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                  <text>Wedneaday, November 18, 1812

Poineroy MiddlepOrt, OhiO

Ohio Lottery

Utah wins first
·tilt at Boston

Pick 3:

387
Pick 4;

Garden 92-91
STORE HOURS

Page4

Mo~tday

thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
WE RESERVE .JHE RIGHr 10 LIMIT QUANnTIES
PRICES GOOD SUN., NOV. 15 JHRU NOV. 21, 1992

CLOROX
BLEACH

Rump Roast___,___,ta.

USDA OIOIQ BONELESS · BW BOTTOM

Round Steak...............LB.

1
$ l9
2

JAMESTOWN

(

.

Meigs C~mmissioners discuss litter departinent action
By BRIAN J. Rl!liD
Setltillel New 511«
. The ,IIICof&lt;XWy . . . filoldsiD
remove cmnpai&amp;lt sips discussed when the Mcip Canty
Commissioncu met in"' • - sion on Weil""""y •• • a
ItW&amp;'IMMM
•dGa ......jby
the board of cieclioas dW 111c
Meigs Comity Dqw•
at" lila
Control -'of be
p!lilical signs anc1
wooclalsipl
at the dejabiit:M'sofficema u.m. .
A venue in Pumt:wy.

·-4

•••c

~RidPnlE.J-.,

Ibis year, said department should cease removing
lie felt d!e ranoYil or campaign these signs and leave the ·responsi·
sips lk •esp•11ihility of the . bility o( removal up to the candidates who put them up. It's beyond
wbae or bow Ibis my comprehension that any candi·«i&amp;· . t• .lciiD Slid. "''ve spent date for•public office would expect
• 1:'1::11. di:al of lime J:allllving SlgtlS the county's taxpayers to pay for
... I - ii*P lolr for. 9S per· removing their signs," Jones said.
cat olay campmgn signs have
Commissioner David Koblentz
baa 1 +ted by me or someone ~inted out that many of the signs,
die • ay bdlalf. It's not fair for if not removed, C!JIIIe off the posts
IS a l"'IM'id•te to expect the and litter the surrounding area, and
CHilly 1o ase gnnt money to
that General Relief workers are
j
*iCSJpL
employed by the agency and can be
diiDk illal. the litter control used for sign removal. It was also

...,. - .

Jj&amp;-

..•""I.._.,._
,
.....e . •
"' ""I

c
.

136 OZ. BOX

$ 99-

GOLFER AWAilDS ftil$1HIDI- 'i"k
ICJawa:yw (TVC'I •ost ~uable golfer and the
Melp,. . . _ - 6e TVC . . li&amp; _ . - • r.ar Loiii,Rod Harrison Memorial Goiter or,
a lllllle .. T'' p•m• 1 fl die ea. a . t t11r y_. Award) and Jason Hart (rli'St team aUindivichlalawads iw' 'z' ..... • lltJ (lint
TVC). Tea•••te Chris Knight, who won tbe
team ai-TVC~ Jay JM;fi(llaleea. . .TVC),
CGIIdla' award, Is not pictured. For the story
Jay Cn•eaas (fint tea• all-TVC), Alluo
udllllditioDatpbotos,seePage4

SUE

CHICKEN
141/2 OZ. CANS

s

-.

