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November 17 1993

A

Ohio Lottery

Tar Heels
open season
with victory

Pick 3:
017
Pick 4:
ll52
Super Lotto:
1-7·21-31-43-44
Kicker:

Page4

Low lonlgbtln upper lOs,
cloudy. Friday, cloudy, high ln
mid SO..

397925

TEMPO

•Air Conditionin g
•Power Mirrors •Overd rive
• Ciearcoat Paint
•AMfFM Stereo

•Driver Side
•McPherson
Suspension
• Power Brakes
•Halogen Headlamps
•Reclining Front Seats

Vol. c.t, NO. 145
MuiUmedlalnc.

Workers
spared
of health
increase

TO~

94

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Health care premiums for county employees will go up effective
Dec. I, but employees are being
spared from paymg mcreased costs.
During the weekly· meeting of
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners, commissioners agreed
to increase health insurance premiums by $24 for family coverage
and $17 for sinjlles coverage effective Dec. 1 wtth county depart·
ments picking up the difference.
Currently, monthly premiums
are $400 for family covera~e and
$150 for single coverage wtth the
county piclcing up $200 and $120
of each. respectively.
The cost of the increase is to be
covered by each department with
no extra money being paid by
employees, commissioners said.
In addition, the board opened
bids from contractors vying to
complete the Rutland waterline
replacement project
Rose Construction of Racine
submiued a bid of $29;460 while
Field's Construction of Kitts Hill
submitted a $56,680 bid. Commis·
sioners agreed 10 table the bids
~~~~~ .v:.si~~?-' of
9
·:'1'1\i~1ii~l67tiriWUiif;
tiQq 9f three fire hydrants and
1,000 feet of six-inch line. The project'is being funded by a community development block grant.
The commission donated a tele·
vision ·and a video-cassette
recOrder/player to the Meigs Coun·
ty Highway Department.
Engineer Roben Eason said the
department will use the equipment
to view training films.
Commissioner Fred Hoffman
and Eason, while discussing the
county's recent membership in the
Ohio Cooperative Purchasing Program, agreed that county agencies
should slill purchase from local
merchants as long as local prices
are competitive.
. Eason, who is considering the
purchase of a four -wheel-drive
pickup truck for the highway
Continued on Page J

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anti·lock brakes $12,999

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.;

Meigs County
.prepares for its
175th anniversary

'"

VICTORY - President Clinton answers a
question aner his statement Wednesday night
at the While House following the passage of

· the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Vice President AI Gore watches at left. (AP)

House's NAFTA approval
gives Clinton big trade win
WASH1NGTON (AP) The House vote to fuse North
Ame*a into. one huge market. place ·gives'President·qiJl\0 " .
sweet, cointi'fi'on\.lleilffi'a P,?T.u·
cal triumph that sllolll'cf ~fliri'gth·
en his hand for even grander
trade deals ahead.
With a last-lap frenzy of persuasion and deal-making, the
White House transformed itself
from underdog to an easy winner Wednesday night, muscling
the North American Free Trade
Agreement through the House
by a surprisingly comfortable
234,200 margin.
"At a time when many of
our people are hurting from the
strams of this tough global
economy, we chose to compete,
not to retreat, to lead a ¥W
world economy , to lead as
America has done so often in
the past," Clinton said after the

.

vote, saluting the House.
The measure is a major prize
for Clinton, who flies to Seatlle
today for trade talks with. A.Siiiri '"
leaders.-HC'bopes NAETA will
pave the way fot a trans-Pacific
agreement and give him clout
·and credibility as officials from
around the globe seek a world
trade arrangement by Dec. 15.
In the Senate, where debate
on NAFTA may begin as early
as Friday, leaders of both parties
believe the pact will get close to
60 votes, perhaps more, without
any ann-twisting at all.
In an AP survey, 52 senators
said they probably would vote
for NAFTA , 31 said they are
likely to oppose it and 17 were
undecided.
Once approved in all three
capitals, the agreement creates
the world's largest tradin~ bloc
- 370 million people m th e
United States, Canada and Mex-

ico.
Beginning Jan. 1, it will
gradually erase tariffs on manufactored and agricullural products,~.way for banks
and oth~r service industries 10
do business in the three counlries.
The House victory took
weeks of strategizing, political
gambling and lobbying in which
traditional political allegiances
were turned on their heads. Big
busine ss sided with Clinton
while labor and some of the
Hou se Democratic leadership
opposed him, at times biucrty.
Though Clinton had argued
that a defeat for NAFTA would
weaken his foreign policy hand,
most Democrats scorned the
agreement as a job killer and
voted 156·102 against their
president. The House's lone
independent also voted no.

the observance committee.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ideas on how to observe the
Sentinel News StafT
Planning for the 1994 obser- occasion were discussed particularvance of Meig s County's I 75th ly ways to incorporate the obseranniversary got underway Wednes- vance into festivals and programs
day afternoon at a meeting at the which are already being carried out
in the county.
Meigs Museum.
Parker reported that plans have
According to a brief history presented at !he meeting, the General already been made to have a video
Assembly on Jan. 21, 1819 passed made of activities during the yeat
an act to "erect" the county of incorporated with pictW'Cs from the
Meigs from parts of Athens and past
Ways to involve the schools and
Gallia Counties. Parker reported
that there is some conflict in the churches were discussed, as well as
date that the county was aclually fund raising. Having students do
formed, one source making refer- essays and art work on Meigs
County's history was proposed.
ence to June, 1819.
Cindy Oliveri reporting for the
Funher research will be carried
Meigs
County Showcase commitout on the history by the Meigs
tee
said
that the observance will be
County Pioneer and Historical
incorporated
into that activity
Society as plans progress for the
which
has
already
been scheduled
I 75th anniversary next year.
for
Sept.
15
and
16
at the Roell:
Representatives or several orgaSprings
Fairgrounds.
She
said that
nizations met Wednesday with
Coatlaued
on
Page
J
Margaret Parker, who is chairing
~------------------~

CELEBRATION PLANS BEGIN ·The initial meeting or Meigs
County's l7$th anniversary committee was held Wednesday at the
Meigs Museum to begin planning for the 1994 celebration or the
organization or tbe county. Margarel Parker, seated center, is
chairman and wiD be assisted by Cindy Oliveri, secretar y, left, and
Mary Powell and Karen Werry, standing, publicity.

,.---Local briefs--seven injured in accident
Seven people were injured Wednesday afternoon in a three-vehicle accident, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Driver Rebekka D. Mcln1)'1'e, 17, Baum Addition, Pomeroy. and
driver Andrea D. Dillard, 14, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, and her
passengers, Kyle D. Ord, 22, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy and Eric E.
Dillard, 14, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, were transported by Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospit.11
where they were treated and released.
Driver Sue A. Kauff, 37, and her passengers, Earl S. Kauff, 9,
and Richard A. Kauff, 6, all of Racine, were transported by private
veh icle to VMH where they were also treated and released.
According to the accident report, Kauff was southbound on S~1tc
Route 7 in Chester Township when she stopped to tum left onto
Township Road 152. Dillard. who was fo llowing Kauff, slid to a
stop and was struck fro m behind by Mcintyre. The collision forced
Dillard' s ve hicle into Kaufr s.
Mcintyre was cited for failure to maintain an assured clear distance ahead. Mcintyre's and Dillard's vehicles sustained heavy, disabling damage and were towed from the scene. Kaufrs sustained
moderate damage and was driven away.

Wood
addresses
Rotarians
Keith Wood, wildlife officer of
the Oliio Department of Natural
Resoutce"s Division of Wildlife,
was the Monday night speaker for
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club . He was introduced by
Howard Frank, program chainnan.
Wood indicated that he had
always wanted to be in law
enforcement and for the last sixteen
years has had that privilege. The
last 10 years he has served as the
Meigs County Wildlife Officer.
One of Wood's main effons has
been in the field of education, particularly with hunter safety and
classes for beginning hunters. The
c~s insure that new ,generations
of hunters wi)l have traming based
on their awn safety in the handling
of firearms and in the safety of
people around diem.
Hunter educalion has been
around since 1979, Wood said .
Thankfully only two falai acx:idents
have occurred in Meigs County
since 1983. The goal is none, he
said.
Wood pointed out lOIS of opportunities:exist in Ibis area for hunting and fishing . Being .the only
wildlife offteer for the entire county, Wood said he receives many
calls .aiJout htinting without pennis·
sion, controlling deer population

2 S.Cti.DM, 12 P8gll 35 _,Ia
A Multlm.... lne. ,........,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 18, 1993

Woman cited in accident
STORM DAMAGE -A firefighter from
Waterloo Township walks past the wreckage of
a mobile home which was destroyed by high
winds in Athens Wednesday. High winds

destroyed two mobile home and damaged sever·
al buildings in the area, but no injuries were
reported. (AP)

Storm causes flooding, wind damage

1 Storms throughout Ohio forced
some schools to cancel classes as
up to 2 inches of rain caused creeks
to overrun . Winds up to 50 mph
damaged some homes.
No llll\ior injuries were rePorted
in Wednesday's storms.
, In western OhiQ, water from the
Stillwater River and .Greenville
Creek spilled over their banks in
Darke County.
·
Schools in Ansonia were dismissed ,early because of a threat of
flooding in the basements of the
and
the worst school buildings. Mindy Walters,
problem and trespassing is the ~ ecretary at Ansonia Elementary
w,orst one to handle, he said. In School, said the closings .affected
Ohio, land does not have to be 750 pupils. '
posted to prevent hunting.
.
Gary Middleton, ])liS supervisot
Wood emph*lized that most for Ansonia Local Schools, said'
,_
· · ·
Contbni~ on I'll' J

~f~urse. ~n~

r

buses had to make 11 detours in
taking the pupils home because of
water on roads.
In nearby Greenville, flooding
disrupted telephone service at the
city's wastewaler treatment plant,
where high water on Monday
forced plant officials to use a row boat to get around the plant, Superintendent Steve Olwine said.
Winds up to 50 mph damaged
three mobile homes and a garage in
Atli'ens County in southeast Ohio,
the county sheriff's department
said. The Nalional Weather SerVice
described the s10rm as a possible
tornado or downburit.
·
The storm also downed trees
and power lines;
A tornado was reported ncar
Stockdale .along the Pike-J~Itson

county line in southern Ohio. The
weather service i~ Huntington,
W.Va., said Wednesday night that
it could not confum that a tornado
had toqched down.
Jackson County sheriff's
Deputy Suzy Matteson said a bam
was damaged, but no injuries were
reported.

1n Fairfield County, a volunteer
weather observer said 1.15 inches
of rain fell within 30 minutes. The
town of Bremen closed a street
because of flooding, the county
sheriffs office said.
The l'lin canted minor llooding
in some areu becaUJC the ground
was nearly satur1ICd from previous
rains over lhe ~. the weath·
er service said.

••

A Greensboro, S.C., woman was cited following a two, veh icle
accident at the junction of East Main Street and Nyc Avenue in
Pomeroy Wednesday around 5:25a.m.
According to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Michelle Haywood, 32, was approaching the intersection when she
reportedly dropped an object onto the Ooor of her 1992 Ford sta,
tionwagon. While reaching to pick up the item, she struck the rear
of a 1988 GMC truck driv en by Kenneth Krigba um , 50, of
McConnelsville.
No injuries were reported. Moderate damage was listed to Haywood's car while Krigbaum"s truck received no damage.
Haywood was cited on a charge of failure to conlrol.

Deputies report accident
No injuries were reported following a one-vehicle accident on
State Route 248 Saturday around 9;45 p.m.
According to a repon from the Meigs County Sherifrs l&gt;epan.
ment, Michele Metzger, 18, Pomeroy, was eastbound on State
Route 248 in a 1983 Chevrolet when he: vehicle went orr lhe road
to the right, suuck a guardrail and went into a private yard causing
damage to shrubbery, flower beds and trees.
Damage to the vehicle was listed as moderate.

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported
Six deer-vehicle wrecks were recently reported by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
Beverly Fetty, Pomeroy, was eastbound on State Route 124 near
Bradbury Road Saturday evening and sii'IICk a deer in the roadway
Continued on l'lge 3

-•.

-•

'.
;•

.

•

�'

•

,,

Commentary
111 Court StJeet
Pomeroy, Ohio

--

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF Tlgt ICEJGS-MASON AREA
' \

ROBEJIT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controlt..r

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Le~
should be in good taste, addressing issues, oot personalities.

Letters to the editor
Attitude problem
In regards to Linn Coleman's
recent teuer, Oct. 19th, about the
hiring of the courthouse employees
to the Meigs County Department of
Human Services - I beartedly agree
that the local welfare system needs
to be changed, but so does the attitude of the public towards th95e of
us whO desperately need to rely on
the system to survive.
I've worked with the JOB'S Program and JOB Club for the last
three years as an aide to Peggy
Roush - who conducts the Jobs
Club for this.area. Over that time I
submitted Civil Service applications for .clerical positions, and I
was disappointed to see that three
indivi~uals ,from the Courthouse,
already holding good jobs were
hired awa1f to the DHS office.
What about the qualified people in
the JOBS Program files or others
who are clients being given a
chance for the opening positions.
In 1992 prior to losing my General AssistanCe, I wrote Mr. Swisher a le~ and asked why couldn't
the DHS Office hire me in the Aide
posilj,on, I was trained to assist
Mrs.'Roush- and I wanted to know
how come I couldn't be offered the
position instead of receiving Wei·
fare - I was then told that it wasn't
feasible. To me that sounds crazy .
not feasible to take someone off
Assistaoce .and give them a job, I
tboughtlbat was what the Jobs Program was supposed to do.
The JOBS Program trains
ct1ents to find work, prepare
resumes, type them up, assist in
~CaChing interview sltills, and use
or the printed media. The Program
is very successful.
I am now a tutor for the Free, dom Road Foundation - since the
Welfare Program has decided that
they no longer needed an Aide for
.: Mrs. Roush.
While with the program - I also
1~ for employmen~ believe me
it ls frustrating to bear lhat "You're
over qualified for this part-time

.

Page-2-The Dally SentineL

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Thursday, Nove111ber 18, 1~

I spent the summer of 1983 at
the International House In New
. York City, where I made tb~
a91~~ of James Kashangaki,
.. •":'Unya nanvewoo spOke With his
mother's British lilt. We passed
many a night away talking politics.
I could not understand then his
gusliing praise for Britain's prime
minisrer, Margaret Thalcher.
· Years passed, I lost touch with
my Kenyan friend. But I came to
share his admiration for the Iron
Lady. She not only was one of the
two most commanding figures of
the 1980s - Ronald Reagan being
the other - but also one of the
foremost leaders of the past half·
centwy.
Lady Thatcher is presently touring the colonies promoting her
best-selling book, "The Downing
Street Years." While the memoir
,makes for interesting reading, ~­
cially for those fascinated with
British politics, it is not nearly as
engaging as the fonner PM in per·
son.
On a visit to San Diego last
week, Thatcher spoke with a
refreshing candor that one rarely
hears from our homegrown politicians. This is attributable, no doubt,
to the strength of her conviction.
She was a g'reat leader, arguably,
because she was never immobilized
by self-doubt. She bad an abiding
faith in the principles for which she
stood.

·Interestingly, Thatcher ~oted ,
roughly a third of the peoplr ,buying her book are under 2S YCI!fS or
age._She s~~IS li!Jt."~y P!efe(

Joseph Perkins
somethinf disciplined, something
certain.' I thought back to my
friend James.
··
.
Thatcher is persuaded that 'most
leaders - especially the ineffectual
- are insufficiently grounded in
principles. They may mouth all the
right platitudes, but they don't follow their words with deeds. For
instance, she said, "They're speelcing about traditional values again.
But they don't know how to put it
into practice.''
Such a charge cannot be made
against Lady Thatcher, She
believed strongly in a set or ideas
- not only traditional values, but
also limited govem!JICIII, free markets, strong defense, privatization,
lower taxes - and they were the
basis on which she governed. The
undeniable
success
of
"Thatcherism" is a testament to
the efficacy of those ideas.
When she succeeded Jim
Callaghan in 1979 as head or the
British government, she inherited a
nation in decline. She faced a monstrously large budget deftciL Trade
unions were crippling the economy. Tax mtes were stitJing wealth

Accu-W~

.

Gloria C. Decker

forecast

creation and driving capital out of communism in Eastern Europe.
the country. The nation's defenses
Thatcher's rise to power ushered
were dangerously weak.
in a golden a~e of conservatism not
In the space of II years, the onlr in Britain, but ais9 here in th~
ldnges't leiJ!n oUny British PM in Uruted-Statesd t&lt;ia rllhel\4:8ihlili"
the 20th century, Thatcher turned it able, lookin~ back on·it, just how
all around. The Tory tamed the closely Prestdent Reagan followed
deficit by reducing public expendi- the successful example that Thatchlures, while also instituting supply- er set for him on the other side or
si(!e tax cuts (are you with us Presi- the Atlantic.
dent Clinton?). Thatcher's conserLike Thatcher, Reagan inherited
vative fiscal policy yielded budget a country that was said to be iq
surpluses dunng her last four years decline. The U.S. economy was in
atlO Downing Street
the doldrums, with double-digit
A coal strike in 1984 was also a inflation, interest rates and joblesspivotal episode in Thatcher's ness. By the ume Reagan left
tenure. "The conventional wisdom office, Che conservative bad
was that Britain could only be gov- brought inflation dowrr by rwoemed with lhe consent of the trade thirds, interest rates by half illld
unions," she recalls in her memoir. created 20 million new jObs.
By defeating the miners, the most · Reagan also was confronted
powerful of Britain's unions, with a nationwide strike that'very
Thatcher sent a clear message that well could have wreaked havoc on
her government would not be bul· the national economr. But be was
lied into labor concessions by resolute in dealing With the air trafthreatened strikes.
fie controllers union. When they,
On the military front, Thatcher broke the law and defied a back-tonever lost sight or Thomas Jeffer- work order, be hired permanent
:
son's dictum that "etemal vigi- replacements.
lance is the price ofliberty." While
Reagan was virulently anti-Com-'
Britain's Left advocated appease- monist, and under his watch the
ment with the communist Soviet Soviet Union did not add one
Union, Thatcher reasoned that the nation to its sphere of influence.
best way to check Soviet expansion This is attributable to America's
was to build up Western defenses resolve to confront Soviet expan·
-arms and technology- to the sionism - be it in Angola or
point where Moscow no longer Nicaragua or Afghanistan - whercould keep up. This strategy ulti- ever it revealed itself.
·
mately resulted in the collapse of
There are revisionists, both in
Britain and here in the United
States, who try to downplay the
significance of Thatcher and Rea'
gan in shaping the momentous
events of the previous decade. The
suggestion is that the two leaderS
were simply swept along by the
tide of history ; that outcomes
would not have been terribly different if, say, John Major and BiJ.l
Clinton had been at the helm,
~.
But, as Thatcher remarked on·
her visit, "history has no·
inevitability." It was not inevitable·
that both Britain and the United.
States wmtld enjoy economic pros;
peruy dunng the 1980s. Nor was it .
inevitable that the Soviet empire
would collapse. These and other.
historic events that transpired during the past decade were the resu11
of strong and principled li:adership
on the part of Thatcher and her kindred spirit Reagan.
.
Joseph Perkins is a columnist
for The San Diego Uoiilo-Tri·
bune.
·
'

W.VA.

I

J75th...

committee before Dec. 7, so that
possible designs can be presented
at the Dec. 1~ meetin$·
Mrs. Parker, as director or the
Meigs Museum and president of
the Meigs County Pioneer and His·
torical Society, was named several
months ago by the Meigs County
Commissioners to head up the
I 75th anniversary ~mmitt.ee.
The committee consistS or five
