhan 400 he
PoliceChiefGeraldRought,people day's Big Bend Stemwheel Festiadded.
,
'
will be c.ite~ to mayor's court. if ' vaL
.
Anderson said he is developing
cau~ht drinkinR ·beer from contatnIt was noted lhat lhe Big Bend
a checklist village water departe.rs other lhan ihose sold at ihe fes- Ste~nwheel Assoctatton an.d lhe
ment employees can use to inspect
uval.
Meigs County Bikers Assocranon
houses when tesidents stop or
With one exceptj on, co unci I have made arran~ements ,to share
begin village water service.
.
approved ,the transfer of a liquor the Pomeroy parking lot Saturday.
"We need to put some teeih into
license from May Mayle to Diane The bikers assOCiation will meet in· . ibis thing," Wright said, referring
Lee Bachtel, bolh domg busmess as the lower parking lot from noon to
Continued on page 3

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News starr
Parking lot beer sales and the
quality of, renta~ housing were
among lhe ItemS discussed at Mon!lay's meeting of ·Pomeroy Village
Council.
.,
.~em~ers of t~e ~eigs. County
Mimstenal Assocl8llon, represented by association president Falher
Walter Heinz, approached council
conceming the sale of alcohol at
ihe Bi~ Bend Stemwheel Festival.
Votcing moderl!tion, Heinz
asked council members not to stop
sale of beer but to consider reslricting lhe area where drinking oci:urs.
Pomeroy Mayor John W. Blaettnar indicated·most of the problems
during the festival are not festivalrelated but come from people who
drink off site.

Meigs to observe homecoming Friday evening .
Homecoming will be observed
at the Meigs Marauder-Wellston
game Friday night at Bob Roberts.
Field.
Queen candidates are Tara
Erwin, Eddena Russell, Sarah
Anderson, ~lyn Swartz, and
· Amber Blackwell, The queen will
be crowned in pre-game festivities.
The traditional homecoming
parade will be held T!lursday wilh
units to move from the Rutland
Street,
. Bank ~e at 6 p.m. to Depot
.

and then go to Middleport where
they reassemble for a trip from
Family Dollar to~tern Auto.
The Pomeroy paride Will begi!J at
Farmers Bank wilh the group to
move to the footbaU field for a bon-

fue and pep raUy.
In observance of Spirit Week,
today has been designated as flannel and camo day, Wednesday as
cosntme day, Thursday at Western
day, friday as maroon and gold

day. Theme of the week is "Rope
lhe Rockettes".
· A·door decorating contest is aiso
underway at lhe high school wilh
lhe winners to receive free breakfasts one 'morning.

.

New Haven ,
man ·injured
1--H-.1 accident

Free immunizations

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.

Meigs United Funr;J
is drive underway~

HARRISONVILLE - HarrilcinvUle Elemenwy P'IO meeling
. TIIclday at 7 pm. at tl!e elemenlliiY
IC~. All parents urged to attend..

.,.

lo'lt'er60s.

Meigs.residents in LJproar .

YOQTH STRINGS • Members or the Ohio VaHey Symphony
string quirtet, left, David and Kathy LIDgr, vioUn, David Messina,
bass, Andrea DlGr~rio, cello, Bernard DiGregio, viola and Ray
Fowler, music director perform for children.at Rutland Elementary School. Tile quintet viSited over 2,800 cbUdren In GaUia and .
Meigs County elementary Schools to promote the Ariel Theatre's
alterscbool youth string provam. ,..
·

course competition for women,
according to Brad Harter, coordinasonviUe.
tor.
. · '
The event will be held at I p.m.
Winners from first to eighth
at Robbins Crossing and will pllice in lhe log skidding and obstacle classes wiD shlll'!l a $350 purse
for each event. In the women's
event prizes range from $25 to $5
for frrst through sixih pllice.
. NEWYORK(AP)-qo·ahead,
Entry fee is $10 per ~lass in
treat Bruce WiUis like a piece of advance or $12 when registering at
meat
the .show. Additional information
That'~ lhe look Willis was going may be obtained by contact Deb
for as an over-ihe-hill boxer in Fraunfelter, 753-3591, extension
"Pulp Fiction."
. 21ol • .
"I wanted biJq to look like a big
piece "Of meat :wilh no fealhers on ,
him at all," Willis told The New
York Titnes in a story publis~ed
Sunday.
Willis pumped up arid had his .
head·shaved to play Butch, who
double-&lt;:rosses an underworld boss
and goes on the lam wilh a scatter·
braineil girlfriend. The ftlm, directed by Quentin Tarantino, is due out
Oct 14.
Willis waived his usual $10 mil·
lion action-movie take for a smaU
salary and a pcn:entage of lhe profits. the film cost $8.5 million to
make.