WASHING'ION ( AP) - ftaiIii £M
denl-elect Clinton is matD&amp; die
o;....•s plliJ includes a modest
rounds of oflic:ia1 W• ' · cw• alil:r •iddle-iaco- tax ut apd an
discussing the ;SUIIe of die world iuuew in a •nimtm~ tax rale
with President Bush -.1 llis KW m. :n JN:itelll 10 36 percent on
hometown wid! resideaiS of a •oasdoolds witll earniags over
worting·dass nej..Uoi••MI
$7fDJIID a yg-.
".I'll do mu ~ IIOliO - ~
o;.... also
"AA pivale ses·
'
....
..._
........
~;IV I ..Jidoox
oftouch,".OiMx!pnwnimi•
.. Pc •"-:'
.....,._,
-~a walking tour Wcdncslay ar a pc- Boll DDk. .R-Itm.. House Minority
dominantly black bobi
cMc,iict I each Rdlat Micbd. R-m; Senin northwest W~ scveal ate Appropriation Committee
miles from the Wbilellollll:.
QU
. RGIJat Byrd, [).W.Va.,;
He said be visited lbc Gtuipa HoiiSC Eae111 aad Commerce
Avenuecorridorof .llmalhllllps..a 0
· 0 · -JobnDingcU,
restaurants to dramMite lllis a.- D-Midi.; MilHouse Badp:t Com·
mitment 10 .......:- inner c:ilies... - LaiD Pmctta. [).
small busi~aDd to clc- · Calif
'
strate that Wasbin•""
was
··1.a1cr
tOday.
lie wu aetting a
D_ . . . _ _ . . . , . _ ..__ Colin Po-·
just government borildiocs
"'
- . r -----.. u...,
w
VisitiRg Wasbi~~PJ~~ .. a twO- ell.
·
of a Joiat Oliefs of
day get-acquaioled call. doe Staff..I'OwdlliiS aiticized ClioArkansas govemor plaaaed to toD"s pkd&amp;e In end the han on
•
..
. . . .L...~
cement his relabonship wi*
aa-•••
-•gressional Democratic leaden
1k pn:sideal-dect's • t stop
while reaching out to Rqdljnps ilia llllilll"s apital on Wcdncsin a series of meetiags today na day was a cogncsy call at the
Capitol HilL
w.ic U. sr, wltt:R be met with
The presidcllt-dcu 8bady biS Ila!li b -'Y two llotn in a privowed to wom.clolldy widtk ••' -OdiOifil:t
;.,
to smooth 1be way b' a ma;
Afu:nratds. Clinton told
ic measures 'be is e•p&gt; ltliiO 11111t- itptiiltll a m •ina fOC!ISed on a
mit soon aftcr·~Clfticc.Jaa.llll. - few ••
t* ismcs and 011 nearly
He planned a br ,.......,
·•
a dcm:a world problem areas;
. with Democfllll:, • '"• h DB widt i+ hrf a Rassia and lbe lllhcr forleaders of both ..,a Mil a:vual •cr Sowicl rcpDblics, Bosnia,
one-oo-ooc mCetinp widl iadiwid- 54 lia ..alllc MicMir East.
ua1 members of Coqn:ss. -...,..
" It was 8 telrific meeting:··
i c ·Dan R&lt;MI +• a I i o.DI.... a · • said. "He- me a lot of
of ....,
oL- tu--"'= Ill.-·~
C •
--iuipts, ne American
people
Ways and Means Comnrillrr
.,.... lint: beea ,
,"
Presumably, they' D talk aiJowl
Basil • •
Marlin Fittwathe tax aspects of tllc ec-ie Ia' i
1 a ...._ , calling the
package CliniOII Mltwd dia:iallois

r•

P~~a~:es~--·-·--. ·-..- 1 .
VA~EY
$189
BELL.

.

2 ~ Mllk. . . . . . . . . . . GAL

. .

PILLSBURY
FLAVORITE LT. BROWN or POWDERED

.

Pie Crust. . . ~. . . . . . .

(

SHOPPERS VALUE

SUGAR

99 ~
Good~~

Offer

4U.

• '
.. 59(
PIZZU............................7 oz.

At PoMII'e Super V.lue
NOv.1&amp;thru Nov. 21,1112
Umlt 1 Pw Cu.tomer

-- ---

- ·- --

SUNSHINE 1m SIZE

COnONEW

DOG FOOD

BATH TISSUE
$269
'

$269 ::· :
.

CHEESE
8 OZ. PKG.

$

FOX FROZEN

2 LITER BOntE

---

CREAM

m ••

Sugar- - - - · - - 2 ia. BAG 89

7-U

2.a.

$149

Good0oO:~

~0:~ At Powelre SUper Value
Ollw
Nov. 15 thru NOv. 21, 1112
Umlt 1 Per Cuet-

BOTTLE

•

.