society members and representa·
tives of other interested county
organizations.

As for fund raising a representa: tive of a cqmpa~y which makes
customized coverlets will be invit. ed to the Dec. 16 meeting at the
· museum to sbow samples and dis1
, cuss costS. Parker said that cover. lets have been sold in seveial other
· •southeastern Ohio communities as
. commemorative·souvenirs. They
·are 46 by 67 inches and sell for
' $45.
Another idea ~ for fund
~ mising was selbng miniatures of
.. historical buildings in the community, such as the Clts Meow or
.Open Windows. It was reported
,that Paige .eleele who recently
.; moved back to,Meigs County has a
, seriei or m~iatures and perhaps
-could work with the obsetvaace
.:committee. Miniatures of the court
· :house~ the old building at Chester,
·churcbeshthe grandstand at the fair{grounds, IIIII other places were discuaed as possible llllbjeets.

.

Why won't men ask for directions?

Commission ...

'

' MQIICY is needed by the f'OUP
, to finlnce some of the activities as
well as to Sllge a kickoff reception
:for th,e celebnltion.
It:was decided that ideas Cor
~ I~ will b\l soliciled and anyone
with an idea is asked to contact the

The 'Daily Sentioel

Schools important too

Voinovich to approve
Certificate of Need expansion .

New"" •oe'd..

Mlmblr: 'lbl.•aa '""' PNu. ...S tbt Obio

ot, NllaHil Ad.Miililll
Rtoraelltli¥t, lkllllbam NIWifJFer Sales,
733 Third A. .,., Hew York. Nw York
10017.

POS1liA$11!R: Selcl- - ... !Ollie
Dilly SHUoel, 111 ~ SL, ~'~~"*"Y• Ohio

4!7119.

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Districts among lowest paying

Two Meigs County school districts wm RCC~~tly listed IJDOIIg
the 25 lowest paying school districiS for teachers in the state.
According to an article in the November edition of Ohio·Scbools,
a publication of the Ohio Education Association, Eastan and Meip
Local Schools tied at $17,000 for the lowest pay for a teacher with a
bachelor of arts degree.
For teachers with a master of arts (Iegree and 12 hours additional
training, Eastern was listed as second lowest at $28,407 while
Meigs came in ninth lowest at $29,750.
For a teacher with the maximum master of arts degree, &amp;slem
came iii at third lowest while Meigs came in 19th loweat with
salaries of $29,223 and $31,450, respectiv~
·
Southern Local Schools were not incl
in the lowest parmg
25 distriCtS or in an accompanying list or the top paying 2S dislriCIS.

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ou expands statistics section

ATHENS -The Archives and Special Collections dep:ubu.:nt
or the Ohio University Libraries bas acquired a 1arJ1e quantity of
microfilined vital statistics records for soulheaslan Oliio m•tiet
The ftlms contain 19th century marriage ret01ds and late 19th
century birth and death recOids for 12 countiea ill the region.
''These new materials compliment our alreldy strong aeaealosi·
cal resources for southeastern Ohio; said depatbikilt lieid GeorJe
Bain. ''They will allow us to provi(!e more service to visiton wlio
frequently request this information on researcb visits to die h'blwy.•
the microftlmed vital Slltistics records are in die Microforms
department of
s Alden Library'
The Ohio University Libraries are a regional center for southeastern Ohio in the Ohio Network or American History Research

ou·

".

Centers.

Editor's aote: All D.ames, BJIK and •ddresses In! publilhed as
they appear on omclai reports.

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Media: The Dally Sentlnevnmes-Sentlnel- WMPO AMIFM Radio
By: Membera of GJMV S. • District - Pollc and Advlso

Committee.

Ul DIZI

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• Wttlll-........- ..........,.;,., ..............5.50 ' '
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ITA!ITING WEDIEIIDAY, NOV, 24

ArriNTioi•••
WEST VIRGINIA WORKERS COMPENSATION

· · · JURASSIC PARK .·

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·eekJ_ncfs
omclally begin
'·

FRUTH PHARMACY WILL BILL YOUR CLAIMS FOR YOU!
,COME TO SEE US TO
AND, LEI.US 'TA"E CARE OF
YOUR
PTIC)N&gt;NE·EDSf

when you slip Into

•
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. SHOE PlAC-E
AVE.

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Leading Creek Conservancy District CUStomers east of Danville
will experience interruption of service or low JRSSUfC berwccn 8
a.m. and 4 p.m. Sunday.
LCCD will be repauing a leak on their 12-inch main line.
After service bas been restored, customers in the area should boil
their drinking wa1er for the next 48 hours.

The 4-Cou~ty Solid Waste Management Plan has been ratified and has been
delivered to Ohio EPA for final approval.
SPECIAL THANKS to the following for your leadership In voting 100% YES
for ratification of plan:
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOABpS OF mUSTEES
Robert C. Harten~h, Prea.
Bedford Townahlp
Janet Howard Tackett, VIce Pres.
Chester Township
Fred Hoffman, Commissioner
Columbia Township
Lebanon Township
Letart lbwnahlp
VILLAGES
Olive.Township
VIllage of Middleport
Ora• Townehlp
· VIllage of Pomeroy
Ruttanct Townehlp
. Salem Townlhlp
VIllage of Racine
Salisbury Township
VIllage of Rutlar-.d
Scipio Township
VIllage of Syracuse
Sutton Township

ADIIIIION tz.oo

1.l0 day 10
• · · h.IS
• ·t'.or
' ·y

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LCCD to repair water line

SOLID WISTE IUNIGEMEIT DISTIICT
THUKS,.MEIGS COUNn- YOU MIDI IT HIPPEII

ONE E\IEIIINQ'IHOW 7:30

. I' - --·"·"·--.. ·-···-· ..·;-· •--...$23.40· , ;

52-............
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Deputies of the MciCS County Sheriff's ~ 1n1 inveati·
gating two
ft:PO'Ied braking ll1d enteriJIP.
.
ROgel w.
COolville Road, repartt.d Monday Jba&amp; li)meone
broke the lock of bis gnp over die weekend and stole a lqe IOol·
box full of tools, an Ecbo cbainsaw and a baUay charger. ·
Some money and tools weze reported sroten following the beak·
ing and entering of Wagner's Hardware in Racine between 8 p.m.
Sunday and 8 a.m. Monday.
An investigation is continuing, Sheriff James M. Soulsby said

GJMV.(Gallla, Jacbn, liel111 VInton CMnlles)

7

IN THE UNE OF FIRER

·.. -- ............,_,,,_.......... ........s.u.t6
..............,. ,_,,_,__.,............$14,76

B&amp;Es investigated

Moll K. MSnooky" Lee, 71, of

STNmNQ FMIAY

IJ - . ._ ..,_....... --··-·-·-· ... - .....521.N

myota

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CUI(F EAnwooo IN

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216 -

George Easter, 72, formerly of
Pomeroy, died Nov. 18, 1993, at
Lawrence County Medical Center
in Ironton.
A retired laborer, be was born
OcL 2, 1921, in Gallipolis, son of
the late Charles and Elizabeth
Gladman Easter. He.attended the
HiUsi(!e Baptist Church.
Surviving are three sons and
daughters-in-ll!w, Jlarbara Arthur
or Pomeroy, Mary and Gene Cooper of Coal Grove and Shirley and
Cbesrer Arthur of Pomeroy; a son,
Allen Easter of South Point; 19
grandchildren and five gJeai·grandcbildren.
Also surviving are two sisters,
Ella Mae Yeauger of Fort White,
Fla., and Gladie Sheets of Gallipolis, and a brother, Raymond Easter
of Ironton.
He was~ in dead! by his
wile, Elsie Mae Blevins Easter, and
five brothels, Burkley, Evmtt and
William Wright and Harley and
Charlie Easter.
Services will be IJUIOunced later
by Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy.

Rotary...

SLEEPLESS IN SEAmE Pa

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bJ' 'I I I i i - II

cllllda••• ,_ ...,l

causing QlOdtrale ~to ba' 1988 Oldimobile Cllllaa.
Teresa Wilson, Qac:111e, wu aonhbolllld oa Oak Grove R.Oid
ncar Racine Monday 1110r11inJ .,.._ 6 llliiCk a deer dlat ran into
tile roadway causin~ climap to ba' 1984 Fan1.
Robert Euon,
• was lllinJiboalld 01 Flatwoocll Jtoa4
Monday e\ICIIing lllcl
llld killed a deer lblt ran iniO tile !Oldway causing moderlle clamale to bis 19S7 Ford VIII.
Ieffrer A.' Birchfield, Afbany, was DOrthbound on Point Roet
Road in Columbia TO'WII$bip Monday e · lllld SlrUdt and killed
a deer that ran into the pad! of his I
pickup causing
moderale dama&amp;e·
Brian Lawreqce, Por11and, Slruck a dec( on Stale Roule 124 just
east of Patland Road in Lebanon Tow111hip Tuelday eveaing. No
damage was listed to his 1989 Chevrolet. ne deer had to be
destroyed
Deborall Cleek. Albany. lll'IICit IIDd killed • deer dill liD inlo die
pa1!1 of her 1989 Ford pickup Tuesday eveniDJ on Stale Route 124 •
m Salem Cenrer. Damaie to bet truck was 1isttd • IIIOdenlre.

Gallipolis, died Wednesday, Nov.
17, 1993, in Pltasanl Valley
Hospital.
Born Feb. 6, 1922, in Henderson,
he was a 1011 ol the late Charles F.
and V'UJie (Jeffers) Lee. He was
also preceded in death by a son,
Kenneth in 1990, two sisters and a
Contiaued from Page 1
brochcr.
A member or the Elizabeth
hunters are reSponsible individuals Chapel
Olurch of Gallipolis, he
and respect the propeny rights of
the land owner, but it is the small retired from Ohio River Co. as an
percentage of hunters that create engineer in 1984.
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth
most of the problems.
(Welch) Lee; three sons, Dennis R.
Lee, John F. Lee and Peter Lee, all
It is estimated that the deer pop- or Gallipolis; daughrer, Sherry
ulation in Ohio is about 18 per Duke or Gallipolis: brother, w.w.
square mile which is about ftve too Lee of Henderson: sister, Freda
many, he said. It is estiinaled that Oliver . or Dayton, Ohio; seven
there about 9,000 does too many in grandchildren and several nieces
Ohio so the number of deer to be and nepllews.
taken legally is varied each year.
The funeral will be Saturday, I
Some deer are ldlled illegally by p.m., at the Wilcoxen Funeral
-poachers who take the raclcs and Home with Pastor Alfred Holley
leave the carcasses.
officiating. Friends may call at the
funeral home Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
Because of the 400-plus square
miles Wood bas in his territory, it
is diffteult to reach him, but he can Mabel Moore
be called through the Meigs County Sheriff's Office, at his home or
The Rev. R. Keith Rader will
through the district office in Athens officiate at services for Mabel V.
at 594-2211. _
.
Moore, 76; of Pomeroy, who died
Vice President Ion Perrin was in Wednesday, Nov. 17,1993.
charge or the meeting. It ', was
Ser'vices will be held Friday at I
announced that the meeting next p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home in
Monday night would be a spouses Pomeroy. Friends may call at the
night. The ladies of the Heath funeral home today from 2-4 and 7Methodist Church served the din- 9 p.m. at the funeral home. ' ·

COLONY THE AT RE

_,. · - -.. ..,.Dilly Seotlllet

Cry for help went for naught

;,;rfrolil

,_!1.60
:515.!1$
r...._._.. __,_... _,,___ ,_,._,_..SI120
IIMGLICOPr

••..----

Gloria C. Decker, 40, of Long
died Wednesday morning,
No¥, 17, 1993, at Vetenns Memo-.
rial flospital in Pomeroy.
'
b Feb. 6, 19S3, in Parkers·
burg, W.Va., daugluet of Marjorie
Hdpe Swain Drake of Lol!g.BottQm
an~ the late Wayne Adi.lns, she
was a charter member of the
RCedtville Fellowship Church
of
1
the Nazarene.
.She is survived by her husband,
Dave Decker; one daugllrer, Hope
Dec:ker at home: a grandltl'other.
FOrrest Adams of Reedsville, and a
stepfadler, Melvin Drake of Long
Bottom. ·
Other survivors include six
brothers, John Adams of Grove
City, Daniel Drake and Harold
Adams, both of Long Bouom,
Da~ Drake of Milf0111, Kan., Dartell D~ake of ,Hays, Kan:, and
Edwanb\dams of Reedsville: three
sisters, Sheila Curtis and Shirley
Smith, both of Pomeroy, and
Sharon Barber of Floricla; two halfbrothers, Wayne Adams Jr. and
Russell Adams, both of Belpre.
Services will be held Saturday
at 2 p.m. at the Reedsville Pellow-.
ship Church or the Nazarene with
the Rev. John Douglas officiating.
Burial will follow in the Sand Hill
.Cemetery in Long Bottom.
Friends may call at the WhiteBlower Funeral Home from 3·5
and 7-9 p.m. Friday.

Continued from Pa11e 1
depaninent, said some local dealers
may be able to meet the state-bid
prices offered by the Ohio Cooperative Pwchaslng Program.
'
In addition, Hoffman pointed
out that residents along Apple
Grove-Dorcas Road in Letart
Township feel the road needs
paved.
"
'ved
Also, commiSSioners recet ·' a
1et1u from. the Ohio Dqw uuent of
Liquor Control stating that liquor
permits in the county will expire on
Feb. '· 1994.
The letter indicated that all permit holders must file a renewal
application and tl\at the Ohio
Reviled Code provides legislative
· authoDty: with the righlto ob~ a
renelval and to request a~~ ,.
. The commission requestedltluu ner.
anyone objecting to a particular
renewal sbould, fjle their Ol)jectinns
with the commissiCln by Dec. 1. · ·
SPRINGVALIEV CI NEMA
In other~ a&gt;mmi3siOI)ets:
446·4524
- Set ~Y at 2:45 p.m;'as
the lleltt meeting dale and time due
to the upcominfi Thanksgiving holiday.
;
- Approved transfers in the
amount of $4,348.68.
- Paid weekly bills totaling.
$157,953.47.
- Granted the Meigs County
Litter Control Office a $U,100
advance so the department can
spend the final 20 percent or an
Ohio Department 'of Litter Preven·
lion ind Recycling granL
- Refused an offer from
Maguire Associates of Midlothian,
Va., to prepare an indirec:t cost
allocation plan for Meigs Cou11ty ·
for a fee not to exceed $3,600. ·
.
Present were Commission Presi·
denf Robert Hartenblich, Vice Pres·
identJanet Howard Tackett, Hoffman and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

!

Sarah Overstreet

Pt Cloudy Cloudy
C1993 Ac:cu-Woolhor, Inc

Continued from Page 1

a volunteer has come forward to
. provi(!e a large tent and help with
setting up a pioneer crafts work, shop for the two day evenL
Using the 175th anniversary to
. enhance ocher programs including
. Heritage Weekend, the Buffmgton
·Island program, and the Ohio Stale
Fair booth wen: proposed by Mary
PoweU, park diSirict director.

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s::ny

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George Easter

B~.

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,..._----Briefs...------cTht 0811y Sentinel hgr

_.;.-Area deaths-----.

MICH.

position." I have a hearing disabili·
ty and though I wear a hearing
aide, my office sldlls are good.
I acknowledge thai there are
many qualified employees at the
DHS office , and I would have
rather seen the positions go to
someone who desperateI y needed
the job than someone alri:ady holding a job.
When the positions came open, I
never saw or beard anything about
them while with the JOBS, Mrs.
Roush works for the Gallipolis
OBllS · if the position had been
listed with them, I would have
beard of it, or seen a listing on the
bulletin board, only our DHS
Office doesn't put job openings on
the bulletin board • bow come other
offices like the CAA do this?
Its highly unfair that people so
desperately in need are looked over
by executives in favor to give their
cronies and party members jobs or
to create jobs for them.
It's time to stop this practice and
give the regular people of this
county a chance to go to work. This
practice only sends the wrong sig·
nal to the young of the county that
it doesn't matter what you know,
but who you know. So why bother
trying to betrer yourself.
Get with it, Mr. Swisher .
yoti're overlooking the greatest
employment pool in this county ,
'
look to the clients in the Welfare
office files. I'II bet you 'II find lots
or them right here in your own
' '
area, stop looking elsewhere for
good people, you have the ability
to help get more people off the system and into good positions and
helping them to feel better about
themselves.
Over the river and through the look at a map or ask for directions. wrong direction and !told her, I'm ball. In a recent column on the mar,
I'll keep submitting my applica- woods I To Grandmother's house uHere's -an example," he said, '~I lost, but boy, we're making good ter, I attributed a quote to the son
tions and hoping that someday I'D we go, I The horse better know 1 got an invitation to speak in a pan time.• ,,
of Dallas Cowboys owner Jimmy
get a chance to work here. I'd The way he should go, /Cause Dad of town I'd never been in, and the
Jones. Actually, the quote was
rather be working than asking for won't look at the map, no!
Postscript: The Houston Oilers from Cowboys coach Jimmy Johnhelp. I was taught better.
may have ended up with eg~ on son's son.
.
A few friends were talking
Martha L Hall
.. their faces when David Withams
Saralt Overstreet Is ·a syndiPomeroy about holiday travel plans recently,
missed an NFL game in October to cated writer for Newspaper
and one of the women mentioned invitation had a map on i1. I didn't be with his wife and newborn son. Enterprise Association.
that she sure hoped they didn't get took at the map and just wrote But I'm the one who dropped the
lost on the way to her sisrer's new down the address, thinking even
house in another state. "George
not seem to get a levy to pass, even won't look at a map or stop and as1c though I'd never been in that part
Dear Editor,
of town that I knew bow to get
I would like to take a moment of when it is for the above mentioned for directions," she said, "and there. I couldn't fmd iL"
your time to discuss the condition items, and not for additional he'd rather ride strapped to the
Springfield, Mo., television
hood or the car than let me drive.•• sportscaster Tom Mast agreed:
of our local school buildings. If salaries.
-recently saw a senior citi·
This stimulated a rather lively "It's an extension of our manhood
appears that several' perhaps most zensWelevy
pass.
Please
don't
misun·
discussion,
with all the women to know where we're going. It
of the buildings are in need of
By ROBERT E. MILLER
derstand
me.
The
senior
citizens
lodging
the
same complaint as means we know north, east, south
repair.
levy
was
very
important
and
proAssociated Press Writer
George's
wife,
and
the
men
generI know for a fact that when it
and west. My father would never
vides
vital
services
to
our
people.
I
COLUMBUS
Gov.
George Voinovich and others in his administraallyfessing
up
to
exactly
what
she
rains. the roof at Pomeroy Elemenread a map or ask for directiOIJS tion ov~e oppo~ition among fellow Republicans _and renewed Ohio ~s
voted
for
the
levy.
But
I
also
was
saying.
The
men
all
said
tary lealcs, causing damage not only
and would drive until he found it,
·
.
to the second floor but leaking believe that our children are impor- they'd rather not look at maps if- no matter how much gas it tooJ;. often-cnbctzed Certificate of Need program.
Under
the
program,
hospitals,
nursing
homes
and
other
health
care
centant
too.
People
grumble
and
comthey
thinlc
there's
a
chance
they
can
through to the ftrst floor as well. It
I'll, never forget as a small child
is also my understanding that the plain about paying more taxes, but navigate by landmarks and their driving around Tyler, Texas, for ters must obtaiq a certificate of need before building new cenrers, expand·
·
··
roof on the gymnasium at Har· if truth be told, we probably all senses of direction. And if they do what seemed like forever, M9,P.I ing existing ones or buying new medical equipmenl
Tbe
JXO$Wft
evaluates
and
monitors
the
number
pf
beds
and
~.
of
waste
some
money,
which
could
be·
look
at
a
map,
they
said,
it's
only
to
risonville Elementary is in very
and Dad going at it tooth and ~L equipment m each area of the state to avoid duplic'&amp;!ion that adds 10 the put
to
better
use.
This
leuer
is
not
fix
the
picture
of
the
mute
in
their
pOor condition.
Dad still has a compass on his costs of health care.
·
.
In addition to much needed to criticize the people of Meigs minds before staning out.
dash.
That way be's always in con·
However,
the
program
in
recent
years
has
been
criticized
because
of
an
County,
they
are
among
the
rmest
The
women,
on
the
other
band,
'repairs, we do not seem to have
appeals process that alloWs exceptions that include the buying or seUing
enough up to date text books. It around, but the time to start think- all admitted a tendency to stop and trol. ''
Arlen
Diamond,
general
rnaru!l·
of certificates among certain types of health.(:are institutions.
ing
of
our
future,
and
our
childrens
ask
directions
of
anyone
they
see,
·would seem to me that the passage
er
of
KSMU
Radio
in
Springfield,
Sen. Grace Drake, R·Solon; heads a 35-member advisor.y group tlult
including
small
children,
baa
ladies
future
is
now.
of. a small levy would certainly
offered
the
most
intrigwng
explahas
been trying to come up with rec:ommendations to streamline and tight~
and
gas
station
auendants
wlio
look
Des Jetren
help In easing our financial crunch,
nation
I
found:
"I'
think
it's
b~
en
the
program.
:,
Pomeroy like escapees from prisons for the
and.help to take care or some of
stem
stuff.
You
don't
want
a
poliinThe
panel
bas
been
studying
the
complicated
prograin
since
March
•
criminally
insane.
these pressing matters. But we cantial
enemy
to
think
you're
w.e&amp;k.
without
fmding
s~Iutions.
The
members
agreed
m
early
November
to·
Why this gender difference that
:
affects so many of us? Most or the It's the· same thing I've heard dop meet twice ampnth througb February to speed their deliberations~ .
do
when
you
ta1ce
them
to
the
vet
Ms.
Drake's
group
had
been
working
agair\st
a
di'Jidline
set
for
today;
men who fit the "Don't ask, don't
tell" stereotype were willing to with a wounded leg. If there are But !iJ!I House last week added its approval io a Seqate bill ex~e~~ding the
On Oct. 20th, our daughter, pleading for help, knew her friends speculate that it bas·a lot to do with other animitls there, the dog won't Certificate of Need program until Nov. 30, 1994.