Low lonl&amp;hl bi 401, Clell' ud
COOL Wedaesday, suany. High Ia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Tuesday, OCtober 4,1994

Copyrlgltt111M

A draft horse competition will
be held Saturd8y, Oct. 8, in con:
junction with the Paul Bunyan
Show at Hocking College, Nel-

Ohio Lottery.
Pick 3:
201
Pick 4:
7322
BuckeyeS:
15-16-2046-30

'def~at
• Page4

ence experiences in the school,
effortS to create interest in malh or
science including participation in
.Debbie ·Lowery was·recognized
the Academy's scten,ejl days and as lhe best loser and MicheUe Fracooperation wilh induslry, extent of zier as runner-up at the recent
. cooperation between faculty and . meeting of TOPS 1895 held at lhe
administration, laboratory facilities, Syracuse Church of lhe Naiarene.
and funds available for instruction.
Debbie Hill presided at lhe inet·
The Ohio Academy of Science ing with pledges being given by
is an umbrella organization uniting · Helen Hill and Daisy Patterson ..
all in Ohio who value science, Debbie Hill gave a program on the
en~jneering, tec~nolo&amp;f, and edu· , new nulritionallabeling and how to
, canon. The miSston of the Acade· read lhem. Meetings are held every
my is to empower curiosity; dis- Thursday at the church at 6 p.m.
covery, an innovation for lhe 21st Information may be obtained by
Century.
calling.Hill at 949-2763.·

$8,040 if you're under age 65,$1 is
withheld for every $2 you earn
over lhat amount If you're over 65
but not yet 70, $1 will bt wilhheld
for every $3 of earnings that
exceed $11,160. If you.'re 70 or
older, you can coUect full benefits
no matter how much you earn. ·
Here's an example of how ibis
could work for you. Let's say, you
are 63 and eligible to receive $800
a mpnlh in Social .Security benefits
-lhat's $9,600 a )'ear. You have a
job lhat pays you.$20,160, which is
$12,000 over the 1994 earnings
limit of $8,040. Because you earn
$12,000 over the eamings limit, we
would withhold $1 from your
Social Security benefit for every $2
you earn over the limit. In your
case, we would wit!Jhold $6,000 of
your benefits. However, you would
receive $3,600 from Social Security while earning $7(),040 on your
job. Your total income from wotk
and Socjal Security for the year
wpuld be $23,640.

Steelers

.-

Oilers

can work and 'collect benefits.at the sams time

YOU

page 10

Auxiliary elects
new Officers

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Mondly; October 3, 1994

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The Dail{Sentinel

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7

'"'_d_lrec
_·

A New Hayen, W.Va., man sustained minor injuries in a singlevehicle CJ8Sh Monday afternoon in
Salisbury Township, the·GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway .
patrol reported.
Ralph T. Roush, 50, was trans- ·
ported br Meigs Co~ty Bmergen- cy Medtcal Service to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was treated
· for his injuries and released, a hos.pita! spokeswoman said lhis mom· ·
mg.
According to the accident
report, Roush was southbound on
State Route 7-when he drove off
ihe left side of the road and struck a
ditch. The patrol listed driver inat;
tention as die eause of the wreck.
the vehicle sustained mode,rate

. ·.
, ,
THE CANDIDATES - One or tbae Meip
HIP Sdlool students wUI be CI'OWIIed 'bolllfCom·

Meigs·Wellston 11me at Bob Roberts Field.
Tiley a'te front, I tor, 1'ara'Enrln, Eddena Rlll-

1 ~-e~-~!~!~_e:~d~-~~ ~~ed- fro~-th~-v~ l~n ~n-reatlvltles Friday nlg~t~~~-be -\--~~r;:t:~:~:~;~~~~~·~~a~t111

'

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