'

Offer

LEWIS RICH
SMOKED

---· TURKEY
SAUSAGE ·
CATSUP

DEL MONTE

79(
Po_..,

a ......

k

.-----.Local bra·e~s
II· . .';- --..

r

1 LB. PKG•

280Z.

A•
Supll' Yllue
Nov.16thru Nov. 21, 1112

s

Three injured in wreck

:n Bal'!"
SIJa!ll

09

nn

Umll 1 Pw Culllllmer

' • , .3

••

•

·•

'

Three per- wm: ~ 'l'iDiday ilt a ~ ~~:tidcnt on
County Road 40- Jk ·
•'*": clU.S. iD
TllWIIship. The twQ *i.as. Paay L Lewis, 11. 241
~ Street.
Middlepolt.JIIId May A. Gi
• 17.47774 Hdwc Ridp Road.
Shade and EUea LcwiS.H. 241 Soldl
S.C.. Mid!'JcpM. a
pas..,;ger in Lewis' o ' · k: -llb:IIID \1 • . M=uial Jlo5.
pi tal by MeigsCoutily Ewi.,..J M l i 4 Sa1'ice.

I

C
~

litter control offiCe asking if there
was a time limit on when the signs
could be removed.
Other business
Jones said that a verbal opinion
had been requested from Ohio
Attorney General t-ee Fisher's
office regarding the board of elec·
lions' request to relocate offices
within the building it now occu·
pies. The board plans to move into
offices in the old liquor store building on Mulberry Avenue, directly
above its Mechanic Street location,
but it is not known whether the

board needs to re-advertise for
bids. The terms of the new lease
are the same. The building is
owned by Robert Wingett of Syracuse.
A transfer of funds totaling
$18,600 for the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities was
approved by the board.
... Present in addition to Jones and
Koblentz i.vas Clerk Mary Hobstet·
ter. Commission President Manning K. Roush and Commissioner·
elect Robert Hartenbach were
attending a meeting out of tOWfl.

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stall'
Christmas open house in the
Village of Pomeroy was discussed
af Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Pomeroy Merehants Associa·
tion.
"Home Along the River •92" is
the theme of the open house to be
held by participating merchants \Jn
Nov. 29 £rom noon to 5 p.m.
. The 81Ulual Chrisunas parade, to
be held on Nov. 29, will begin at 2
p.m. and funher information on the .
parade may be obtained by contact·
mg Bill Quickel, parade chainnan,
at 992-6677. The public is invited
and encouraged 10 participate in the
parade, ,
·
In conjunction with the open
house and the holiday season,
members of the association are
again working with classes at
Pomeroy . Elementary to place
Christmas trees outside their businesses. The classes will decorate

the trees on Monday with half of
the students conting in the morning
around I 0 a.m. and the remainder
in the aftenioon around 12:30 p.nl.
The association wiD again be serving hot chocolate for the students in
the mini-park.
David Riggs bas donated the
trees for the project and Jim Ander·
son will pick those trees up Saturday and bring them to the former
Elberfeld's parking lot. Those who
have agreed to participate in the
project are to pick up their trees
after noon on Saturday.
Susan Clark, president of the
association, stated won: will begin
Saturday to hang the Christmas
banners. She also • encouraged
everyone in the business district to
outline iheir building facades with
white lights. For those who are
willing to outline their buildings
but have no way of hanging the
lights there is a person available to
do the job ,and maintain the lights

throughout the holiday season 8t a
cost of $1S. That person may be ·
contacted through Joe Clarlc at 992·
2054.
Vicki Ferrell, vice-president,
reported the electric poles which
hold the Christmas ~andy canes
have been repaired through the
efforts of Steve Cotterill. Mrs .
Clark thanlced him on behalf of the
association for his efforts in restor·
ing power to the poles for the
Christmas decorations.
,Holiday advertising was discussed and the group's ne&gt;&lt;;t promotion will be Christmas open house - ·
with a group advertisement to run
in The Daily Sentinel next
Wednesday, Nov. 25 and radio·
spots to begin accordingly on
WMPO. The association will also
be running a series of "shop local"
newspaper advertisements.
The association will sponsor an
"Old Fashioned Saturday Night" in
Continued on pa~e.J