'
.
Annie King, 16, and three of her were seriously injured. Because wanting to appear to have things limp~
Gov. George Voinovich planned to sign the bill when it reached his
"!nat's why if a man ever does desk, probably sometime today, spokesman Michael Dawson said.
friends,. Lena Knotts,15, Ben Put- Todd wouldn't respond, they completely urider control. ·
,
have
to
ask
for
directions,
he
'11
man 16, and Todd Jackson,16, thought he was dead. What she
The
House
passed
the
bill
73-23
vote
afrer
a
floor
ftght
in
which
Rep.
My longtime friend Missouri
were involved in an automobile didn't know was the extent of hCI' Rep. Mike Schilling said he stride in confidently and try to Michael Fox, R-Hamilton, and others argued that the program bas nqt
accident on SR 7 about a mile own injuries. She has a broken beheves it's a "blow to the male know as much as he can about worked and that the state should drop it and try something new.
.
~uth of TUppers Plains. They were nec:k. It sounds terrible 10 say that feeling of superiority" to have to where he's going. He won't say,
He. said nursing homes that obtained certificates but lack the mol)ey .I!&gt;
Do you know where so-and-so is?' expand have been selling them to others at prices ranging from $40,000on their way to school when the so bluntly, doesn't it? Terrible
He'll say, Now, if I just go straight $55,000 a bed.
. :
vehicle went off the road and doesn't begin to describe the ordeal
down this road it will go righl over
slammed into a tree.
she has been through. The agony
~ 'This program .is increasing ,bcalth care costs, and there 81'1 lliles wai~. Todd was pinned in the car, she felt as they drilled into her care of our kids, we owe a great the bridge just soutb of Cairo, ' ing to get into the better 1\ursing homes,'' Pox said, referring to homes
unconscious.. Ben had been thrown skull so that they could attach a debt of gratitude. We would also right?' Instead of it sounding like,
that cannot expand due to the quota system. . .
. , ~.
. ~
forward hittin~ the rear view mir- !Jalo ring. The pain and bumiliali!ln like 10 tiiltnk the Caldwell's, who, I'm lost,' it sounds like, I'm pretty
Rep. Otto Beatty Jr., D-Colbmbus, who carried Ms. Drake's bill in ttie·
ror. He sustatned a broken wrist of having to wear this huge appar&amp;· lived near b1 and came 10 dleir aid. sure I know where rm going, but I House, said Fo;t inade some legitimate criticisms but the pegram CatUJOtand a seveze cut to his head. Lena's tus for the next three months. But And. IO all of those who did Stop, just wanted 10 ask a cool guy like simply be dropped without the state having alternative controls.
.:
legs went up under the front seat, her doctors have told us that she is we don't know all of your names, you to see if I'm right.'"
Rep. Patrick Sweeney, D-C~veland, said Califomia and other Slatds
Another tendency the men often had· similar problems and· repealed tlieir CON laws but' now have passell
breaking one ankle and spraining . very lucky. She could easily have but our thanks 10 yOii i.s no lesi. We
are
four
faiDllles
,ve.ry'
grirefw
for
said
they shared was to chart a · laws reviving them~
·~- -·~-. Annie was able to extrac
. t been pull~ ca: wone yet, ldlJed
·
•
' ''' "
1
'1. ''
l
your
caring
and·compasaion.
courae
and calculate an E.T:A.,
the wrecb~ and run
ne·- dri · that van didn't
We
would
like
to
ex}ileaS
a
very
then
drive
it
as
if
they
have
injuriea ·were
• boat 2.5 .-.. to the highway for know hoW Wlfft
thank
one the vol- "Pennzoil" plinted on their fend- ·
help. A ~n stopped tbat sh.e at the •
Y« he 1a1ew that there special
unteers,
Rob
Davis.
He visited ers and a minicam iiiOUIIted on the
,
·
· '
.
.
·! '
clelcribecl u a mulli:Colored vehi- were kids involved and that t!ley
'
·
81 TlHt A.oclatec~ ~
;'
cle. She said ,the driver was a were burt. It is incolll:eivalile lo us Annie e~ day .wbilo ~ Wl\l in ' back clasbboai«!- Th~ ReV. Doney
Todly Is Thliilday Nov 18 the 322nd day of 1993 There
43 da •
heavy-set man with dark hair and a h!J": anyone .clfn pass by I!C~ent tbe hospital. His COmforting W0011 Levell, exec:uuve director of the
'
' :.
•
are
. Yf
beard liJid a miiiiiiCbe. She was cry- VJcums without an ounce of~­ and - - . meant so much 10 Council of Owrchea of the Ozarb, · Jell in the year,
all
of·ua.
.
.
lllid
he
developed
~
habi.t
after
Today'i
Hlghllaht
1n
Hisulry:
,
·
t
ing and piCading with this man for ~: ~~ only il il immoral and
fa'
all
tbose
reading
dli.s,.
try
to
.._.y
yearl
fl
traveling
frorii
town
On
Nov.
18,
1928
the
fint
SIICCellful
d
hronizcd
---.
l
lielp But he said to her "I don't illcQal.ttll inhumane.
,
you•.
·
. We hope that .he's readint ibis im&amp;Jine' what t~ese kl~s went to town for speeHna engagemr:nts ~. Wli.t~·i "SiellilbcllltWlllie,~1yncMi~.,.., ~~
·
mieredattheColoriyTheilerinNewYOik ··
ng _,
·PI'!I7.
...We boP,I
the driver of this ri~.now1 WJ;t if il had been bis throUih ,and ple~~SC,.when . you see · in area churches. ·
an
accident,
don't
just
pass
them
.
"But
I've
~o.De
so,
comR'!lOn
thlJ
dale:
,
•
·
·
1 •
' ·!;'
. - . W" 11
now. He · kids 10 tb8l accident'l
.
' :
,. stve le~ do 11 on ~· be
'in 1865, Samuel L. aemens published hiil story "The Ceie~
blw:edDDClllllllMD
IIIOIIIinaao
Gthis~e•• ~o•thet~~ by.
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jolul King, tolcl me. One time my wife wu Jwnpina Prot! or~ County" under the .....
u~~ TWalft · '
be Jl"'lbbbl:r'hll no cobcerp now · aren 1
man.• o
""
Reeds'lilie. trying .to tell me I was going ihe the New Y:Oif Saturday PJas.
. · . r.-• nam~ ••,...'1, , Ill',
.,.; die pt."""ing before him, people who took such excellent

.

1

~

M

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO WcJthcl
Friday, Nov.19

Thatcher lives by her convictions

The Daily Sentinel

-..
•
•

• •

..

•

•

·-..•

..•
•

b

•
•

•

........~.__PO
...I.,.NT-.P
..,L~~-AS
4 N...
T_-~G.._,A...L_LI...
PO~
, L81111S.._-.M_I_D_DL_l:_P...
o_RT_iiitti.-_,~
11111f...
•

•

••

�•

.•

Sports

The Daily Se.ntiD.el

•••

"

Thursday, November 18,1993
.

~·

'

\fi;gfl~)d helps Cincinnati to soar to 90-72 win over Butler
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - Better
than Oscar Robertsoo. Better than
Ni~k .:van Exel. And, in one
coach's opfuioo, benet than Jamal
Mashburn.
Dantonio Wingfield has · made
quite an impression with one. game.
Wingfield scored 30 pomts the most ever in a Cincinnati debut
- and showed off his versatility as
the 19th-ranked Bearcats beat Butler 90-72 Wednesday night in the

fltSt round of the Pre seasoo NIT.
His point total was two better
than Robertson managed in his
1957 debut. His ·three-point touch
was much better than Van Exel' s
- 5-for-7, most of them from several feet beyond the arc. And his
overall game was NBA caliber, in
Butler coach Barry Collier's opinion.
· "Someone ask:ed me if I think:
he's the next Jamal Mashburn, "
Collier said, r~ferring the Dallas

Mavericks i:oolae. " I Said. 'I don't
think Mashburn is that good.·
That's probably an overstatement.
· ·But I don' t k:now how you
defend a guy who can step two
steps off the three-point line and
fue it in."
.
On Friday, Wingfield gets to
find out whether he's as good as
Eric Mon1ross.
Cincinnati will play No. I North
Carolina in Chapel Hill in the second round, a rqmatch of their

NCAA tournament game · last
spring. The Tar Heels overcaltte a
big ~arne by Van Exel tO' beat
Cinemnali 7·S-68 in overtime in th~
East Regional fmal, then went on
to win the naliol)lli title.
North Carolina beat Western
Kentuck:y 101-87 Wednesday in its
first-round NIT game. Montross,
the Tar Heels' 7-foot center, scored
21 points.
·
Wingfield, a 6-foot-8 center
from A!bany, Ga. , dido 't have

- • Basketball • In the NBA ...

Rice•Minaelotl winner v1 . Alab.ma
SL-CioorP,. wiMa, TBA

EASTERN CONFERENCE
L
1

80&amp;1(11....................... 5
Miami ...................... ]

2 .714

u

2
3
3

2.5
2.5
3
4

Odendo ................... .4

Wuhinpm .............. 3
New Jersey ... ........... 3
Philaddphia .............2

PeL
.17S

S

.600
.571
.SOO
.375

6

.250

At Mldl&amp;on Sq""re Garden

GB

Cali£omia •Kanu• winner VI . RiccMinneaota - Ala.St.-GoorJia willner, 7
p.mNorth Carollna·Cincinnali winner va.
Cleve.. St.-UMau--Towson St.·SL John'a

s

wWc:, 9 p.m. - -

••
•

ChiCIJO .................... ]
A~u ..................... 3

3
4

.500
.429

l.!i
2

CUlVELAND ........ .l

4

.429

2

Detroit. .......... ........... ]
Indiana ..................... !
Milw•u.kec ............... l

"

.429
.167
.12.5

7

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tum

Hounon ................... 7
UWI .........................6
San AntorUo .............4

:Denva ..................... 2

o.u....................... l
~otl ......... .... ... t

s

The prcao11on Top 2S women''
buketball teams, u compiled by Mel
Greenberg of the PhUadelphla Inquirer
bued on the vote• of 71 women ' 1
coacho1 wilh fint · placc votca in
pitmth~, 1992-93 record, toW poUna:
buod Oft 25 poinll for a fint·placc vote
dtmu.a)l one point for a 25th-place vote
and Jut )IOU' I final rankina:

GB

0 1.000
2 .1SO
4 ..SOO
4 .333
5 .161

.167

1.5
3.!1
4.!1

B

s.s

LA. Cil'l"" ........... 3

PordonL . ............. 3
L.A . l.aken .............. J
Saeramsu.o .............. 3
Golden S1.11c ............ 2

0 1.000
2 .661
3 .500
3
•
4
4

.SOD

2
3
3

.-429

3.5

.429
.333

3.5
4

Wednesday's scores

Bocon 1~. New Jency I 00

Alhnh 92, P!riladelphia 90
Wul'linJlM 117,Milwaukoe104
Ulah Ill, Miuni Ill
O.adoue 130, Sacramento 113
Dotroil91, OdUldo 92
San Amonio 9.S, New YcD 90

10. VlrJinia ................. .2.6-6 1,029
ll.Soulhcmc.I ...........:U.1 913
12. Colondo .................27-4 793
13. WC1t0mKmtucky ..24-7 7&amp;2
14. TeauTrdt .............Jl-3 743
IS. Swpua F. A........28-S 700

Tonil!~t's pmes
Jkw!Mattndiana. 7:30p.m.
CLEVELAND at Dclnwr, 9 p.m.

16. Konw ....................21·9
17. Goo'Jio .................2l·ll
II. CannoctiM .......... ll· ll
19. Alabama .................22-9
20. SW Milsouri SL .....23-9

Dallu •~ L.A. Cippen, 10:30 p.m.
L.A. Laten at Ooldcn State, 10:30
p.m.
OtiCIIgO It Ponllnd, 10:30 p.m.

Friday's games

23. Muylond .............. .22-8

2A. Okloh- s.........,lJ-9
25. Piorm.i ..................16-11

..·•

Orlando at Bodon, 7::30 p.m.
lhah II Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.

z.J.

.......

Go&lt;qo1own 12, T_... Tocll 12, Lao&amp;
~anAl

S'AIO I, Florid~ I, Louiavillo I, XAVIER,
OHIO I, Now Mexico State 7, Orcaon
S!ol&lt; 6, UC Sonia Btrlluo 6,1\fi-... S,
Nadh Cuolirua S1010 S, Tolado 4,1Jnko 3,
Fairfield 3. Ocoraia TCch 2, Kent 2.
Marquette 2, Tcau AAM 2, Virginia

11
Cincinn•ti. 90, BUlle 12
Kanu• 69,
Mi£hiaan .so
Callfomia II, San11 Oan 74

w.tem

Tc&lt;:h 2 Ci.lifornia 1, Florida Stue I ,
Monta~a State I, So\ldlcm Illinoi1 1,

TotiiJhl'lpfftfl
Cleveland SIIIC al. Maa·rh'WI', 7:30
p.m.
All bam• StU aa c::Jec:wp., 7:30p.m.
TowtOR Slale ll St. John'•• 7:30p.m.

S.Ulll"" M!lhodlot I.

-*NHL•.;_

p.m.

Quarternnals

Atl•ntlc Dlvlalon
Tum
W L T PU.
N.Y. Rq... .... 13 S 2
21
Now Ieney ....... 13 4 0
26
Wullin......... 9 9 o 18
Flarid• ____ ,........ 7 9 3
17

Friday
Cineinnali at Nonb CM'O!lna, 7 :30 p.m.
Califomia II KMiu, 9:30p.m.
Saturdar
Cleveland St.-MuAc:buiCUI winner

GFGA
73 52

6S 42
52 58
54 S9

Basketball

Nadonal B•kelbaU Asloclallon
LOS ANGELES UJCERS : AtUV11cd
Elden Campbell, fotWird. Plleod Trevor
Wilson. forward, an the injured lilt.

MD.WAIJXEE BUCKS: PlAced Frank
Briekowtki. forward, at the inju.md lilt.

WASHINGroN BULLETS: Activ•Lcd
OhccqJ!o MIU'CIIan, oemcr.

Leaauk

NatiOMJ Football
DALLAS COWBOYS: A 'va tad
l.inooln ColcmUl, rum1nc bod&lt;,
the
p...UC.oquod.
OR.EEN BAY PACKilRS: Plocod Rich
Moran, auard, on injured rcaorve. Re·
...ad Omyt Ina;nm, ti&amp;hl'"'d.
KANSAS CITY Cf!JEFS: Rclemd
Huaan I met, wide mceivcr• .Placed Ron
D1n1D. HuJhca, wida
receiver, frc:m tho pra«ico tquad.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS : Sianed
Steve O'ordon, center, to the practice

~quad ..

PIULADBLPWA BAGLilS :

,

- • Transactions • Baseball
Amtrltan Lcque

MILWA\)KEB BitJ!WERS , ~h.liod

the ~11'1-a,t: of Tyrone Hill. Scdit Taylor,
Charlie loaora and Byron Browne,

Pitcltcu; Mike" Matheny and Mike
Std'anU.i, catc:hcn; DeKk Wachter and
Duane Sin&amp;Jcton, outfielder~ ; and Jeff
CiJillo, intldder, from New Orlans oC the
Amaican Aa~ociatim.
National Leaaur
A'I'LANTA BRAVES : Traded Brian
HuatOr, lint buanan, to dle Pittsburgh
Pintaa for I pl.lyer ttl be fWNid later.
CHICAGO CUBS: Purchucd the
conttaCI of Doua•OJanvillo and Otlie
Tinunonl. aulfw.kn, fran Odmulo af 1hc

SDUiltom Leo.,...
CINCINNATI REDS : Purchased the
c:ontract of Jeff PiOJCO, pitcher, from

lrldianlpolll of tho Amorican Anoci.atioo.
Named Marc Bombard manaacr of
Jndianapolil.
COLORADO ROCKIES: Announced
they h•vo uaumod tho final year of
Houatou '• player dcvdopment aarOcn\ent
with A1heville of 1he SouLh ALlantic
LeaJI.te 1ad OI.LOftded lho aaroomcRt

. lllrWal&gt; 1996.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Cout l.oCIIpe ~·
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS ' A.,...
to an. wilh Matt Canon. outfielder, on
a two-year contncc..
lnlerntllonal League
CHARLOTTE KNIGHT S : Named
Brian Grlhlm. m&amp;I\IJ.Cf.

, re.etYo. Aclivnod

N.Y. RanJcn at Tampa Bay, 7:35p.m.

h'

t'CIIta playcn. Named Ken Berry minor ·
leiJIII hininJ lnnruc\or and Ray
Ripplcmeycr pi\CbinJ eo~ch (or 1hc OW! '

Dickouon, wide J"eceiver, on injured

Anaheim at Vancwvcr, 10:3S p.m.

355
'/GI
244
220

Dune 9,

, Wedllesday's S&lt;Ores
&amp;dan4,H&amp;nford2
N.Y. W..- 8, Oa.two I
MonoaJ 3, Edmon1a1 I

Winnipeg at Buffalo, 7:35p.m.

R.utacra ll, Sotan Hall _19, FIOI\da '
lntemationa118, MOG\Ina 11, Vennonl
17, Olcl Dominion 16, Ari&amp;ona 13,
Bclrll Swe 11, Noc:re

63
11
13

Friday's games

12
2A
21

Boila SUite. 21 , BOWLING OREBN 21,

Flrsl roWid

Mim-.,,30

.S

Miuiuippi 43, Nebn.*• 40, San Oieao
Sl ]j, Nonbem IllizuX. 31. Provlclanco
31 , Croipn.., 27, UNLV :13. MWm 22,

WedMid•J'IIItOI'tl
NOI'\h C•rolin•lOl, Weaan Kcnwcky

&amp;;a, ..

I0
13

1J.ri&amp;hom y.,... 48, Dd'oul 47, S..'!'=

Preseason NIT action

10

Hartford at Philadelphia. 7:3S p.m.
Chicaao 1t Florid•. 7:35p.m.
Cal&amp;uy at SL LoLliJ, 8:35p.m.
Toronto allAI Arlgclcs, 10:3S p.m.

OU.m realwtna •ote12 Nonhweaern.
180, Tezu tSI, Wa~hi.naton 144,
Clem&amp;on 93, Hawaii 84, UCLA 49,

Allaru at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Wuhinp II Clw.rloe&amp;o, 8 p.m .
San Antonio at Deuait,l p.m.
Sacmnano at Minneloca. 8 p.m.
Ponland at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
Drallaut Seattle. 10 p.m.
OUciJOal L.A. LakeD:, I 0:30p.m.

61
Sl

78
63
73
41
49
9 57

Edm«u.on ......... 3 1S 3

Wioldcr; llid .Ch\lek Ricci, pitcher, \D '
minel'obJUe COI\hi.CII, lavilcd Di1cenzo
and Can&amp;cloli to •prina trainina u non·

Football

PadRe Dlvlllon
Calgary ............. 14 4 2
30
Vancouvm- ........ 12 6 0
24
Loo Aqolro .... .. 9 1 2 lO
Sud01e ............ 6 11 4
16
Anohcim ........... 4 13 2
10

SanJ01e at BOlCtoo, 7:35p.m.
Washington at Pituburgh, 7:35p.m.
New Jeney at Onawa, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. bbnden n . Montreal at
Hamilton, Ont. , 7:35p.m.

9

21.~W~ll 449

22. Mil""'l'P' ...........19·10

PU. CFGA
30 79 53
:14 57 52
22 72 67
20 62 53
18 68 72
lS 69 65

Tonight's games

IS

631
S93
50!1
499
463

T
4
2
4
2
2
1

New Janey 4, BWf1lo 0
WinnipBg 2. Ocu-oit l
Dal.lu 4, Tampa B•y 3
Toroo.to4, Anaheim 3

Lui
Team
W-L PtL Ytar
l. Tmncaco (34) ........29--3 1,721
l
1 Vandezbil.t (34} ........ 30.3 1,7l.S
I
3. 1owl (2) ... ....... ........ .27-4 1.413
4
4.l.oWmno Toch (I) ..26-6 1.452
14
S Aubwn ................... .25-4 1,401
7
~ Stonford .................. .26-6 1,319
6
7. Penn Sta1C ............... .2l-6 1,170
I
8. OIUO ST ................ .2114 1,151
3
9. North Carolina ........23-7 1,040
17

Parlrk: INria&amp;on

Sooule ....................6
- . . ................. ..4

7 p.m.

Women's pre-season
Top 25 basketball poll

•

MklwMI Dlvllloll
W L Pd.

Tum
W L
TOJOrll-0............. 13 3
SL 1.ouU ........... 11 -1.
O.U.s................ 9 i
ClUcaf;O ............ 9 7
Winnipec .......... 8 10
Detroit.............. 7 9

Third. place
Snifinall~m .

12 6.582
11 60 10
10 49 73

Central Dlvlllon

AI Madllon Square Cud.en
Frkby, Nov.lti
Semifinal winnCII, 9 p.m.

2
3.5
4.5

73 14
60 4l
42
69 68

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Championship

Central DlvtakMI
2 .114

23
23
55
15

Monueai ....... LO 6 2 22
Qocbo&lt; .............. 7 II I
Otuwa .............. S JO 2
Buffalo.............. .S l1 1
HartfOJd ............ 4 12 2

VVednesdaJ,No•. 24

CtwlottL ......... .......S

.S

N-..aDI ... lon
PinabwJh ......... 10 1 3
a...... .............. 9 4 5

Semlnaals

AllanUc Dlvl.._

Teun
W
New Yor:k ................7

11 60 61
10 42 59

N.Y. Ialandca ..• S 12 1
Tomp.oBay ....... 413 2

pm.

.

that in the first half. He scored 18,
including seven in a 13-4 run that'
put Cincinnati ahead. He' also
established him~!f as_l)le star of
UC's youngest team ln ~ yeiu1.
He swished three-pomters, hit a
turnaround jumper, had 'three
assists and two steals _- and that
was just in the fltSthalf.
"Since I've been in Cincinnati,
that's what's expected of me "
Wingfield Said. "When I came ~ut
(See uc on Paae 5)

In the NBA,

Scoreboard
vt . Tow1on St.·Sl. John'• winner, 7:30

much problem doing anything he
wanted. against Butfer. The Bulldogs' two centers wound up with
four fouls apiece just three minutes
into the secon~ half, when Cincinnati surged ahead 52-36.
Buder never got closer than l)ine
points despite a career game by
senior g(Iard Jennaine Guice, who
scored 37 points on 14-of-19 shooting. But the Bulldogs' front line
man~ just 17 points.
Wmgfield had more points than

4

HOUSTON ASTROS, Nomed Terry
Collliu manapr.
NEW YORK MBts, S;gned D••B

Ducau.o and Jofut Canacloli. OJificldcn;
Alberto Cutlllo, catcher;
Graham,

Orca

~;gned

John Raper, linebac!lor, to a ono-yaar
c:oatno&amp;. Rolea1od Oorald Ni.chola.
def'Miivc tadtlo.
PHOENIX CARDINALS : Plocec! En.
Swann. dofenlive!. llcklc, _ancl Brcu
Wallcrucdt, linebacker. on Jnjurod
mervo. Activated Mut Tu~. ctrcmive
lineman, fnm thB praeticc squad. SiJnod
David Metria, lineback•. Sipocl Chria
Pcn:z. offCII.Iivo liacman, to dlo pracdce
oquod.

Spurs drop Knicks
from unbeaten ranks
By The Associated Press
The San ·Antonio Spurs, who
handed New Yotk: its only loss in
eight preseason games, did it to the
Knick&amp; again.
. The Spurs, who defeated New
York 76-75 at Salt Antonio in an
exhibition game, again sent more
than 18,000 fans at the Alarnodome
home happy on Wednesday night
with a 95-90 viciOry over the previously unbeaten Knicks.
San Antonio outscored. New
York: 29-18 in the fourth quarter to
overcome a 72-66 deficit after
, three periods. Patrick: Ewing, John
· Stark:s and Charles Oak:Iey managed just three points in the final
,,12 minutes.
.
·~ "We beat the guys !hat were 7Spurs coach John Lucas said.

f ·"

' ' What IJoes that say about us? I
stress to the guys that th~ season
has started. Sometimes they don't
remember that. We played with
some emotion that's been lacking." ·
Dale Ellis scored 21 of his 25
'points in the seco11d 'half,' while
David Robinson acored 32 points
and Dennis Rodman grabbed 20
rebounds, his sixth time in eight
games with 20 or more. .
EUis' IS-footer gave San Antonio its ftrStlead at 76-74 with 8:17
left in the game. EUis later started
and fmished a 9-2 run tliat gave the
Spurs their biggest lead, 85-76,
with 3:51 remaining.
Starlcs finished with 21 points,
while Oakley' added 16 points and
(See NBJ\ on Page 5)

. ~Th~urs~~~·~·No~Q~m:H~r~1~8,~1!~~--------------------~----~P~o:~::ozy:=N:Id:d:le~po~rt~,~O:h~lo~------------------------~~~~~~~~~

JFull 'slate of bask·etball action marks .Bevo Francis C·lassic
A full schedule of college baskelball will be housed :witllin L e
Center at the Universiw of rio
Grande this Friday and Saturday
when the Rio Grande men's and
women's basketball teams sponsor
this year's edition of the Bevo
Francis Classic.
. The tournament, which started
: in 1983, is named for Clarence
\ "BevoN .Francis, the basketball
plafer wh9 eslablished new acoring
;' r~Cit4J ~)'&amp;Orne ef which· have
, never been matched - between
· 1952 and 1954 while he was a
' member of the famed Redmen
team coached by Newt Oliver.
, Francis and Oliver have regular!y attended the tournament and are
J expected to be 011 hand this weekend for the ~ontinuing observation
of the 40th anniversary of the
team's accomplishments. Francis,
Oliver and other surviving members of the team will be honored at
the halftime of Saturday's last
game. .
The tournament opens Friday at
2 p.m. with a women's ·11ame
! between Tusculum (Tenn.) and
" West Virginia Tech, while a men's
· contest pits Milligan (Tenn.)
.: againsi Montclair State (N.J.) at 4
p.m.
The Rio Grande Redwomen,
~ coached 'by David Smalley, com:. pete against West Virginia Wesr leyan at 6 p.m. , and John
' Lawhorn's Redmen hattie Daemen
;

' (N.Y.)at8.

On Saturday, the Red women
will play at 6 p.m., regardless if it
· is the championship or consolation
; game, while the otber two women'~
. teams will play at 2. Similarly, the
. Redmen take the floor again at 8
for either the title or consolation

game, and the other teams compete
at4.
Men's actloD
The Redmen are 1-0 entering
their contest with Daemen Friday
after pestina a 106-SS vic!Ot)' over
Wilberforce in the seuon opener
Tuesday at Lyne Center.
·
Rio Grallde will look 10 a projected starling lineup of J~ Mor..
gan (5-9, Sophomore) u the PQint
guard and Matt Powell {6-4, junlor)
as the shoo~ng defender; ;f'owell
led all or his teammates.In ICOrlng
against Wilberforce with 23 points.
Expected tO serve u forwards
are Walter Stephens (6-4, junior)
and Jeff Hoeppner (6-4, senior),
both of whom were double-figure
scorers in the opener, along with
Brett Coreno (6-5, junior), who
will take the pOst.
· Don Silveri's Warriors are ·0-1
going into the game following a
69-65 loss to SL Thomas Aquinas
(N.Y.) in their season opener last
Sunday. Daemen was 12-17 last
season for Silveri's fourth year at
·the helm of the Daemen program.
· The Warriors' projected starting
lineup will pit Denni$ Schimpf (56, junior) and Rob Lange (6-4,
sophomore) on defense, with Gil
Padilla (6-4, senior) and Travis
Carrow (6-5, saphomoi'e) handling
the forward ~lions. The starling
center will be Mario torres (6-8,
senior).
Milligan, under the direction of
Tony Wallingford, will be the ooly
team 10 enter ·.with a set of regular
season games under its belt - and
all of them victories. The Buffaloes
have edged Knoxville (Tenn.) 6763, buried Warren Wilson (Tenn.)
1OS-52; and nipped Cinch Valley
85-83 on 'the

·.~. There will be.a girls' basketball
ilreview Saturday at Meigs High

ISchool.
·
.
t The ·evening's fttSt contest will

underway at 5 p.m. with Southplaying Warren Local. At 6
Federal Hoclcing ·will meet
Villley in .the second game.

,.
,.
.~

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:
PlAced Alllhony MsDowell, fulii&gt;Kk, on
injured ro~ervo. A;Uva•od. Soan Love.

·?;.•

offen1ive linerftan,lrom the practice

:•

oqu•d

Hockey

•

NUion•l Hockey ........
DA!±A:S ·STARS: Aaaianed &lt;!hria ,,
Tancill, center, lo K.alamuoo of the
lntomotionol HockO)' 1 - .
·

i'•••'

FLORIDA PANTi-l!:lt.S : Recalled ..

Stcphane Richer, dcfen1eman, from
Cincinnati of the Intcm•ticmll Hoc:.i.cy

.."':i
'i

l..e.ol"•
SAN JOSE SHARKS: Recoiled M;U
Sullivan~ center, from x_.,... City of the
International Hockey Laaue under
cmcqcncy condidona.

".:1
D

Colle&amp;e

CAUFORNIA, PA ,, Nomod R!ek
BettaanoUi 101\ball COld&amp;.
· CONNECTICUT: Announced tbe
rc1ianation of Tom Jackaon, football
soocb.
LOUISVILLE' Nomad Glynda B""""
wiftant 11hiedc dJreGI,ar for campliance.

Doua •-

~

M~ laOW-CGifP..,.._r FUTUifiDMODfllf

and quutczbaek cotdl; AI Cade.. dd«llive

f·

ture the Rio Grande Redwomen against West
Virginia Wesleyan at 6 ~.m. 'Friday and the Rio
Grande Redmen against Daemen (N.Y.) at 8. On
Saturday, tile Redwomea will play at 6 p.m. and
the RedmeJi at 8.

~ NBA games .. •_ _:&lt;_co_nu_·nu,...ed_rro_m_P_a&amp;_e4_&gt;- - - - - - - - -

NORTHWEST MISSOURI STATB'
Fired Hlrold "Bud" Ellion, footblll
cooch;
o«..a,. ............
coordinator and lineback:Cit c:oa.ch; and
Steve Quinn, affelialve line coach.
AMouncod tho mipatioa of Rich1rd
Flwaan., alhldk dinlctor, etroctive Dee.
31.

...

TO COMPETE THIS WEEKEND.- The
~ Lady Pioneers of Tusailum College (Tean.) will
~ race off a11aiost West Vir11inla Tech at 2 p.m.
:.... Friday in Lyne Center for the first game or tbe
t two-day Bevo Francis Classic at the Uni~ersity
itt or Rio Gnnde. The aanual tournament will rea-

score~

15 rebounds and Ewing 15 points .
23 points and Alonzo
10 rebounds. Ewing is still Mourrung and Dell Curry 22 each
~ hampered by a sprained neck.
i~ the Hornets' fourth consecuuve
:
"I'm not going 10 play 811f1110re vtctory.
: until it feels better," Ewing said.
Bullets 117,Bucks 104 .
a "I should have trusted my
Don Maclean .acol'ed: 38 pomts .
~ instincts."
-:- 14 more than~ preVIOUS career
=
Elsewhere in the NBA it was high - and WashmgtOII stopped a '
= Boston 105, New Jersey 100; late comeback ~id by visiting, Mil- .
~ Atlanta 92, Philadelphia 90; Washwaukee, extending the Bucks )osington II7, Milwaukee 104; Utah
1o 115, Miami lll; Charlone 130,
= Sacramento II3; and Detroit 98,
: Orlando 92.
.
!I
Pistons 93, Magie 91
ii
·am Laimbeer scored 26 points
; on H-fot-15 shooting, his best
·.
game in two' seasons, for De~1t
against visiting Orlando. Laimbeer's performance came one day .
aflflr a practice fight in which Isiah
Thomas broke his hand when he hit
Laimbeer in the head.
.
• •
· CeltiC. 105, Nets 100
, ~ Boston won for the fifth lime in
I , m· ' ' wn~. again gettiJ!g soiid j~
!" ',several players m defeaung
: w.Jersey.
Jazz 115, Heat 111
·,.
Karl Malone, a career 25 Jl!lr,.1 :cent sh. ooter from thr.ee-pomt
~ange, scored 3.0 g:J.nts. and
·,.
$wished a lhree-pomt
et m the
!final minute as Utah rallied from a
t 1•I7-point deficit to win at Miami.
"
Horaets 130, Klnp 113
·,.
~
Charlotte kept Sacramento win~ less on the. road as Larry Johnson

E and

IIAVY iiUTYWAIIIIt •• LIU IIV• ·

WAKE FOREST : Announced that
Ricudo htal. fcwwar4, haa boea rulod
olipble"' ol•J buUibd1 hylho NCAA.
WA Y~i!SBURO: Announced the
ra.Lpation of Ty CWko. football "coech.
dfeetivelllhl end Of lhland=k JCIG'·

BY YOUR
SWISHER 'LOHSE ,,

PHARMACISTS

·l

When ehould you have eurgeiY for brMit c~? Study oflonl' ..

1errn recorde lit the Unlve1'81ty of Loula~llla ScMcll of MedlciM In
Kentucky found thllt women who hMI eurgeiY belwlln the !_th
and 20th day of the 1111netrual cycle we111 moN than twice "'

'

•••

"Cold" Ia. . trutment for cerpal tunneleyndrome rrwv ·taka the
p'- of ltandard IUIQIIY. l.u« ref~ .PfUIUN by bjlrefr
pene~Ntlng the akin to ehrlnk ewollen tendon• around tile
median ntrta. Mllthod calli for -r•l trutmente II - k for f~
w11ka, plue eome follow-:up.
,,

•••

A ,_rly teet to lpOl blood In the etool Cjlll elgnlftc.ntly ,-d~
dllllh• of eolorectal cancer by cldchlng cancer. ..,...,.,
eccordlng to • etudy reporteci· tn the New England Journll !f
IIJidlciM. ThoH teltecl, uperleneMI on•thlrd fewer c1Mth1 '~"'·
thedl......

•••

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' ·.· ~· ·

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11 :00 am to 4:00 pm

Free Candy and Gifts
For All The Children

'

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• •• ••

uc wins ...

PICTURES WITH
SANTA
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•.UMj.trpalllld capaCity

,I,'

:
(Continued from Page 4)
iof high school, everybody ~d I
'" 1\vas the .best in Georgia. I dtdn 't
: (have--to work that hard. Now.
you •re going to see more C?f that.''
Wlill. 'Huegins would ·like 1P see
more. of everythin~ but the_1ong·
~ange
shootinS.
ije s not
•on
having
his center
put 100
themkeen
up
'rrom way outside. WinlfiW flO'~
·,shoot IP many three-po1nters m _his
debut ·because the young starUng
!jjneOJ:i·;,;.. he's o~e 0~ three~: '

'

·,.

l

.

k!o;::'y~~:·t iWl~gh~:t

~r.U: ·~~~~~~:';.~i~~~~

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.,,

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Chras
• t. maS Shoppe
SR-50, Littl.e Hocki.ng, OH
(614) 989-22~1

men """' '~~ !ltillleanuna
Hugpn•.
system.
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or Your Camera

sTJ\HL' s

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he thi.nb his coach
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••

•
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IS
com1ng

NOVEMBER 2oTH

=
' ··
=·1

to party.

II lllt'7 11111 OlllYl,

CLAUS

SATURDAY ·

H's our anniverSary,
but you g$( the gill.
Buy yout lavorHe
footlong Subway
sub.and we'll gi~
you a secol\d one ·FREE. At Subway,
we-really l(now how·

·NQ~Uhlng

;

ing streak to seven games.
Hawks 92, 76ers 90
Dominique Wilk:ins had 23
points, Stacy Augmon 22 and
Kevin Willis 21 points and 14
rebounds for Atlanta. The. Hawk:s
took an 8~-64 advantag~ mto the
fourth period before the Suers then
used a 1.2-1 run to close within
five.

P*""~S!~;\g

,.

&lt;.·

Open Mon.

.

-Fn: 8 to6

S

at

8 ';, S 1 S
to ~ • · un. to

"

Ji. it tJa'jtl!Mi'll.tbti ti:tr iHil #I ·;; a; ill~ ·..
I

p~y

during the evening games.
Hall or Fame honorees
Concurrent with the tournament
on Saturday will be the annual Athletic Hall or Fame Banquet, se.t for
S:30 p.m. ,in the James A. Rhodes
Student Center.
This year's inductees will be
Darren MiUer and Mark Pierson,
1987 graduates of Rio Grande who
distinguished themselves over a

four-year period in cross country
and traek. Miller and Pierson will
be the 58th and 59th iqductees,
mspectively, into the Half of Fame
since its founding in 1973.
. Miller and Pierson are scheduled 10 be introduced by two Rio
Grande running greats from the
1970s, Jack: Finch and Bernie
Tilley.

Braves ship Hunter to Pirates for unknown

Gallia .Academy and Eastern will
play in 'the third contest at 7 p.m.
The final game.will ~ve Alexander playing the host Mlirauders at 8
p.m.
.
Admission is $2 f9r adults and
$1 for students. Each cootest will
last two quarters.

!

I~PICS

Milligan was 23-10 last season fust-year coach, Sandra Elmore.
and·shared the Tennessee Valley
Admission to the tournament is
Athletic Conference championship. $3 for adults and $1 for non-Rio
lts opponent in the opening Grande students. Rio Grande sturound, Montclair State, begins its deliiS, facultY and Slaff are idmitted
·seUon at Rio Cltande; looking to free with ID.
impiovc 'lipon an 11-13 fmish in
.A concession stand ~ted by
1992-93, where Nick De!Tufo' s the University Women s Club in
Red Hawk:s went 8·10 ill the New the 1Qbby of Lyne Center. Rio
J(isey Athletic Conference.
. Grande's. Pep Band under the
, ' Women's competition
direction of David Phillips will
; Slnalley's Redwomen will be
the Mly women•s· ~ilfthe-tllilr'
~nt y.i.th season experience folIQwing ~s of 106-100 in its
By ALAN ROlliNSON
OIJCI1er laSt Saturday with CumberPITTSBURGH
{AP) - Brian
il!nd (Ky.) and a 120-43 drubbing · Hunter figureS that ev~
if you can ·
of Wilberforce on the I'Oij1 Tues· beal'ern, you can join 'em.
day. .
.
Hunter played in two World
Leading Rio Grande into action
Series
and on two pennant winners
against Wesleyan will be Gena . in Atlanta,
yet still welcomed his
'Norris (S-3, senior) on the point
trade
10
the
Pittsburgh Pirates ' and Stacey Ritter (5-5, sophomore)
the
team
he
as the shooting guard. Talcing the . playoffs. beat in .the 1991 NL
·torwaril positions will be Michelle
Hunter, the Braves fli'St baseman
Crouse (5-6, senior) and Tricia
whose
three· run· homer off John
Collins (6-0, junior), with Lori
Smiley
decided Game 7 of those
Hamilton (6-0, senior) repeating at
playoffs,
was traded to the Pirates
theposL
on
Wednesday
lor a player to be
Both games have given the named.
starters and Smalley's dependable
just want 10 go somewhere
bench the opportunity to score and"Iprove
myself," Hunter said.
high, as in the Wilberforce game, urm a Pirate
now."
which saw seven of Rio Glllllde' s
The
deal
gives
the rebuilding
!'layers get in10 double-figure scarPirates
a
potential
power
hitter in
mg.
the
miildle
of
their
lineup
and
gives
Wesleyan, 7-18 overall and 6-12 general manager Cam Bonifay
in Uie WVIAC last season, is
more flexibility in his off-seacoached by Lori Flaherty, who had even
son
maneuvering.
He could offer
not yet decided upon a probable
starters' list as of p-esstime.
The other women's opponents
include Angelo Botta's Tusculum
Pioneers (25-7 in 1992-93)
Ia&lt;'IDI!. ,off against Tech's Lady
4-14 in the WVIAC
;:::~;.:~:i~un·~~der the dir¢ction of a

:Girl~' cage previe.w slated for Saturdp.y ·

PHARMACY

likely to eurvlve.

•

'

.

·
I

two-lime All-Star Andy Van Siyke,
a potential free agent after the 1994
season, or .300 hitter Orlando
Merced for some much-needed
pitching.
The Pirates have a logjam at
ftrSt with Kevin Young, Hunter and
Merced. and are expected to make
another trade or two this winte(.
Their top priority is to acquire
pitching to improve a staff with the
NL's second-worst ERA, but
Hunter was too good to pass up,
manager Jim Leyland said.
''Cam and our scouts did a lot
of homework: on this, and I think:
they see the same thing I do. He
could be a steal," Leyland said.
"When you don't have much to
spend like we do, you've got to be
smart. I thin,k it's a great gamble.''
Hunter, 25, had 12 homers as a
rookie that seasoo and 14 in 1992,
but wound up in the minors last

season after the Braves dealt for
Fred McGriff. He hit just .138 in
80 at-bats ror Atlanta in 1993.
"We feel he will give us righthanded power and run produc tion," Bonifay said.
The Braves planned to send
Hunter to the Montreal Expos in
the Dennis Martinez trade last
August, bul Martinez .vetoed the
deal. Hunter is glad to leave
Atlanta for the chance to play every
day.
"I guess I dido 't see eye-to-eye
with (manager) Bobby Cox," he
said. "Everyone there knew I
should have been the regular fiCSl
baseman. I was better than the
other guy (former Pirate Sid
Bream). Everyone knew it except
Bobby Cox."
The Pirates think: Hunter has the
potential to hit 25 homers as a
starter, yet won' t cost them a key
regular.

�•

•
Page ~The Dally Sentinel

.

The Hartford Whalers played
their first game with a new coach
and got the same old result.
This time ft was the Boston Bru·
ins, who won 4-2 at Hartford on
Wednesday night and spoiled
... Pi~. McGuire's debut as coach of
tho Whalers. He took over Tuesday
when Paul Holmgren be(:ame fuU timc general manager. '
The loss dropped Hartford's
record to 4-12-2, tied for secondworst in the NHL. But McGuire is
not about to get discouraged one
day into his new line of work.
''I like the effort
team made
tonight'," he said. ' They did a
good job in the neutral zone."
The Bruins·. who received two
third-period goals from Cam Neely
and strong goa,Itending· from Jon
Casey, extended their unbeaten
streak to six games (5·0-1 ).
Wednesday was the third night
replacements worked in place of
the suilcing referees and linesmen.
And the Boston·Hartford game,
like the six others across the
leal!ue, was played without major
inculenL

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fri., Nov. 19- Major Colleges- Dlv. 1·A
• Toledo
t9
Eastern Michigan
12
Sat., Nov. 20
1
Air Force
24 • Hawaii
22
Alabama
21 • Auburn
20
• Ball Stata
34
Kent State
13
• Bowling Green
27
Western Michigan
17
• Brigham Young
30
Utah
28
Cenlral Florida
23 • louisiana Tech
19
Cenlral Michigan
28 • Miami, Ohio
2t
• Cincinnati
3t • East Carotin a
16
Coloraqo
26 'Iowa State
10
• Florida
32
Vanderbilt
6
• Florida State
37
North Carolina State
3
' Fresno State
28
San Diego Stale
26
"Indiana
33
Purdue
17
• k)wa
17
Minnesota
16
• Kansas
23
Missouri
13
Kansas State
2t • Oklahoma State
14
'L.S.U.
29
Tulane
e
• Navy
27
S.M.U.
24
Nevada
3t • Arkansas State
20
New Mexico
28 • Texas-EI Paso
t4
'Nove Dame
32
Boston College
t6
Ohio StaiB
29 • Michigan
24
"Oregon
3t
Oregon State
22
Penn State '
27 • Northwestern
7
Pinsburgh
36 ·Temple
10
• San ,Jose State
23
Pacific
10
• South Carolina
20
Clemson
17
• Stanford
24
Ca\ifomia
23
SW Louisiana
32 ' Nevada-Las Vegas 21
Tennessee
25 • Kentucky
7
• TeKas
Baylor
26
12
Texas A&amp; M
30 'T.C.U.
8
Texas Tech
34
Houston
17
• Tulsa
20
Southern Mississippi 10
U.C.L.A.
28 • Soulhern California 27
Utah StaiD
2t • New Me~~:ico State. 13
• Virginia
22
Virginia Tech
14
• Wake Forest
29
Maryland
21
• Washington
27
Washington State
t9
• West Virginia
26
Miami
24
Wisconsin
t4 "Illinois
t3
• Wyoming
25
Colorado Stale
tO
Youngstown State
19 • Akron
17

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Major Colleges- Dlv. 1·AA
Prairie View
7
• Jackson Slate
19
"V.M.I.
7
• Brown
Columbia
26
17
• Cal State Sacramento 23 Southern Utah
22
·Colgate
24 Bucknell
16
·Dartmouth
21 Princeton
20
Delaware
26 • Northeastern
21
Eastern Illinois
29 • Southern Illinois
24
Eastern Kentucky
34 • Morehead State
6
Florida A &amp; M
28 Bethune-Cookman 20
Furman
27 • Tenn.·Chattanooga 17
Georgetown
24 Washington &amp; Lee 18
Georgia Southern
27 • East Tennessee
9
Harvard
24 • Vale
22
• Holy Cross
2t
Fordham
16
Howard
24 • Delaware State
t5
'Idaho
33
Boise Stale
7
• Indiana State
31 Westem Illinois
26
• James Madison
23 Boston U.
21
Lafayette
30 • Lehigh
28
• Liberty
27 Villanova
21
·Maine
17 Hofstra
16
• Marshall ,
27 Westem Carolina
12 .
• Massachuseus
t6 New Hampshire
14
Middle Tennessee
26 • Tennessee Tech
21
• Mississippi Valley
28 Texas Southern
·23
• McNeese
30 Nicholls State
15
• NE Louisia.na
27 North Texas
10
North Carolina A &amp; T 24 • South Carolina State 2t
• Pennsylvania
33 Cornell
21
S.F. Austin
19 • NW Louisiana
17
Sam Houston
20 • SWTexas
t4
Tennessee State
3t • SE Missouri
28
Tennessee-Mart1n
24 • Austin Peay
t4
Towson
3t • Morgan State
t5
Troy
20 ·Sam lord
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• Western Kentucky
28
Murray State
14
·William &amp; Mary
31
Richmond
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•

WARNER

"I played terrible the last couple
LA QUINT A, Calif. (AP) Splash, as in the sound of a golf of days. Sometimes you win preuy,
ball hitting the water, described sometimes you win ugly. This was
Greg Norman's firsl day at the an ugly win," Norman said. "In
Grand Slam of Gol(. Ring, as in lhe fishing terminology, it was like a
sound of a cash register, was mackerel in the moonlight, shining
one minute and smeUy the next."
appropriate for the second.
What he didn't mention was that
Four shots into the water. a late
out-of·bounds that could have cost ·the other three players in the match
him dearly and 36 holes after he of winners of this year's majors
teed off in the $1 million Grand played worse.
Slam, Norman flew away Wednes·
Norman, the British Open
day with the $400,000 winner's
champion, finished at l·over·par,
check.
And Norman, who won two shots in front of PGA champi·
$252,000 in a tournament in Japan on Paul Azinger. Masters winner
three days earlier, literally new Bernhard Langer and U.S. Open
away; he took a helicopter to make champion Lee Janzen were tied
his afternoon pro-am tee time for another shot back at 148.
the tournament he hosts, the Shark
Shootout, 150 miles away in Thou·
The foursome found themselves
sand Oaks, Calif.
rather humbled by a course only
He could earn as much as Janzen had seen before, the tighl,
$125,000 in that event, which unforgiving PGA West layout
would run his take for the week to designed by Jack Nicklaus.
more than three-quarters of a mil·
They combined to hit 10 shots
lion dollars.
into the drink on the fust day alone,
The Gran!J,Slam .Jl\lycheck, the and Langer in we meantime was
·;; biggest bfitU ~r; came -for what assessed ·six pellaity strokes. The
. Nonnan adiriitted ~· wiil'i smile foursome wound up tile two rounds
- were two days of less than . with two triple bogeys and five
championship-caliber golf.
double bogeys.

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.Thanka to those peslcy Jets, who keep beating.the DOlphins, game like tills one become must wins for Miami In

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PARTS

RIDENOUR SUPPlY
Chtster, Ohio

the last~~ of tbe '92 season, ll,fiaml won 1f13in ot, its eighth sblligbt over N.E..
·
MINNESOTA ..- .. w·"..-w... 21
•--rAMPA BAY ·-....-.17
Ill typical Sl)'te: !11e.VIkinss shut tbe Buccmie«s down IS'.() l.be first time they met, forcing five turnovers and
. notching tl!dr first !hutoudn two years. Minnesota bas just enougb offense to wili.
.
N.Y. GIAIIO'S ........- ...:- .. w.l!l
..PRU.ADELPIDA .... lO
. Wltb· 169 ~~two '!V's fro,mi.ewis Tillman, the Giant: lcnocked the Eagles out of first in tbe NFC East five
. wCeks qo wlih a 21-10 win. Now, with Dallas on top, the Giants figbt for stcond............... ..
••N!Y. IETS-~- ..................30
CINCJNN~TI.......- .... 18
,~~year thbets b~ilt a 17..() leid ovet tile Be..sals and bad to bold off a late,CinclniWi rally to preserve a 17·14
1WID- but that w,as'wben Boomer was tbe other side of tbe line. He'D go wild.
..
·
~II l:U.~GHr··~·P•••·••l7 ,
••D~R ............-.21
·
i The key ·to lh!s fiDie .Will be bow~ the; 'Steeler 'defense, beat aplnat the
baqdles Iohn Elway's passing
pme. Wlth both tams in divlsioall dogflgbts, ljtla lhould be a real bailie, loo ' · · ·
, (lllooday) .
••sAN FRANCI$~0 .....;... ~
NEW ORLIWIS _:~:...u
In a swpriainiiiY low-SCOring atfai( in week four, tbe SainiJ Meted Sleove Youns six 'limes and pulled out a 16·13
win with last·serond MOrten Andersen field goal. S.F. wo" 'tallow a reptat
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(Open dale: Phoenix. Seattle)
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Peluso scored as the Devils won for
the. fiflh time in six games and 13th
in 17 overall.
• Caaadiens 3, Oilers 1
At Montreal, Palrick Roy made
32 stops in leading Montreal. Don·
ald Brashear and Jean-Jacques
Daigneault each scored his first
goal of the season for the Canadi·
ens. Vladimir Vujtek gave the Oil·
ers a 1-0 lead in the second period.
Edmonton ended its seven-game
road aip at 1-4-2.
Stars 4, Lightning 3
At Dallas. Mike Modano scored
two goals, giving him an NHL·high
18, to lead the Stars. Modano put
Dallas ahead 3-2 al 10:17 of the
second period when Mark Tinordi •s slap shot deflected off
Modano's skate and past Tampa
Bay goalie Daren Puppa on a
power play.
Jets 2; Red Wings 1
At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Teemu
Selanne' s goal early in the third
period broke a 1-1 tic and lhe Jets
ended a five-game home losing
stteak. Nelson Emerson also scored
for Winnipeg and Ray Sheppard
had Detroit· s lone goal.
Maple Leafs 4, Mighty Ducks 3
At Anaheim, Calif., Wendel
Clark scored the tie-breaking goal
and Dave Andreychuk had two
goals in a five-minute span of the
first period to lead Toronto. The
Maple Leafs ended a five·game
road winless streak and the Ducks
lost for the 11th time in 13 games.

PILE DRIVING over Detroit goalie Chris
Osgood (bottom) is Wianipeg's Nelson Emerson
(9) while the Red Wings' Paul Coffey (77) comes

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••BUFFALQ.-.... - .............33
INDIANAPOLIS •• - .... 17
Last year tile Bills won tlleir sixth sblligbt over the Colts wllb a 38..() Iaugher, giving up only 140 to1a1 yards, then
got beat 16-13 in the relnatch Wllell Indianapolis rallied to win in overtime.
••CLEVELAND..................l7
HOUSTON .....~ .............l4
1\vo more intradivlsldoal rivals that split in '92: The Browns won24-14 in Houston and tbe Oilers won 17·14 in
Cleveland. Who's leas predictable, Cleveland's Kosar or Houston's Mooo? Beals us.
DALLAS .............................. Jt
••ATLA.NTA ................ 20
Emmitt Smith ran for 174 of tbe Cowboys'.435 yards as Dallas blew tbe Falcons ou1 last year, 41·17. Once again
Atl,anta is among tile worst in the league aj!ainst the rush; Smith will run 3J!ain.
**GREEN BAY -w"-""'""22
DETRQJT,.;..,w,.....,,w... 16
The Lions are.ranked higher than the Packets in tbe NFC on both offense and defense, but we like Green Bay any·
way. Last year the Pack beat Detroit twice, 27-13 in Detroit and 38·10 in Milwaukee.
••KANSAS crrv ........ ~ ...... 28
CmCAGO....................ll
.Sort of an oddball matchup, between teams that bave played only five limes. The Chiefs won last, 21·10, in '90.
Both have solid defenses, but, unlike the Bears, Kansas City bas some olfeDSe, too.
·
L.A. RAIDERS .................... 24
••SAN DIEGO .............. ll
·Three weeks ago in L.A., .the Chargers' Donald Franlc toot the wind out of tbe. Raiders' sails with a 102-yaro inter·
cepuon rewm, and San Diego won 30..23. We stiU tbink L.A. is the better team.
,
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••L,A,RAMS ...,,.,.,.,.,w,.,.,.,l6
WASJDNGTONw ..... _,23
The Redsldns have beaten the Rams six out of tile last seven times tlley've played, but that doesn't mean mucb this
year. L.A.'sJim Everett can't win games by himself, but at least be's at home.
. •*MIAMI-....... - ........._w-32
NEWENGLAND.w-... 14

"'

MaCLean. Randy McKay and Mike

a

UWUII~S.COATS

MIIDUI'Oif

Neely's fust goal put tile Bruins
ahead 3 ·I. Bryan Smolinski and
. Steve Heinze each had a goal and
an assist for the Bruins. Pat Ver·
beek and Robert Kron scored for
the Whalers.
In other games, the New York
Islanders routed Ottawa 8·1, New
Jersey blanked Buffalo 4..(), Mon·
treal defeated Edmonton 3·1, Dal·
las stopped Tampa Bay 4-3, Winnipeg edged Detroit 2-1 and Toronto beat Anaheim 4-3.
Islanders ·s, Senators 1
At Ottawa, Pierre Turgeon
scored three goals and New York
took a 6·0 lead after 13 minutes.
The IslanderS, who ended a three·
game losing streak, set a team
record in the first period with three
goals in 39 seconds. Islanders
goalie Ron Hexlail lost his shutout
when Bob Kudelsld scored wilh 59
seconds left.
Devils 4, Sabres 0
At East Rutherford, N.J., Chris
Terreri had 30 saves in his first
shutout as New Jersey stopped
Buffalo's four-game road winning
streak . Scott Stevens, John

Norman wins Grand
Slam of Golf crown

ANDERSON'S

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· With tha..Top 20 rankings, lionference tlties ancrbowl games on 'the line, this is. a weekend ol big games, and the
biggest take place In the Big.j;ast, the Southeastern Conference and the Pacific· t 0. In Morgantown. W.Va .. the best of
the'Big'East,-Miaml ilnd~est ·Virglnia, wilf slug·" oUI in what shapes up as West Virginia's biggest game ln. years.' After
a hard·luck 5-4·2 season In '92, the Mountaineers have stayed heanhy and, under the leadership of quarterback Jake
Kelchner, have finally lullllled their potential by blossoming into one at the best teams in the country. Last year they lost
to Miami 35-23-the Hurricanes' seventh win In eight games against West Virginia-but in this one the Mountaineers
are our slight favorites. A lew weeks from now, West Virginia will cap its season by making its first bowl appaaranoe
since 1989:
Alabama's shocking loss to LSU two weeks ago took some ol the glamour away from the Crimson Tide's visit to
Auburn, but the game Is no less crucial in tbe banle for the SEC championship-and we're picking Alabama. Though
the Tide has won three straight Iron Bowls, as this t 00-year-old rivalry Is known, none has been a runaway: Last
· year the national champions beanhe 5-5·1 Tigers 17·0. This year. with a brand·new head coach, Terry Bowden, and
a bland-new attitude, Auburn would love to claim a national title ol Its own. That, however, would reqUire a big upset
this Saturday.
The Paciflc-10 has remained interesting thanks largely to UCLJ&lt;s rough stan (losses to California and Nebraska in its
first two games), because there's no denying that the Bruins have played like the class olthe'confarene&amp;-anclthe' best
Rose Bowl c:hoioo-as the season has4)rogressed.. This weekend.at.Jbe L.A. Coliseum, their an:hrivals, the Southern
· California Trojans, will take their best shot at the Bruins, and no doubt make it a great game. The last four UCLA-USC
scores were 38-37, 24·21 (both UCLA wins), 45-42 (USC) and 10·10.
And don't forget, Lehigh hosts Lafayette in the 129th game of lhe mosl·ohen·played rivalry in college footbaa, whiCh
dates back to 1884. If this one is anything like last year, when Lafayette captured the Patriot League championship with
a 32-29 win, there w~·t be a dull moment. In '92the Leopards and Engineers rang up 49 first downs and an awesome
1.072 yards ol oHense: Lehigh had 480 yards of passing alone. Who says all the excitement's in Division 1-A?

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_, .. ; Pom!r!Y.d~h~o

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.9Lcqtiisitions, :rineJewefry
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By The Bend

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·• Thursday, Nov~mber ~a, 1~
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.Return Jon~~hart Ch~pter ·D.AR . ·
tours O·ur House Museum ·
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Fund raising projects,
education classes topic

~llim Syste1111

· · · · . New HPt~n. w. 'V. 25:26~ ·
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~ryl.t\.Jilines
Jame~

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The Return ·1otiath~;ri Meigs dent; one or wh'om: at lease slu)ll be shall be necessaty to a.choice. And
Chapter Daughters of' lhe ,o\meri- an··inhabiljlllt of the same State with if the House of,Representatives
can Revolution; met for·their ri:gu- •( hems:eive$; th ey shall name in . shall riot ch~se a Presidrnt "-'lien•.
Jar November meetillg at the Our . the~. ~ots ~~person voted for as ever ~e nght or l:.hO!Ce shf!ll
House Museum in Gallipolis on ·' Prestdent. and m dtStmct ballots .lhe devolve upon them , !Jefore the!
Nov. 13.
·
· person voied for a8' Vice President, fourth day, of March next follow,
The DAR members and guests and lhey shall nlake distinct.Hsts of· ing, then ~e Vioe ~e.si4~omt shall
attending were given a tour of Lhe all persons voted for as Prestdent, act as Prestdent,. as m the·case of
historical landmark by the curator, and of all persons voted for as Vice t~e dt~th or other:·~ns~itutional
Barbara Kemper. Built in •1819 by ·Prestd.ent, and of t~e n~mber of disabtlity of the Pr~tdCJll. The perHenry Cushing and Elizabeth votes for each, '!htch hsts. they ,so,n having .lhe greaiCsl ~umber of
Cushing.Foster, the structure origi- shall stgn and certify, and transm•,t vo~es~~ Vtce Pres!~ent, sha~ be
nally housed a tavern and inn. The sealed to lhe ~t of lhe ·govern- the Y.t~ F'!'estpent., if such number
inn was "the" place to stay and pro- ment of th~ Uruted States,.directed be.a majOrttfof lhe whole num,ber
vided_social .Ji(e for the Galli a to th.e ~sident of the Sen11te,; The of electors apJX?mled, and 1f no perCounty a~ea. O~r Hoqse is .fur- Pres1dent of the Senate shall; ID the son .M~e ll ma~o~ty, lh~n fr&lt;?ln the
nt shed with penod furnishings, presence of the .senate and ·House two htghest numbers on tiJ;eJtst, ~e
China, quilts and other miscella- of ~epresen~auves, open all the Senate shall choose the Vtce·PreSIneous items which Iiave been certificates an&lt;l the votes sh~l then deqt; a quorum fot the purpose
donated or purchased. After the be counted. The person havmg th.e . shall consist of two thirds, of th~
" DAR meeting members and guests greatest number of vo~S· fOJ:. Prest- whole. nqmber of Senators, !Jnd a
were served dessert in the ball- dent, shall beth~ ~tdent, if such maJOnty of the whole,nl"'lbet ~
room.
.
number.be a maJOnty of .the whole be necessary to a clioice:,.But no
Miss Eleanor Smil.h, Regent, number of electors appoonted; .and person constitutioilally inelikible to
opened lhe meeting with the DAR if no person have such majority, the office of !he President shali bC
ntual. Vice Regent Nancy van- then from the pe~sons havil)g .the eligible mlhat .or· Vice President of
TOUR MUSEUM ...:. DAR Vice Regent
Our HC)use Curator Barbara Kemper tour the
Meter gave the National Defense h1ghost numbers n\)1 exc~ed4,ng lhe United State!. .
· · ·
Nancy VanMeter, Regent Eleanor Smith and
Our House Museum in Gallipolis.
message.
. three on the list of'those voted fot
Regent Eleanor Smith reminded
Mrs. Gene Yost, Flag and Con- as President, !he Hoitse .of Repr~- members that the DAR .President
stitution Chairman, presented a flag sentatives shall choo~ imri1edlii~- General en~ges ·all·l?lAR meni~
fact as follows: The Flag of the ly, b¥ ballot, the PreStdenL Butm hers to make.plans 11\rdugll. 1995 to
United States of America should choosing tlie President, the votes observe the 50 ye&amp;rs &amp;ince !he
never be flown with the union shall be taken by States, the repre- . beginning of World War II.- Activi•
down save as in dire express.
sentation from each State having tics
to be 'commemoraiions, not
Mrs. Yost also presented the one vote; a quorum.for Ibis purpose celebrations. This is ·a great opporTwelflh Amendment to lhe Bill o! shall consist of a member or mem- tunity io s)iow our aJiprec.iatiQil. to
Rights: The Electois shall meet in hers from two thirds of the Stares, those ffi,¢n and women that servM
lheir respective States, aild vote bY, . and a majority of all the Stales on th e ·battlefront lind !he ·homeCommunity education classes purer classes lhrough Taylor, it was Bolin-explained.
. ballot for President and Vice Prcsifront An ·exhibition·of war .me,norabilia ·-.vill' be on di~play ·at the
and fund raising prtJjects were dis- reported. Sites for classes olher
Owens joined tbe advisory
cussed at the recent meeting of the than lhe Meigs High School were council as a new member. Suggesfn~~h~~tir~0~bX~G:r~:::nt::
Community Education Advisory discussed as a way of.reaching tions for others that might be mter1994.
'
Council held at the Meigs County more people. It was decided '!hat ested or helpful on the council were
Its beginning to look a lot lilce ols are interwoven within the clasFour petitions for membership
Public Library.
for now a few classes in the same made. Anyone who is interested
Christmas in Athens, as Charles sic story of Ebeneezer Sctooge and in the Return Jonathan Meigs
Janet Bolin, director, chaired lhe location is desirable.
may attend !he meetings and particDickens' A Christmas Carol comes all of the beloved characters from Chapter, DAR were prcseqtcd'and
October meeting at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Bolin asked for members ipate.
Dickens novella of lhe 1800s.
alive on stage at Ohio University.
approved. They included Grace
Public Library. Upcoming classes to consider fund-raising ideas,
Olhers attending were Suzy Car"! think of this adaption of A Warner, Marjorie Warner,
A
new
stage
musical
adaplion
of
, to be started and fund raising activ- since the program needs to become penter, secretary and Meigs Local
the Dickens classic wiD be present- Christmas Carol as a masqu~." Stephanie Amou aild Cathy Moore.
.• ities were the main topics of dis- self-supporting, once the grant liaison; Ralph Werry, and Roland
ed at Templeton-Blackburn Alumni .adapter Jones said. ''The songs do
Miss Smith urged members to
• cussion.
monies this year are no longer Wildman.
Memorial Auditorium on Dec·. 3 at not move the story forward; they participate in and observe Natii)nal
:
Mary Owens met with the group available . The state intends the
It was noted that surveys are
stand apart from the text . .The Bible Week, Nov: 21-28. ·
8p.m.
: to discuss the aerobics classes she grant to be seed money, with the being distributed to teachers asking
songs
are traditional·but the scoring
Performed by the Nebraska Theis conducting on Tuesdays and local program to generate funds about teaching community educaThe next meeting of lh~ Return
is
contemporary
and· exquisitely Jonaihan Meigs Chapter DAR wlll
atre Caravan, this adaption of Dick' Thursdays in November and lhrou~h class fees or olher means, tion classes.
•
·
ens' classic tale is written by beautiful."
December. Classes are being held
be held on Friday, nee. 10; 1993 at
The
show
features
set designs 1:30 p.m. at the Meigs County PubCharles Jones, artistic director of
, at Meigs High School. Bolin
the Omaha Community Playhouse and special stage effects created by lic Library.
·
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reported on a discussion wilh Fennoted designer James Othuse. The
in Omaha, Neb. .
ton Taylor, principal, regarding use
A Christmas Carol features 200 set and special effects were
of the school when instructors are
costumes and .an ensemble of 36 d~sign.ed with meticulous detail to
' pajct. The .cq_mmunity ·. educalic:m
.
.
, '. .,., .
actors; singers, musicians and tech- recreate the world of Dickens'.'
rcpreSelltaltves had understood that
Church Women Umted held its Yost.
when lhe school board and superin- annual World Community Dar on
Church dues were paid and nicians presenting a full array of England of the 1800s. Among the
tendent had approved the imple- Nov. 5 at the Rock Spnngs blankelcertificateswerepurchased. traditional Holiday carols. The car- special effects included in lhe show
wiD be a 16-foot hU11\BD puppet as
mentation of a community educa- Methodist Church. About 40 peoRev. Keith Rader had the medi!he ghost of Christmas future and a
tion program, that use of the facili- ple attended.
tation, He spoke on "The Needs of
bed which has been rigged to mysties was part of the agreement, as
President Edith Sisson wei- Jesus" and the theme "Healing the
.teriously move about Scrooge 's
they are publicly owned and !here corned the group and then turned Church."
bedroom.
for the use of all citizens, especial- Lhc meeting over to the key woman
Several songs were sung with
Tickets for A Christmas Carol ·
ly for board approved activities. of the church, Louise Bearhs.
Lenora Leifheit as organisL
are
$10 for adults and $8 for chitBolin will confer wilh !he adminisVarious ladies talcing pan in the
Fern Morris and Sharon Folmer
Contributions
were
made
to
idren
(12 and undeJ) an'd ·can be
tration about !he matter of pay- program were Racbael Downie, took up the offering from the host
UNICEF,
Blinded
Veterans
and
,
purchased
at the auditoriums box
mcnL
Florence Richards, Lula Hampton, church.
·
our cat removed from ·
,
Hospitalized
Veterans
when
the
.
office
weekdays
~rween ~n and
Olher classes to be offered were Mary Pugh, Emeline Pratt, Mary . The benediction was given by
Lew1s
Manley
Unit
263,
American
'
4
p.m.
For
more
informalton,
call
Rd.
&amp;
Rt.
t
•rea;
No
quutloft.
•
discussed. Bolin will arrange com- Kautz, Ada Titus and Mary Kay Rev. Rader.
Legion met recently at Dale's ' lhe box office at1-S93-1780.
Any lnfql'l'iMitloit .PII!Y
be relayed to Chuck Krilglit :
Sm~d
The meeting was opened in .l'itu- ·· --------~---------985-4334 Qr H2·2090. P l On several occasions, the testimo- l..ve rneuage with pliO"•
alistic form with .Helen Culmer, "
.
ny
of parrots has been given a limitvice president, in charge.
·
ed
legal
~ecognition
in
court
trials.
A communication was read_
iic is invited to auend.
THURSDAY
munity Center will have a Thanks- from District 8 President Nancy''
giving dinner at 6:30 p.m. Every- Brown statina that the 81h district is
FRIDAY
RACINE - Racine American
one is welcome. Bring a covered in first place in membership with
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursdish.
four applications being received for'
TUPPERS PLAINS - A
day following a supper at 6:30p.m.
membership in the uniL Bulk mailround and sqUare dance sponsored
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- ing from headquarters was disby the Tuppers Plains Post 9053 of ty Juvenile Court and the Ohio tributed.
. ..
ROCK SPRINGS - The Middle- the Veterans of Foreign Wars State Pattol will be at Meigs High
Lula Hampton had charge of ,
port Child Conservation League Ladies Auxiliary will be held Fri- . School parkin~ lot from 9:30 to placing literature in the library lind · ·
will meet at 7:30 p.m. at lhe Rock day from 8-11:30 p.m. Music by 11 :30 a.m. to gtve all Meigs Coon- schools and "An Apple for the
Springs United Melhodist Church. True Country Ramblers wilh Red -ty students an opportunity to have Teacher" in observance of AmeriGuest speaker. will be "Flip" Carr calling. Public invited.
their speedometers checked for can Education Weelc.
'
Wiebke Muehlhoff, an exchange
accuracy. There will be no charge.
The Christmas party was
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
student from Germany.
planned for Dec. 14 at the MQpnt ·
Salem Center - Star Grange Moriah Baptist Church in MiddleGospel Church will have a ThanksRACINE - Southern Local giving dinner at S p.m. Preaching #778 will hold its annual Thanlcs- porL
'
School Board will hold its regular and singing will follow at 7 p.m. gi ving supper at 6:30 p.m. at the
Margaret Bowles, Americanism
meeting at 7 p.m . at the high Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub- Salem Center Fire Station. Meat chairman, read a poem entitled,
will .be provided and !hose attend- "Soldiers" by Robert W. Teater. It
school.
lic.
ing should bring a potluck dish. All is a tribute to the soldiers.who have
RACINE - The Racine Gun
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury members and interested persons are given their lives for America and ·
Club will hold its regular meeting Chruch of Christ will have a invited 10 auend.
those still lllive who are ready to '
at7:30 p.m. at lhe club house.
revival and tOOth anniveJSary celedefent the nation if the need arises.
POMEROY - The Meigs Counbration at 1 p.m. Nov. 19-21 with
Closin~ remarks were given by
POMEROY - Meigs County · Evangelist An Bush. There will be ty Retired Teachers will meet at the president. The singiqg of
Democrat Executive Committee special music 1S minutes prior to noon ai Triniry Chutch. For reser- "America" and a prayer for peace
will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the ear: services. The public is invited to vations call992-3887.
closed the meeting.
•
penter's Hall.
auend.

is:&amp;curity · .

. _ · , ..
c~Ct~ttf . Securttt·c..r.

0

DAY BEI'ORl!.PUBLK:.\TION

.

.

. .Mo~. thru ...i. 8A.M.-5P.M, ·SAT.B-12 .
. cLO$ED SVNDA y . . . ·..

.

. 1:00

' PI. per
'l'ueday Paper

POUCIE8

.P.-

..,;C......o..

.

·ti.::.:r:?' .

wnu.,.. c.

Thunday Paper
. Friday Piper
Sunday Popor

'.

.'

.

.• ·~·.• '! .. • •.'•

''.

,l

'

I:OO,J:&gt;"l'· n-loy .
l:OO:p.m. Woctoliday
• !DO p.m. ThCIIIclll)'
1:00 p:m. Pddly ·

.

•

(304) $82-3336

.

C:O.Ofmett

l:OOp.m.~-, .

W~yl'lpor

• 'J .. '

"

.' .'

'•

......liW.lloo ....., 7""' ad ............ pn,.i.t
• ll..,he 41 WI for ..S. ,.i.t Ia i.d.,...,

·•.,.._ .w,; c 1 -7 .u r-1111 ..t. •""• u ........ w111""
' n.S'da:jeai ..........,: ·
' Pl'loo of ad for all ..pkolloit.onio dooLio prico of ad coot ·

RAte Over15 Wonla
15
· HOO
s .lO
1
.5
$ 6.00
$. .30
., ... ~tfroo.tr~
. . .
'
6
15
$9.00
s .~
P S..tloool·lo ,_.. .,.,,,;.u,Jo fer ornn oftor *'"'day (cheek ·
10
.
15
$13.00
s
.60
- .for.......,l)ntdoyadnluiapoper). C.UWorei ,OOp ....
Monthiy
IS
.
·
$1.90/day
$.05/day
. day.,... ,.w-.. ...............tlo. .
Ratenre fOr consecutive runs, brotum up days wUI be
' . ""' .......... paid ........... ~.
.
~rd .r n..u
.charged for each daY;~ separate ads.
·
7 Ada
. ,.
. la-111&lt;la~ru
Yard Saloo. ,
. BualnmCani-...St7.001111clt per.maDilh
· • A eloooillod.od~ot plaeool.ia tloo Tbe O.lly SonUnel
Blllletin Boatd....,$6;00'1nch per day
&lt;··-~ pr.,lay,, ~ c,..t or. Lop! •
Da)'ll
1
3

Wonla

.', WW'ID71 ·
W.tp Ill ' ·In:

FIIE&amp;WATIR
·D~UUQE

R~
INIUIWICE ""-~0111!111• .1

1Li»

.

No-) 'lriU oloo oppoor ili.lloo. ~. f~oo~Pt Reptor aod
.tloo.Colbl"!llo Dally T~-. Y' o;\;lil •-li,QO!ItaOin-.
.
. . .
.

.

. C::MSSD'IEDS
GET

mm:rs .

lN.._
'
· En• IIOCJ lantoe·
' '

(

'

'

.

.

.

Limestone
··
.'
'•,

Dirt ·

Gravel
992-7878

are

OU featuring A Christmas Carol ·

Church group observes
World Com.r.nunity Day
~

·~

'

Lewis Manley
Legion makes
several donations

••ked.

Community calendar

.

'

RUTLAND' - The Rutland
SATIJRDAY
Township Trustees will meet in ·
special session at 6 p.m. at the RutMIDDLEPORT - There will be
land Fue Station.
a round arid square dance at !he
Old Legion Hall from 8 to 11:30
REEDSVILLE - Riverview Gar- p.m. Music will be by CJ. and the
den Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at Country Gentlemen and Melvin
ihe Reedsville Church of ChrisL A Cross will be caller. Brings snacks
Christmas workshop will be held. and soft drinks. Children' an! welBring finger lood and gifts ~or come with adult supervision.
patients at the Pomeroy Nursmg Admission is free. Everyone is wel· and Rehabilitation Center.
come.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
aropQ of li.A and Al-Anon will
111ee.l at 7 p.m. at Sacred ~eart
Catholic Chureh. For more mformation call 992-5763.
RACINE - Racine orange
112606 will meet at 7 p.m.- at the.
Jr1n1c hall. State delegates Chris. line l'iN~ier arid Pauline Rise will
'give J'eii0!1;L; •.
¥
•
.
MIDDLEPORT - Bradbury
PTO will moet at 7 p.m. Emergency Medical Services Director Bob
Dyer will have a program. A door
prize Will-tie glyen away. The pub'i

,

TuNSMiSSJON .
&amp; AUTO REPAIR
Speclallzlnit)n

AIJVEiln.M

·

Po.n-,

~,; Oltto 4578

·

· ......,_._!ed ·BIOIIIor
Jlle ·: oon'!l'llotlon .· of Wa..,

HOME COOKED ROA$T BEEf DINNER
Mulled Potaton &amp; Gravy

Umil Bean• • Hot Buttered Roil
Choice of Drink

ONLY

0

::·~.....
t~'"::~·:·:::
1~2~~~~§;;
In
1014
' . .
·} 1'llil wo,. oitveNCI by .Jha
· ••ili'ract
dC!cumenta
' lfto,IIHiea the following
qi!8RIIIIM. "

Contraot

'W1ter

·Jla ·gt FICiine.:. ·

.

: , CcNoalrucllon of • 17,1100• . e•l!on glaa-•Jacll bC!Ited
' at.l ,llfOUM wl!t!ll' etorege
. link ~nd · valve vault,
:,f!N!itploitJ with ·to!HICiallooie,
. •It• work, plumbing and
. plpiRO, together wllh tha
. nHHaary appertaining ·
'. ~
.
· Th_•
aatlft\otad

Tran1milllona
368 Ea.t Main St.

.,..Ice,,

·~. li\llllloty apanaoll. onll

Pomeroy, Ohio
882-6321

'----~GKLllllloal.l

Little things ·
11re Worth Alot
in

the Cl11isifitd 'Stction!

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

111 L!Mng Memoiy ot

VElSil. M~

·~

at: '
·:w.x.,'!,~fllllned
ir.~ii:.' of · Pomeroy, 320
: al
Po....,y,
:f.':
U
I Nlpte, UmHod,
;E414• E111er111n A_,,.,

CARI»ENTEfiiERVICE
1-Aoo~m~

Work .
Pluo;nblng

d_~t-,
11

merton.

Awnue,

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

..

· II'• euy IG 11y, "lion

• 1M

"
of the ConlriiCit
~OUII!tnta · . may be
·fclllaaad ·et: BIIIV•• I

; . eo;t••

t

!

• l.ta, ' Ll!llllld
~

.

U24

rkertbUIII, Wall VIrginia
· 11M upon ·payment of
, ;aa; ~one· of whloh will

. . lpeolal anantlon by the
'
t!ll' .Ia to lie diNalad
: o Mlno'rlty_ a ·ualnti..
: l!ll'jHIM ..-qulrtimanla •• •
.. Upulatad· within t~a
·
.· -ll!rY COnditione.
·,
de!• ,ara . raqulrJd to
.....,., wllh. the llli\oriJY,
~--~ EnttrpriMi (MBE)
·reautremanta aal Iori[~ In
hOlton 114.07 of Jilt Ohio
Rlliaecl Code, •d ruta114of tha
Ohio
· Adnilnlttratlve · Coda. In
,.,, thla ••na' lllat •n,

,.u.

'he . · extant . that It
)lllloO!Itracta work; .ahall

to...,
lilt""*•

- - tulloon~
~dllelllllnori!Y,

... . . , .....ll'lft ·~~~..

IIOIU vll,llt of·no ItA Jhan

:live· p..oetl1 · (5%) of th•

.jjrl•e Coptract. Bidder
:prowremant aotlvlllll lor

*4'5

l'lllnlllltl

V.C. YOUNG Ill
8112-6215 ;

..w•··

P"!ftaror, 01110

BILL SLACK

Bill ·we

a•• in tach

FREE ESnMAns

949-2168
1-tM:I-tfn

D.A. IOSION
EICiVITING ·
(614)
667·6621

24, 1993. Nl~o:J:~:~

required to r•
don~ have to

and
present

to win . .

w...w..,.lliiOO~
ltrpw•il•n

ShotAder t.brlt... ...'155
Hom MOIIlt................ '22
ScJinel ...................... '55

dim. DK's
rvFarmToys

'

HOME

,...

FOI SALE
•yOtPer

we love, '
10 eully we could bve
told them,

I

IAIWII, 01110

SERVIa

36970 lei I• Road
· Po.stoy, OldD

GRAVEL, SIND,
LIMESTONf. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

992·3470
OWIID: Jeff WltbnMa

J.A.I.
CONSTRUCnON
oJlozler e81ckhoa

Wat•r Lin.., Sapllce
Llc•nH &amp; ll&lt;&gt;ncled

Ch•li•Hatflald,
Opetator

l.l.sPOWID

Now has beautWul Cocw SpalMal Puppiea. Alto
leatunng a 2 h. corrmon Black Tequ. L.ayawayw ue
now available for Chriltmu. Sale on Oil' entire llock

ollarge aquariurrw.

THE

.

TRI-COUNTY REaQING
Ia now IICCepting an .,.,._ llllblla
lncluc:l!ng: Un, cut Iron , long and ahott Iron.
Must be small enough to be mouad by hand.
Short Iron (lui than 3ft.) 1.715 par huncllad
Motor Cut.-..2.00 par huntlr.d
Clean, dry alum. cene .23 pound
Prlc11 subject 110 chanfla wiUoout notice
Located at the comer of S.R. 143 and 7

Pho•• 992·5114

742-2103
11/ltltl

new ilernl.

mo.

QUI

Memory Mates • Portraits
Speclsl Occsslons

llapalr,
-Goll
Cluba,

I

Trophlel

THE
PHOTO PLACE

Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
·' 992-7878

JOHN TEAFORD
114otU4tl1

Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

HAULING

11180

IISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1n 1 mo.

~

SAYRE TRUCKING
814-742·2138

1·9
ICIHMY

...

'IIIOLD'S
PLIMIING,
HUniG&amp;

'. ~OOJ.IB· ;

QUALITY WdRK .
·&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

,..._

DEPARTMENT STORE

'
•I

arfOI.L ••••
1-IOIMI-0070

. PIMIVH

I I
(

I '

I

I' I I
\ ' '

I

t

I)

109 High Sb tat

EVERY THURSDAY

EA

S

CL
IN POMEROY
8:46p.m.

Sptclil !'lr1r Bird
$100 Payon

Thll ad good lor 1
FREE~rd.

Pomeroy

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages .. Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL ....1 RESIDENTIAL
NlEE ESTIMATES

614-H2·7643
c~os..-,c.nal

Uc. No. 0061.:142

tctlf/1-

Yoa alw•.l'• ud time fbr
everyoae aad we !ilways
knew yoa loved •• u
much •• we loved yllli1 1·
We mlu you 10 macll.

...

·HI-ISIS

111VI

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

FURNACES

H2•70Uar .

LAnd Clearing, Ponde;

VARIETY OF OUAUTY
METAl. TOYS.
1112-:13114 1::10-4 llon.-Fri.
7424020 Allar 5:00
Pedal Tr8Ctcn AmM·ble

Mobile arid Doubfewlde ownera...

AllMIIU&amp;iiiiDI

IIIJ• part, Ohio

GREAT SELEcnON AND

R11111111blt.Raltl
.
' J~ N. Sayre

1UPPEa8 Pl.AINI
IMio aUdliWia.,

t'

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

'!)itcher oOump Truck

UMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL

Loclded on VIne 111. In ·
R•cln•• .Ample lot,
fenced yard, walking
dl...nce I&lt;&gt; echool or
church. Ideal for
young fllnlly.
C.l1 .....2244
attere ·p.m.

PARTI

Spec'-'izing In CUllom
· Fr•l'!!! Repair . .

AT THE
QUALITY PRINT SHOP

I-I00-714·niE

lime
to feel the bruoh or
••'wiDp;
The Lord must .reel
· sudlaonow ·
wbea we bart tbe oaeo

WQLEY'I

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

675-6755

~en away December

· ruok to ftll our Uvea
wllh Jltlnp,
end never take a little

Guttei.
DownipoutS
Gutter Cleaning
PalnUnt

..TRUCKING

e

1

NEW-REPAIR

•BACJ(HOE
•TRACK LOADER

Come by 11nd register
for free Battery tq be

you,"
.
and "'ope you have a
a~ day,
lo there lllllltlhlna I uti
do for you,
I'll be &amp;lad to a!Gp and
pray."

ROOFING

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS

· prayer!

"Y011'rt my alfl from
beann abOnl"

LOTilUDGE - Loaridge Com- .

-FIREWOOD

&amp;L n11 JAIN
33151 .... ""' ....
••ow.m11
614..f92-5344
1-100-714-nRE

(FREE ESTIMATE.)

.HowdLWdtuel .

•LIGHT HAULING

Extorlor '

So many times we
•urry
aad don't Jeke lite .time
to Clrt;
ot.era reel 10
loooely
and jusl need 1 simple

• . ibnllurJi, Waat Vl..,la

. RIMOVIL .

•ooz~RS

1tfltltl ..... .

'!'be Pllrilrlllll clooumanJe

TIIMn•

USED RAILROAD TIES

FIICioty Chob
12 Glluge Shot
Strictly Enforced

.!IOMinlllllon ooat Ia SM,eoo
• of Oo!aber, 1883.

&amp;Till

992·2269

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30.P.M.

· ROUSH .

.

JlldcMr on Contract t3-1 to

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21st

Jhal Ia P.rocuraa matarlala
and/or •
ahall t'IIIUIJ
l~ln 1h~rt'r.caw,it•rd'bl procunmant
to State Certlllad
ty _ 8uatn . . a
In .on .oggregala
vatua of not IHe Jhan
two p•r9en1 (2%) of Jh•
~~t,.al.
.

.8 rat.elli :llliprcivti•anta
S:O!'Iract ·ts-1, .W~•
810.,_ ·l'a.. lltl.a will ba
Jlall~ed by· lhe VIllage of
: 'Pr~llv• a~: mey
, Aoawro.r ·at tfle ollloe of. 'addraaa : t'nquhl . . '10 :
......, . &amp; NIP.M; ·Llmltecll Burgo a I NJpla, Umltad,
· ;141~ : mere_.n . ~..U., U24. Emtiraon · Avenue,
~
' ·' ·.' ~I Vlraliila l!ttrUrllbU'II, WHt Vliglnle
· . 1M IIIIU '·Ui:OO o'ol1111k
. .

.:..,.o
..... ia•1,
V

Automatic

ConlriCI 83-1 IO the lllent

RlR 8108
Vllla!le of
UO Eeetllatil BINet ,

'·

.-

. (114)'111-7474

POMEROY,~

.NOVDJJJaiSP.C'4t
(BEAT THE BAN)

(A14n--..
s110
.-

.

'~"•

~~-·---.. '95
HON.COIRO$IYE .. '130
uu Afiiii:IO
H4 411·72n

1VIIill1110,

••
••

.
•

~

�Thursday, November 18, 199:)

..

I

.

'

ALLEYOOP

KIT '!I!' CARLYLE® by ur:rv Wri&amp;IJI

'

BEA TilE BLVD'.T" by Bru« Belittle

Pomeroy-Middlepot1, Ohio

BRIDGE

.. · OH' OH ! ons
':. A RUI\ICM ~
\o.r LCMMt~!

()t;l):J"IME
A ilNe-1-&amp;:44€ 1&gt;

i{

The Dally Sentinel-Page 11

NEA Crouword Pta:azle
N:IIOSI

.

PHILLIP
ALDER

'"'

,...

...

;

.

41 HOUHS for

..

Giveaway

hOOIMO.

,'

Rent

2 Bldi'OOift ~

..·- 4

'

..~
•

NOI\TH
.A 10

...

U.ll-11

•Qu

f300 DoMeK, Roltol'lnCI A•
J.~~· Call &amp;11 141 3123 w

-•·
...
.,

2 , 11droomo, ...-.On
Furneot, c~, Front 'orch,
No Pl11,111 14&amp; 0151.

:·. . I MIJT' (X)T ~tTH A GI..J'r''
WHO SAID l-1E'5 1W ACTtV~
·"' !'lAYER 1/.j 1}1£
C"£AJ~R ECVIUIY

EAST

•Ku

.KI73
tKIH
.1064

SOUTH
.J9U4
.All

-"'
Coltlo Doa To Country Homo. 9
Wanted to Buy
Dog
Pon
You
Mull
Hout,
2500
----"""""""""".....;.,:.._
Lb. Sind &amp;14-440·1&amp;21
FrM Klttena., To Good Home WANTED: ongtno lor 1188 Ford
O.tyl Call Aftor 5:30 P.M. 114- Footln, 4op.L 1.3 lltor, nNdod
ASAP,
fM-992·2455
245-1151.
1:301...a:aopm.... eM-992·2421
Oooct homo tor pol cotfllh, I lftlt 5:00pm.
112" long, mull have ttlh lank.
614·992-18f7.

palntlna. hand'WIIh hoi.INI &amp;
moblt ftomn, odd jobl. 15yrl
e~~:p .. nc. reta. FrM ..tlrnlt...

l.lrge ,.._ far flr.wood,

304.e71Ht33.

Employment Servtces

3()4..

18

Wanted to Do

Houuhold~g. 112 mi. I ---~~~~~!.~Jarrlcho Ad. Pt. Pleuant, WY, I·

lntortor/oxtorlor pointing, roof 052t

895-3132.

BLACK ·lEAR Compound BOliO,
814-387-711H.
Fo1 Rro SIOO;
c -114-4~.
- · s._ • 10 ·
Arrowo,
looking For 6\lltlly Cuo!Om
A-mblld Ooll Ctubt? 814-24551111 Roaaonoblo Polcoa.

53

Ell'l Work! EKCIIIInl Payl /laHmllto Producll At Hontl. Call
Toll FIM, 1oii!H87-45el, Ext.

Lost &amp; Found

Found: Doa, Nur Chii'Cit 01
. -.. Chrt8\ Llnar Dly Selnte,

High Eomtnaot Part /Full limo
Pt-ng FHA Mortaogo
Refundl. llo

To WilKo Rood, 814-251o

Nouro,
Nouro.

Loll: I r•• old !Igor ••~ ~· 11

so•

~

8105.

T•us Ad. aNI, 114-115-4334 1
INvantua ....

Ute

e:r:,nc•.
own24
44.

1·501

and

Do

HNith

you

lneurancH

have control of
fOUl own
lifo? Eltpondtng
Prcpony &amp; c.... tty lnouranco
AJIIIIOY to looking tar_lull I pen

Loll: Orwy Cat With Ton 6
ag.nt. E•m While you
WNto, Chlrlllo Hille ArN, &amp;14- lim.
lelm.
TNinlng
provkled.
446'11112.
IMIIH•. MU8t be 1 •If .t1rt.r.
Loll: whho wtth yottow opoto, Ex .., . . - . Sind
Orevhound. Llurlf Cliff 1ru. re•ume to: Aglnt, 11• Court
StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio 41711.
814-)82.3083.
l.oii :NIYy llluo Ohio Unlvoratty N-d Rlldtng Tutor To TIICh
Aduh To Read. Stnd AHftanH
lily chllri, conlolno 3 geld - · To
Bel CLA 2111, c/o Gotlpotlo
1
u"""
. - , -nltD -Ill Ofltci
.. DillY Trlbu!!1 125 Third Avonuo,
to llu 111M, In tnon1 01 Goltlpotlo, "'" 45131.
Mtok'l -Shop In Pomoroy,
Ooooboook Contorhlo port ·u. .
&amp;14 _ . , •• tor Amy.
o"'"lng lor CNA'o, II onlfto.
For

Yard Sale

ft'lOIW

1472.

OWrtJrook Conttr hoe lull tlmo
or port Umo oponlnga lor ovonGallipolis
lng lhlft AN oupanrt-. For
...,. tnf&lt;&gt;nnatlort, colt
&amp; VIcinity
OPI!taru-ot 8t4otl;l-8472.
ALl Yllld 8otH Muol lo Pold In
ml,... ~ tor oulAd-. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Surlla.
ot..tato
wort&lt;.
OpoiiiC&lt;I niOdld
tho day boW. tho od lo Ia run.
IOd lOader, 1hoH1, dr.gllne,
Sundly Hnlon • 2:00 p.m. for
drillef.t. dot•, Clfllfied -~,
F-. Monday ldhlort • 2:00 lnd
mocttanlo. Tronopcr·
p.m. Sotu,.y.
lotion, · room. booid provided,
PlY .,,,z.ao -ty. 1~
8
Public Sale
1117.

co-

INOTICE!
OHIO VAllEY PUIUSHINO CO.
roccmmondl thlt you do bull"""with-"' you k,_r end
NOT to aancl ..-y throuan tho
rriolt unlit you hovo tnvootTgllld
tho ollorlng.
GrM1 inv'tl Elt. A Snack /SOda
RtL $1,200 IWk Pat. 1.aGD-1131313.
\

Rea! Eslale

P'-

buy -

ot complolo

._ nhald. aleo .. ,.... okl
blw:ah 1,

llf41141.

aa

O.tt; Martin, 114-

~.~~~O:O:.::PI~.~u
1\::
,..-old
..__
_.,..

•

onl-.-

fumlturl. AnltqUII.
Rute Moore, owner. ~

mt. w. _, "'-·

=-7=u•nk .....
J I D'1 -

Plrfl end lltvogo,
trucil.

- l d -To Buy: Junlt Autco
With Or W1tholrt Molen. Call
lllrY Uwly. 114 3U 1101.
Wtlnlld Ta luy: IIIUICilng Tl""
._ I Pine, GOod PrloM, 11+

311-.

T.. Prlcoo Paid: An Old

u.s.

~Ooldlllnai.Su-Cotnt,
Cotno. M.U. Coin Shop,

111 -.c1 Av~nuo, GoHipotlo.

W.nlld to -,, Ulld

mobt~

grM,
,
DvM ,.... ~ drtv&amp;ng u~-. gODIII ctitvktg Mianl,
ind
1d1qu1tt
automobUt

oo••• raqulrecl. n k11.,..td,

lind
to Caclllo
P.O. lei
104,
Jocltoon,laklt,
Oh
45140- no totw thin
1Vo13113. 10£.

18 wanted to Do
111bJ lnd ollltcl lltlna doni 11
.... - b l o ........ witt
tronopon ohlld up to 12 mll11
from end to hcmo. All hou11. Wa
hen - - call 114-112·
2011 or toi0C).IH.20H.
UR 'IIIEE IEII'IICI!. l~,

Trl~,

Tn1 Removal,
Trlmlitlnii. , _ Elttmatool 8
911"1MI"Aftor lp.m.
Oononlllolntononco, PI~
Yon! Work WI,._. W _
Gult1t1 Cleonld 'Ught Houlng,
~II, RMI•ntilll, llew:
114-441-1111.

.......14 4410171

n.PDSIDI

By GARY LARsoN

-rtlll'

,. 1111-

-orllllng In
INI 14ut I .... ..., IIIUbttcUo
IIIIF-FIIr~Ad

ol11111 _ _ • ....,
to.,....tlle_'"llrtpNfti.Kii,
1m1t111on or clllcf.l•llt .uon
biMd on r.oe, calor, Nlglon.
eu:llmllall&amp;llul or Rlllonll

.... Ori!IYtrlonttonto
makttr¥aucltPIIfltiiiCI,
lmhlllon or dllaYnlnatlon.'

Thlo no-1011 not
acMrtllemlrtaforrul...,..
_ , 11 1n -lion o1 Utt
tow.
an hi-'lnformld lhll aN tt ell lVI
D.niMd 1n this ne 'lfnr•r
~
navlillbleonMIIqUII
opportunlt)r-

I Bldroom Houoo,

TI-llS IS M'(
REPORT ON A
REAL 1-lOCKEV
PIJCK ..

I GOT IT LAST
Ni614T AT TI4E
GAME WIT~ T11E

"'.uocU'rv RAMIN60S"

·-r

mo-.

llnld 'Good Conclblon, $50, 814441-77211.
4 Foot d Foot By 1111 Inch
Plllllc Sholto, F'lf Bolo $5.00
&amp;ch, 514-35f.711Q." • ' . '

811. lull olio t,.ulotor!,. ,truok
~· vw Rott Buggy.....77.1'

.to-

utlltllll
dlpollt
Nfllrll1cll. pold,
3o4-laz.al66.

T~E

HEAD :

-56--P-et-.
~.~fo_r_S_a_le--

,.

Ftower ,..nlngements
•
•
•·
,..ron
From
Rayliurno
Marltot,
Countmldo ~. on 15111. 2 Bod- Kanouga, W-1, 114-:!Mt/A; 010, WID Hootwp1 ,t327, 814 441 8435.
onth. Roctulroa lahoma CNoo, 5 dlyo/4 nlghlo.
114-446-4222 ct C14-441-21'lll.
Undorlloi&gt;kodl
Mutt
lOIII
Flrot
HApanmonta, 1271/coupto. UmHod ltcki!L
8ocond Avonuo, Golltpotlo. 114- 4117·717-81110 oxt. uu Mon.sot,
44MIOO Senior, Olllbtod, &amp; 1:00AM • 10:00PM.
Hondtoo!IIIOd 1 • 2 Bodrocm
-UnHI. Rwrto iUod On Adluolod Dlnhy, Ilk gold, btUI llphlro
lncom•. FMtiA·Subeldlud, HUO rtng, lla 1." Grut Chrlatmaa
Cortllloltoo Acclptld. 114...,.t· Pf-ntt 304-Tn-l!ti:JI.
11001 Equot Houolng Oppor· Buck Woodbumw Stove With
tunlt n.
SuppiJ 01 W-' Full Slzo Pool

WO ~ D'IOU rfLJ~.

=ilrt

[~! .

.

wfcom~o ~!'!'!'!!!.. tnotudtng
w.-/drylr. .....,.-1410,

-For lalo: 2 Ste&lt;y, 4 -

45

1110·

S::1'
lf1580.tt20/mo. Oallla Hotot.
8

2 Bldroom Aponmont, 114-

441.0310.
One bedroofn

aputmenta.
Ulllllmo•.tncludn utiiHito, ftOO
-why dopooh, no polo; &amp;14IIZ-221L
.
Ail)lty .,.. ' MW 1bf'.

apt.

Now au tonkl, 0111 len ·lr'uclt

Will

........ ,......... floor

m.t•,

llc. DiR·~-

tor

••

Nor~

Eut

2NT

Pua
Pua

2t
3 NT

Pau
Pau
Allpw

THeRE:S Oto.Jf:: 6-ReETINGI'LL NEVER USEAEiAtN.

WHAT~

tm , Prowtw 21" ' 1111 C...

talnod, Air 6 Awnillg 114-4412314.

Selvtces

pa,m~~~t

e Wk141 Sta.
1 L•lotiHar
a Moll

1 ClotiiH (II.)
2 Trickle
3 Site ol TaJ

unplelunt
8 UI!Nppy
10 UnQtrll

11"'11

481111

5 PrHIId lor

ltaotl

RU't&lt;
'"'
·· 1---~---

High chair, ploy pon, wotklr,
btby bod, otrottw, cor _., 304Stooping ruorno whh cooking. 175'4848. '
Aloe troltor - · All hook-vpo,
caN atlw 2:00 p.m., 304-Tn- lllcldnj..h kitty groon o1zo ~S:Oitnth. woron twttoo.
111'1, M111011 WY.
11421
It

~-

••

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL
'

Houuhokl

Oj)ur

,,i

~·

••

•·'

Fdd~Y,Nov.11,1tl!

In the veer 'ahea~ your sense of tim ing

-,might be rather remarkable . Your cha~
.rohows you may be able 10 close some
~dlalslhat totilly bailie others.
'Sf;:OAPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In or&lt;ler lo
'\ldY•nce your parsortll lnt81'ests today, you
might cozy
to persona who could help
you and trtal rtther coolly lhote who can't.
-Unlortunate,Y, you{ beltlvior will be noted
1and remembered. Get a jump an llle by
~l'nderstand[ng the Influences-which are
goveming you tn lite yur ahead. Send tor

up

gaill_._...,.
llunllnillldlli.

111111-... wmlllflll!r IUC I ful dly, lllld 1M
IMIOUIId ololltughllr ltld 1M

tlll1 . Pont'. o:..m PIIJ PI, AI~
AO!to~.~ ll,tto, Aftw o
P.M.
I.

Oitly Klmbu I KOWI,
wtlh lull I lingle ~.
}

~

0

·•

Goods

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher crrpt0gram1 . . awled !Tom qyotatlonl by IMtDUI ~ PM' Md prt~~t~t.
EACfllener In IIW ClpMt ltancll 101' ~ - TOO.y'• ~; F ~ K.

' VAZPME
DPYYHWN

z

DA

s

PLPUEAWP

;¥:\;,;, '"'
"
&gt;

~

.,

•

,Mf

--··
' .·~''*·~
.,.,, ""

toDAY'S HISTOUY: On lhis day in
1820, U.S. sea captain Nathaniel
Palmer discovered Antarctica.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Clarence
Day 0874-1935) , writer; Eugene Dr·
mandy (1899·1985), conductor·music
director; Johnny Mercer (1909· 1976),
lyricist; Alan Shepard (1923·), astro·
naut, is 70; Margaret Atwood (1939-),
writer, is 54; Linda Evans (1943-), ac·
tress, is so· -

HI

IPVUPD
F WAR I

I S E I

AWP

p

OTD

WA

IVAZPMHSW)

ZSBPU.
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "I come trom a blue-collar town in Ohio. I was

OHYY

raised lo work hard and respect other folks." -

Robert Urtch.

won

·=~~~, sctr~ot\1A-J££trs· GAMI
------------14~4~rC~YI. ~~-~:::;:;:-Rearrange '-tters of the
0 four
Krombled words below to form four words.

I:

N 0 RUD

I. -,-1.
1;-s

~~-.,--.,rl

My parents were discussing

~ whether to buy a family sized

L . . .

,.-:L-"':o::-:rN::-:s:-r-:u::-:o=---...,,
1. 1_ _ _ 1_

car or a smatter modet."The
new economy car is something
etse." my dad kidded mom. "It

~; ~~=~:.~~~"~u:~:~, ~":~~~.:

~ by foiling in li'le mossong word$
,_...___.._...___.._.......__, yov develop from st'p No 3 below.

e

6

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUAUS
UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

SCitAM-l£1'5 ANSWERS

Maroon - Award - Lunge - Warmly - OLD MAN
Gramps would be considered elderly by most people ,
but is young at heart He is always amazed when some
one refers to him as an OLD MAN.
. .·- ......

NOVEMBER 181

Home

Roome tor rll'lt • WHk or monlh.

~fmur:Jnn•t

•

'"''"

DOING

campers&amp;
Motor HomM

Rooms

This deal from the world champion·
ship semifinals was very unusual. The
same card was played at the critical
juncture at two tables, producing two
different coups.
At aU elghl tables the contract was
three no-trump. Once it was played by
North and the declarer was favored
with a heart lead away from the king.
· Five times West led the club seven. I
leave itlo the reader to decide whether it is better to win in the dummy and
play a diamond toward the queen, or
to win in hand and lead the diamond
queen. As you can see, whichever plan
1
the actual declarers adopted, il
worked.
At the other two tables, American
players found a more damaging open·
ing lead.
Kerri Sanborn led the heart jack
and, when she was allowed to win the
first trick, continued with the heart tO.
Declarer won with her ace, played a
club to dUmmy's ace and led a diamond toward her queen. East, Karen
McCallum, went in with the king;
cashed her two heart tricks (partner
discarding a discouraging club two)
and switched to the spade Iring. This
Merrimac Coup dislodged dummy's .
entry and killed the diamond suit because it was blocked: one down.
Wheti Marty Bergen· led tlte heart
jack, declarer won with his ace and
ran the diamond seven. East, Eric
Rodwell, won with the 10 and returned
the spade Iring. This was a Descha·
pelles Coup, aimed at creating an en·
try to partner's hand. And it WBII suc·
ceaful. Declarer won with dummy's
spade ace and continued with the 10,
but Bergen won with the queen and returned
the heart 10:
one down.
r4 ··· - · - . · ... . ,

58th day of fall.

HOIWM-.1

-·

3724133ot1

Fumlshld

'

Wet;

Today is the 322nd
day of 1993 and the

"' MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
1,\)110 Gotton, ms; Now JET 811
!No Sond Flhlr Roqulred)
ft,4M; Ron Evano
Entlrprtooo,
ollckloif, Ohio 1 ~L
Con.ot. H,..ldlllor Wcodoroln
uo - IIIII• For tt20, 0ro11
For WDDdbUII·~ Homlie, ew..
441-3111.
'C roN Country Sldng And
Rowtng Eltarlci lllcltlno 850,
114-1'1
ood... •- t t • - ••••
,_
"" •~, ~--:

~PI-' ~lddlo~·~
;:;::===::'7::-'-':....::.7-':,.,..

Propo"r·
" - - ··
AnN It 101•2-.
Ext.Your
QH.
101~1 For Cumant Rope llll.

$15.

reaponslb~
occldonto. 304-f1S·14t4.

wholeul•. Not

Groctouo living. 1 end 2 bod·
room oponmonto at vt11a9:

BIDWEll: lnd lot Fct
lite 1500 Down. No Poln11 or
e.-g Colle. ._ Mcnthty
PaYIMIIta. Call Ron A-rt 1·
II00-3SMttO.
GOVERNMENT -ES F""" ft
IU. Ropol~ . DtllnqUinl Tu

, _,

DOWN

Nov. 18, 1993

I
•• L...-.1-.1

tlon,
2380. $40, 8-&amp;1. 814-410o'

Chrlotmoo

s..m

DATE BOOK

-·..
..,.

T bre Whh - .
Fumllhed 4 Roome And 81th, ...• .... rnh EQuipment Tabll
Ground Root, Wator Pold, n oonn~, 814-441o0tm.
,_ ...
~ar,~ttlpolla, $325/Mo. 614- Bunk Bid Framo 0ooc1 Cenci~

-

Rtvor Fronllgo 4 lldroom
l~ck, 114-441-1'117 Aftw I P.ll.
SrniU, ~. ' - w/olllchod
lllflll'o ............. to Pt,
P t - . ....
lyn.pi,iila.
old 142,1110,
-.....

-= -

Block, brick.
wtn-.Mnt~~·
· call "114......
Rio .
, OH
245-8121.
'i' '

r.1rt Cnd ndtse

'*"'

AVT06RAPHED..

BESt DES, I SAID.
VOU WERE TI-lE
ONE IT !-liT ON

Transportal ton

sUpplle!J

,I

11202. Call &amp;14-112·5851. EOH.

.-

~kllng

One bedroolil turnfahed •P', Att•nllon: Sellin" Chrlltma

AVIriuo, Potnl P - WV
FHA lfpn:urecl, tow71-1it5.

3Pocl,
~~~~
...............
'"'
Orounil
Wllh
11ony ..,,..,
.... Soot lllko Ollor, 114-25f.

55

,.,,

"""'' •tint

T06ET IT

I TOLD ~tM
, I Tl-ltNK
AUT06RAPI-ItN6
i5 STUPID..

-.Ohio, J-.a3'7.e52i.

..
"'•

fruita ol"'*

M'f DAD
WANTED ME

•net--

In tcwn. At&gt;PIIciitcno ovoltobto
11: Vtttaao ·o...,. Atoll. 141 or
coll&amp;14-.mt. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMeNTS AT
BUDOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 131 Joclwon Plko
'tram $2081mo. Walk to ahap 1
Coii1114-441-25ISI. EDH .
- h 811111, Mid-, Ohio.

·I I - - Irma

A tale
of two coups

••

PEANUTS

"'",.
,..

$

,, \\

A- . . t FOA
Apptuold For Paloblo - ·
Ron e .... E n t • - .._

'-!~~~~~~~~~38Uuuu.
:'
;::Fu-::m::;to:::hod:-:--:-::A-po"'n"".,..-ni"",-::Ut:-::llltl::;-11
Plld, . Onl
Bedroom,
!!~;t~;;] --::--I
DowMtalra, No PM, 258 Slltt
-:c
Strlll, Golllpotlo, 814-44tlo3etl7
12110/llo.

~

!!

\f~.J

: '

W.rin llomlng
11- a.-· Vwy A-able
114-441-:ziiT Colt Allor 4:311 P.ll.
WATER .Lifi SPECIAL: :114 lncll
200 PSI ftt.l5; 1 Inch ZOO PSI
PUO; Ron 'Evono &amp; - . .
olio"-, Ohio, ~21. '
WATiiR ' ~AOI! TANKS

torRent

r-::-'J,(ct(,

SOUL

2 Elgh\ Trock AMIFII Rodloo In- Zlnlth ~ Color· T.V. 25
- Inch - J I I - Wcrrk, StaG,
2bdrm. • • • total lllectrlc, apo cluding SPNhll And Cdi1W4HIIL
. 31150.
ptlancu hunllhld, loul)dry PI•yer, 121 Each, 114-441-2380.
roorn ltoclthlll c - to ochool 30 Got. 011 W.tor Holtor 01011

1

Our-

!;-;

•
'r

Apanmem

44

PORE

rr=

54 lntpUdiRCI

55 IIOinlll tyrant

Opening lead: • J

..·"".

IInce 11M IIY l!lndYVIIil Pool
Olllce .... lu~ llnl ~touao•.t.hlltor lddo 4 •• ...,tor
XXlll.,&lt;,!)ompollvo - · FriSit.Silft; noon tilt 1 : - .
ott.ra _day• &amp; hour8. 304-~
11155.

Antiques

.....

YOU

41
•:::~::.·'·,
IIOR
1
53 Petroleum

By PbUUp Alder

•rrnr aurDiul ·

..

llnowlngly - 1

Wantljl to Buy
AmlquH onc1- turnnuro, no I ~=~.;i
bnl
1oe larp • too M\lll11wlll 1nlghta

lim 'I&amp;Om.MIII'a

Business·
Opponunny

21

.&amp; Auction

9

,,

"

Information, .,....

oontiCI Opll ClrUONJ, &amp;14-112·

Fimn Supplt&lt;'S
II L1ve stcck

AN' POURED ALL
MY CORN
SQUEEZ.t N'S
!NTH'
GREEK
!I

IMII:t -,

•

-r " ·

7

·THEM REVENOOERS
CHOPPED UP MY STILL

Financ1al

313.

6

BARNEY

call 304-871-1450.
S..rs Prime Fit Skier Machin•,
Round toblol 4 ~hllll, ftOO. OE P71J.Iko New. 814-245o8043
almond -co or e'-ctric: 81ove Sharp Wtzalij OrganiZer SmlthoWfMif cleaning oven. 304-882w ~ Eleelrio typewrtler, 2
2446.
BIIC.k Full FICI llciCIOYCII
Hllmot.
Uko · Aportrnont
SWAIN
StzoCI i!-rtc
Dryer,
114-317_.UCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 7002:
Olivo St., Golllpollo. I UNd
furniture, hut.n~, Wntem a Stgno: PO!Ioblo chongolblo lot·
Work boola. 814-441·3151.
tor ljgn Qn, Froo tolt1t1 lnd
dallvory'. PilOtte lltlltl US. bo•
52 Sporting Goods
( - ..... 1111). 11 513

8 Room Nou11, Stokorrnlllc
Slovo, Call After 2 P.ll. 814-44f.

I.

z.dofl

36 Hlghwly foot

.KQS
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

MiscellaneoUS

......

4$111 lnorol
·41Aeltell-

tublllnca

tQ7

,II'

PICKENS FURNITURE

UV.Id

e Colteea daa.
12 Trr to

18 ThOll hold·
lng olflca
20 Lock of hlir
22 Baker'a
procfuct
23 Fibber
24 Challenge
27 Flttotelhllr
CIOHIJ
31 ArmedHio
33 F•nnJ
34 t,nner

t.'diiiZ

,,

llondtoll

5.111nc1-

111rlng

•.u

"'

1 11144tn••

1
1 3 = erl
14Fadar•leocJ.
15 Uncteenne11
17 TrH nuid
18 Mineral

tn!

Rett!iJ!s

37 Currltll
31 LociiIIIOIIIt.r
40VINcle
41 llrHIIIt ....,
llllltt¥1111011
43 a.bJionilfl
lllodaol

�...•

••

••

Thuraday,.November 18, 199'«

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh,lo

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

.

(

Betty Dean installed Chester
Not everyone is ready to kick
Garden
Club
president
.
·.
:
·
.
smoking habit in Monticello, Minn.
Birthplace of ' Great American Smokeout'

Dy LAURA BAENEN
Associated Press Writer
MONTICELLO, Minn. - Cus·
tomers at Ernie's Bait Shop are
greeted by a hand-lettered sign:
"No Smoking." Next door, regulars at the bar known locally as
" The Zoo" puff away in a haze.
It might be any small town. But
Mo nticello is the birthplace of
today's Great American Smokeout,
the town credited w1th first persuading American smokers to give
up Lheir habit for at least one day
each year.
Not everyone in town puffs up
with pride at Monticello's place in
the history of the antt-smokiDg
movement.
" I've often marveled that not
on.ce has a smoker ever taken a
drag and blown in my face," said
Lynn Smilh, the weekly newspaper
publisher who orgamzed the first
Don't Smoke Day - D-Day for
short.
Smith, 73, who quit smoking in
1954, says he had often editorialized against smoking in his newspaper, the Monticello Times, which
serves a town of 5,000 people
abOut 34 miles northwest of Minneapolis.
But he wanted to do something
more. So he organized D-Day for
Jan. 7, !974. For four weeks in
advance, he published lhe names of
people who pledged to q~it.
.
On lhe big day, a Minneapolis
radio station broadcast a program
from the newspaper office, inte~­
viewing people who had quit
smoking. In a survey 100 days
later, Smith said he found abOut 30
people had kicked the habit.
Inspired, Minnesota held a
statewide D-Day on Oct. 7, 1974.
The California chapter of the
American Cancer Soc1ety adopted
the idea in 1976, and the American
Cancer Society held the first
nationwide event in 1977.
Though the term "smokeo~t"
was coined in 1970 for a s1m1lar
event organized by M~achuset~
high school students, we cred11
Monticello with the event that
prompted us to adapt Smokeout
nationally," said Stacy Charney,
cancer society spokeswoman.
A 1991 Gallup poll found that
11.7 million smokers had participated in the nationwide smokeout .

New officers were installed and
holiday activities planned during a
recent meeting of the Ch~srer Garden Club held at the hpme of
Maida Mora
•
··
'd
·
Mrs. Mora, retumg preS! ent, m
her .!nstall~tion cerem~n~ !_ikened
the mcommg officers liv.es to a
colorful tapestry To express that
sentiment, she u~ed different colored ribbons to represen.t past
accompliShmoms, high expects·
tions, friendshi{l. toleran£_e and
helpfulness of acnon and individual
contributions
Installed ~ere Betty Dean president; Edna Wood, first vice 'presi·
dent; Maul Barton, second vice
president; Pat Holter, secretary;
Clarice .Krautter, assistant secretary; Twila Bucldey, treasurer; and
Dorothy Karr, assistant treasurer.
The annual Christmas flower
show to be held at Carleton School
this weekend was discussed and
members volunteered to provide
artistic arrangements in four classes
oftheshowwhichhasasitstheme.
"Jingle Bells". Eleanor Knight and
Maurita Miller will serve on the
placement committee.
The fall meeting of Regio.n 11,
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,
held at Carleton School was reppned on and it was noted that'the
Chester Club provided 96 table
favors. Representing the club at the
meeting were Betty Dean, Maurita
Miller, Pauline Ridenour, Pat

Ho~~~utifii~~~~an. Maye
SMOKEOUT ORGANIZER - Lyon R. Smllh, pubHsher of the
Monticello Times in Monticello, Minn~ is shown Tuesday in Mon·
tlcello. It's been nearly 20 years sin~e Smith o~ganized "Don't
Smoke Day" • D-Day for short. The 1dea gave riSe to the annual
Great American Smokeout. (AP)
push," she-said. "I tharik him and I
thank God every day.''
Not all residents share her
appreciation.
·
Bartender Joyce Wipper at The
Zoo, said customers sitting at the
smoke-wreathed, dimly lit U·
shaped bar aren't big fans of the
Great American SmokeouL
"Somehow in this process of 20
years smokers have lost their
rights," she said.

since it started.
Betty Wold was one of the 300
Monticello smokers who pledged
to quit on that first D-Day. She
fondly recalls lhe day she gave up
her 2 1/2-pack-a-day habit for
good.
"I had so many people watch·
ing me. Everywher~. I went ~le
were watchmg me to see tf she
could fulfill her vow, Mrs. Wold
said.
Smith ' 'just kind of gave me the

Mora, accepted the-certificate of
award for lhe club's 1991-92 publicity book which received a superior rating of 94 points. Mrs. Dean,
state publicity chairman, reported
on the O.A.G.C. state convention
held in Dayton. She also attended
the state O.A.G.C. board meeting
on October Sth and 6th and the
regional board meeting which was
held at the Chester Methodist
Church on October lith.
Pat Holter represented the
club with an arrangement in the
Stemwheel Festival flower show
held at the Meigs County Public
Library. She, along with Mrs.

__ ... T i1a Buck
Dean, Mrs. Miller 111 "' '!'
•
ley exhibited at the Me1~,s County
Showcase flower show H~ of
the Valley" held at Roc k bSpnngs
fairgrounds A former c1u mem~-- L' da King was awarded best
""'• m
•
of show for herenuy. . Kmuuer
Mrs. Holter and C':riceth M ·
served refreshments ,or e etgs
County A~sociation of Garden
Clubs meebng held recently a~te
Me1gs County museum. . e
Chester clu_b served as lhe nomJ~ating comm1ttee for the upcogreedmmg
year and lhe same officers a
to serve for another term. Roll call
was answered by 12 members who
gave therapy ideas for personal use
during lhe Christmas season. Program chairman, Edna Wood, suggested that members carry out
these ideas during the next month
by spending time reading to someone, taking a plant or sending a
card or note, or calling a shut-in or
someone who is alone.
A thank you note was received
from the Meigs County Public
Library for a book that had been
presented as a memorial. Devotions
were given by Edna Wood entitled
"Do Something Good" and mem·
bers were urged to remember the
promise of the new day and make a
resolution to do somelhing posilive. She closed with two poems,
"Pilgrims' Voices" and "Lets Give
Thanks".
Pauline Ridenour presented Gar-

Ohio Lottery

Gophers

Pick 3:
103
Pick 4:

advance in
NIT play

den Gatherings , "Care pf Your
L wn d Shrubs For Winter" She
s~ted d:at com stin leaves ·~ the
to di po of tbem.and the
~~tl:gy hum= be worked into
. .
f i1 .
the top s•x mches o so .1n. your
flower beds and garden soil m tlie
spring.,This, she said, encourag~g
earth worms that can live for 10
.
ed gard ' n
10 proper1Y prepar
e

'

Page4

vin old flower blossoms 81ld
g m stin 10 kill insecis
~h 1 s, coha~ore/ in the leaves
a !"'e
.
mowmg lhe grass o~e more ume .
it. is at least three mches or mo~e
h1gh.
.
...,
Mrs. Ridenour noted that shru.,.,
and roung trees can be mulched ~y
placmg layers or newspapers .lllid
then oak le.aves after the so1l ls
crusty or f1rst freeze so 'ji004r
stems can harden for putecllon. ' •
.A workshop was held and dec~
rauons were placed on tiJree large
wreat~s to be used at Overbroo)t
Nursm_g Hom.e and Veteran!
M~m~nal Hosp~tal Ex~ded Care.
~ IS an ongomg proJectth andbell!e
thrrd year for ~e wrea ~ to .a
part of lhe club s commumty thera•
PY program.
.
·
_Dorolhy ~arr w1~ be lhc sunshme chauman for. the month Qf
November. Door pnzcs were wo9
by Edna Wood and Macel B.81'tfll1'~
Maye Mora served as asstsung
hostess.

':~

:J

•
Vol. 44, N0.148

him for 111ylhing. HOWCVCI', Ibm's
one thing about this guy lhat
bolbm me a lot, and rm afraid 10
bring it up.
"Luke" owns a car. It's old. it's
ugly, and it hasn't nln in years. I'm
sure that at one time it was pretty
sensational, but it would take a lot
of time and a ton of money to mak
it thai way again. Before we ~
married, this car took up ~ m
his parents' garage. We towed u ~
our flfllt Ddence and then had 1t
towed again to our present home,
where it silll in the garage. ,
Ann, Luke hasn't worked on this
car in years. Because of money
cunsttaints .and the possibility of
having children soon, I don't believe
he will ever get this piece of jllllk
ruMiQ&amp;: Meanwhile, it takes up
that we could use . .Luke's
family and I have '!tspa1r~ of
bringing up lhe subject w1thout
risking a ..Jiig fight. He is very
sensitive about iL
1 know this car represents
sornelhinR important to my husband,

space;

.

difftrencea

Meigs County has about
70 individuals waiting
for rental assistance

It's beginning to look a lot like C

~
';,~~~·

·:..·y,

By CHERYL KULAGA
Sentinel News Staff
The MeiJ!S Metropolitan Housing Aulhonty is worldng hard to
respond to the demand for rental
assistance in Meigs County.
There.are currently about 70
people on the waiting list to receive
· vouchers distributed through the
Authority from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, said Jean-Trussell, executive director of the Meigs
Mctro~litan Housing Authority.
This number may be misleading
because different types of vouchers
are available. The largest waiting
listS are for two and lhree bedroom
units.
Trussell also said the Meig s
County waiting list is no where
near as long as other nearby counties, such as Athens which has had
a housing authority for a number of
years. The Meigs Authority has
only been operating since June of
1992.
Additional funds of $85,680 per
year for five years were received
from HUD in October taking an
additional 18 families off the wait-

said John Costa. a 32-year-old lifelong Sinatra fan from Coventry,
RI
· At a formal ribbon-cutting cere,. · th da for the
mony ear ter m e y
1,480-seat Fox Theatre, casino officials said Sinatra's enduring popularity among big-time casino gam.
biers would put the Fox woods
complex on the map with Las
Vegas and Atlantic City, NJ ., as a
gwnblin~ hot spot
"He s the chairman of the
board," said Richard A. "Skip"
Hayward, lhe Pequots' tribal chairman
·

Merchants and villa&amp;e
employees In the Bend area
took advantage of the sunshine Thursday afternoon to
'
' ._ .J!lltV.bollday de®ratloos.
'
Clear Christmas llgbts have
~ been placed on the trees which
'... line Middleport's downtown
sidewalks, and yesterday large
attractive wreaths were hung
· high above t.h t streets on
North Second, MiJJ and
Hartinger Parkway by vUiage
employees. Here Jeff Peckham
hangs one or the wreaths on
Mill Street.
Among the merchants tak·
ing advantage of the nice
weather to fmish outside decorations was Annie Chapman
of Chapman Shoes pictured
on the ladder. Her daughter,
Anna, placed the bows on the
lighted greenery around the
doorway.
The Christmas banners
purchased several years ago
by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association have been hung in
preparation for the opening of
the Christmas shopping sea·
son. Special activities begin in
Pomeroy on Nov. ZS with a
parade at Z p.m.
The Middleport parade will
be held at 6 p.m. on Thursday,
Dec. 2.
Merchants in both commuJJities will have open houses on
Nov. Z8 •
•
Shoppers in Middleport
now enjoy free parking and on
the day after Thanksgiving,
Pomeroy meters will be freed .
(Photos by Charlene Hoeflich)

mess."

Please don't mi.sunderstand, AM.
Those who have beeD abused as
childml - wually; physically or
emotionally ·- have my heartfelt
sympathy, but too oftm cbildhood
llelW8I abuse is used as an cxr&gt;•!IC'l
for failure or Inadequacy when no
such !bing took place. - nJLSA
DBAR TULSA: 'l'hanl: you for
p1mn1 a Utile light on a subject that
has geaerated a lot of heat.
This sort of charge can be
extremely damaging and should
never be made unless Ibm is a high
degree of certainly. Thanks for
saying so.
Gem or the Day: Those folks who
seem to be 110 coocancd about tbe
high divorce rate apparently do 110(
undcnland tbe law of supply and
demand. Thele R more: lawyers in
this country than members of the
clerJy.

November Is Ford National Truck Month
8 Turnpike Is Your Truek Authority!

•

CHARLESTON, _W.Va. (AP)
- Language details must be
~esolved before II? agreement, endmg the U~•ted Mine Workers SIX·
month strike can. be announced, a
special mediator says.
"We are very close, but we cannot ~nnounce some fmal agreement
yet, mediator Bill Usery saJd late
Thursday. .
.
Usery said the umon and the
BituminousCoal Operators Associ-

'

DONfT MISS OUT! .
SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STOlfi
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
••• FINANCING AVAILABlE
.
••• IT'S NfVII TOO Ulf TO $AVE!
.

Service industries will be
first to profit under NAFTA
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Service industries such as banking,
insurance and truckin~ probably
will be the first in Oh1o to profit
under the North American Free
Tmde A~ent, analysts said.
If th~ Senate approves the
NAFTA J.lackagc that cleared the
House 234-200 Wednesday night,
it could for the first timQ open
Mexico's $4.5 billion service sector to Ohio exports. The Senate
debate could begin as soon as today
. l\bolit 30 Oliio ctiinpani~ bavc
expressed interest in expanding
exports to Mexico, said David L.
Harp!er. deputy director of the
Intemauonal Trade Division of the
Ohio Department of Development.
Most of tliose showing interest
were manllfacturcrs until recenily,
when interest increased in the service se&lt;:tor, he said.
.
"The banking industry had felt
·NAFTA would,be a boost to banking pperaiions," John Russell; a
spokesman tor·Bane One Col)l.,
told The Columbus Dispatch in a

roes

dleport. Dancers pictured, left iOricbt, l'rollt are
Tara Erwin, Jeanie Newell, Jodie Sisson, Crystal
. Vaughan, Joy O'Brien, Danielle Crow, l!:ria
Krawsczyn and Amanda Musser; and second
row, Heather Howard, Libby King, BUiee Pool·
er, Kelley Grueser, Sarah Anderson, Abby
Blake, Stacie Reed, and Lauren Anderson.

Usery: Settlement is close

Guaranteed Best Buy In America!
GREAT SELECTION OF FUIJ., SIZE TRUCKS. RANGERS,
AEROSTARS &amp; EXPLORERS FOR Tms EVENT.

ing list and leaving room for others Trussell said.
Single people do not receive
to get on the list. Applications are
now being accepted.
funding very often because the fed~
"I accept applications as long as era! guidelines say that funding for
I feel I can help within 12 monlhs," singfe people
frrst to diose
Trussell said.
over 62 years o age or disabled.
People are taken off lhe waiting
There are three federal prefer·
list, usually when the Authority cnces. In order to receive fundin8 a·
receives additional funding, based family must meet one of these threi
on the date of their application . preferences. They must be currrntPreference is not given based on ly Jiving in substandard hOUiing,
need.
involuntary displaced or spending
The only way a family can get 50 percent or more or their annual.
preference is if he or she is a veter- income on housing.
an, the spouse of a veteran or the
Besides lhose, lhe Meigsminor child of a veteran. These Authority has two prefcralces, ~
people are at the top or the list.
already mentioned is the veterans·
Very-low income people are preference. The other pcfc:rence Is:
considered first, although, Trussell for Meigs County residcnls.
said she gets very few applications
One condition all recipients·
from people who are above the must meet after starting to receive
HUD-set guidelines for very-low vouchers is to resi·cie in Meigs
income. The federal standards for County for one year. After thai ooe.
very low income are based on fam - year period, a family can take their
ily size, but, for example, the voucher to any county, as long U '
~uideline for a lhree peiSOII family
they still meet the eligibility
IS anything under $15,500 in yearly
requirements.
income.
This condition fits in witlt
"It's first come, first served. I another condition that the m:ipient
don't give preference based on enter into a one year lease after
need now, but I may eventually,"
Coatinlled 011 pap J
•

TO OPEN SHOW - These Dig Bend
Dancers trained by Paulette Harrison, will step
out to "Hey Look Me Over" with Peggy Brickles
as vocalist to open the 1993 Meigs Talent Showcase of the Big Bend Minstrel Association. The
musical will be staged at 8:10p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 27, in the Meigs Junior Hieh ~chool at Mid·

\

1994 FORD F,·150 XLT 4x2
AMEIIIC~'S # J SELliNG 11lUCK

2810'-,12 ....... _
AMulllmeclaMN . , .. .,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Novembe,r 19, 1993

MultiiMdlalnc.

and her failed marriages. She made
her devastating accusations against
our faiher publicly but privately has
admitted that she doesn't really have
any actual memory of these events.
Her excuse is "They must have
happened because my life is such a

but I wish ·it weren't such an
albatross. How do I persuade him
that it's time to let it go aad move
on?- TAKE.MY CAR,IUASEI
DEAR~
· ' 'C. PLEASE: Arcept
the old
as a per1111111111t
~~ · · ·.. doo'l have to feed iL
~;!: ,) our hnaiJand hu Ill
ernoliililll~ph!MIIt Ill tbe old
l11l1elnijS tilt !lefiellogic. .
.
Some
between Dllll
and wife just ~~e~~'t worth figbtiDg
lbout, and this ia one rllbao.
. Dear ADD Lallden: This iaabout
your response to "Loving But Not
Able; the woman who was not
intereSted in her husband wually.
Please don't suggest thai she may
have been wnaDy abused as a child.
lt is good that she is seeking
counseling. However, too many
counselors R quick to blame a
person's ~~""'~ on childhood
abuse. Th~hb1 bas begun to
assume epidemic poportions, and I
am sickofiL
My sister has UteraUy tom our
family apart with her unfounded
accusations of sexual abuse. She
decided to latch onto lhis as the
reason ror her teen-age promiscuity

Buckeye 5:
8-10-25-29-32

so Her other suggestions included

Husband's old car proves to be albatross
Dear ADD Lucien: I've beeD
married for dlrce yean to the JliOSI
wonckrful man. I would 1101 trade

•

,Ye;r

Names in the news
LEDYARD, Conn . (AP) _
Frank Sinatra introduced some ·
"strangers in the night" to a new
$240 million theater, hotel and
h ·
t th Mash
s oppmg concourse a e
antucket Pequot Indians' casino complex.
The .crooner opened the theater
Wednesday night wilh the first of
five sold-outshows, serenading the
audience with favorites from the
40s and 50s, including "Come Fly
With Me" and "Strangers in the
Night."
"He's the best. When he sings
he can tell you a story and you just
want to sit down and listen to it,"

6393

story published Wednesday.
Last year, Bane One formed a
joint venture with BANAMEX in
Mexico City to install credit card
operating system software in Mexico. If NAFTA passes, that venture
. . . .. .. ' ....
could be expanded, Russell sail!.
---·
r
- -- J
The nation's largest banks, such
as Citicol)l arid Bank of America,
have the most to gain from
NAFTA.
A manager in Huntington
National Bank's international clivision said that although Mexico is
the United States' secOnd largest
trading patlller, it is Huntington's
lOth !X' 12th largest
John Jourdan, !IC'lnior vice ~ident and manager of lhe div1sion, ,
· TIC.KE'l'S ON SALE • Tlcketll for the Bi1 Bead Millstrel Asso·
said he expects that I'IIIIIW!g to rise
ciatloa's
Melp Tllellt ·Sllo'wtue to be ltqed at 8:10p.m. on Nov.
to fd'th or sixth imder NAFfA. He
27
itt
the
Melp Jualor Hllb Scbool aadltorlum are now on sale.
said the Mexican government,
·
Haocilllla
the ticket&amp; are S'riller-Lohse Drup, ChJ!teau Beauty
which defaulted on millions of dol·
Saloa/
aod
Cbapmaa Slloa In Pomeroy, and the Prescription
Iars in international ~ in 1982,
Shop;
Barr
Clothiers,
aad Middleport Department Store Ia Mid·
has worked to re-esrablish itS inter, dleP,ori. Tile lkkell are $3 Ia ldvaac:e with 500 to be sold. Any not
national ci-cdit under Presid\lnt Car·
sold In ldv10c:e '11'111 be aVIilahle at the door. Here Sandy Iaooareilos Salinas de Gortari.
U·sells sbow tlcllell to .)eiDette Radford.

-

(

........

ation would resume their talks
early today in Washington.
There are "several items we still
have to work out. I have people
writing some thing s to01ght,"
Usery said.
The two sides have "been work·
ing night and day trying to bring
this together,'' he said.
The union be~an its strike on
May 10 in what 11 said was a dis·
pule over job security and future
employment for UMW members.
The union says it now has about
17,500 miners on strike in seven
states in Appalachia and lhe Mid·
west, including more than 300 in
Ohio.
Earlier Thursday, an aide to
U.S. Sen . 'Jay Rockefeller, DW.Va., reponed that Labor Secretary Robcn Reich had told lhe sena tor the two ides had reached
agreement.
Press Secretary Marisa

Spatafore said Reich "called the
senator about 6 o'clock and told
him the parties have a final agreemcnL"
.
"Although we have tried , we
have been unable to get independent confirmation from either
party ," Ms . Spatafore said. "We
are simply relaying what the labor
secretary reported to us."
Usery said he did not doubllhjtt
Reich told Rockefeller the strike
had been seUied.
"I would assume he did because
I can tell you we have made a lot of
pmgress, but we haven't finalized
i~" Usery said.
Spokesmen for the union an'd
the coal operators denied an agree.
mcnt had been reached.
" We don 't have an a~ment
until it's all done, and it s not all
done," said Thomas F. Hoffman ,
vice president of CONSOL Inc. of
Continued oa Page 3

--Local brief--Forms available at county office
Meigs County Commissioner Fred Hoffman srated today lhat
anyone who was unable to attend the recent meeting on Issue 2 projects in Marieua may obtain the application forms and instrucbons
at the commissioner$' office.
Hoffman is a member of the District 18 Integrating Committee
and also represents Meigs County on the executive committee.
He stated the integrating committee priority was not included in
the original packets at Marietta and the points to be awarded
according to lhis priority are as follows:
Roads and streets, 25 pointS; bridges, 20 points; water supply,
15 points; sanitary collection and treatment, 10 points; storm water
drainage, 5 points.
He stated that aliiapplications must be at lhe Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley ReglDnal Development offices in Marietta by
p.m. Dec: 17.

s

•

r•

..•

•

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