Clinton tells residents
he will stay in touch

BROTH

19

noted that villages within the COUR·
ty require a cash de}iosit before
signs can be placed, but that the
county may not be able to enforce ·
sign removal in outlying areas.
It was noted that several calls
had been received at the commis·
sinners office regardinf! the litter
c~ltrol dep~lit's acum.
Rita Smith, director of the
Meigs County Board of Elections
said Wednesday afternoon that the
Board of Eleetions had not requested that the signs be removed, but
had received a phone call from the

Plans for Christmas open
!louse, parade finalized

TIDE
DETERGENT

5

2 Secllono, 14 Pogeo 25 conta
A Multlmoodlo Inc. Nowapooper

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 19,1992

WITH BLEACH ·

Leg Quarters.~......~..u.39·
1
Pic 0 Chick..__,_la. 89c

59
Bacon --•2oL69

Vol 43, No.l47

Copjolgbllll11!12

· l·LB. BOX

.

(

Turkeys___,_. ._ ....~la.

•

/

$189

Cheese.......................~... LB.

(

ZESTA
.SALTINES

'

. LONGHORN COLBY

FLAVORITE GRADE A 1-0·221b. avg

'

$ 89

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

.

Low tonight In mkl-48s.
Friday, cloudy. High In mk1·60s.

GALLON JUG

(

mK~N

1091
Super Lotto:
2-3-12-33-42-47
Kicker:
624998

'

talks "warm and informative.,.,
Clinton was wrapping up his
whirlwind visi~ 10 the nation's capi·
tal tonight at the Georgetown mansion of Democratic benefac1or
Pamela Harriman.
On Wednesday night, he was
the guest at a dinner party thrown
by Washington lawyer and transi·
tion chief Vernon Jordan. He also
went to a fund-raising reception for
the Children's Defense Fund - the
adv~y group his wife, ·Hillary,
onee led.
Thousands of people strained
against police lines for a glimpse of
Clinton as he wBlked from shop to
shop along Georgia Avenue on
Wednesday tallring to shq&gt; owners
and their families. He shoolc hands
with many in lhe crowd, signed
au10g1aphs and posed for pictureS.
"The reason I wanted to come
here is these small business people
are the backbone of the economy,"
he said.

di.nner at . Jordan's home in Washington
Wednesday night. The youngster is a neighbor
or Jordan's. (AP)

' YOUNG FAN. A yoDng ran requests an
autograph from President-elect Clinton as be
walks with Vernon Jordan, chairman or Clin·
ton's transition team, after CliDton arrived for

Housing starts at three-month low in October
WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous·
ing starts' fell an unexpected 1.1
percent in Octqber to their lowest
level in three months, the government said today.
Single-family construction rose
for the third straight mooth but was
offset by a big drop in apartment
building.
Building activity declined in all
regions except for the Midwest,
where it took a double-digit jump.
The Commen:e Department said
·construction of new single-family
homes and apartments totaled 1.23
milli.on at a seisonally adjusted
annual rate, doWn from 1.24 mil·
lion month earlier. The economic
cmsensus predicted B 1.28 million
rare for Octobez:. ·
The department also revised
September's increase to an even ·
weaker 0.8 percent, from 1.4 per·
cent in its original estimate last

rates ..

part by falling mortgagle
A
12.1 percent surge in August was
the largest
increase since
a 19 per·
,.· . .
- ..

Postmaster general
sets expanded hours

wASHINGTON (AP) - Post·
master General Marvin Runyon is
promising Americans shorter post
office lines this Chri~ and no
increase in stamP J!)ices for at' least
a couple more years. .
Sharp cost-cutting efforts have
turned a postal deficit· into a sur·
l
· "t
ore Ch ·st
~~sma~~t -:::'tes~" said ln ~
speech WedneSday at the National
Press Club.
He announced plans for longer
hours this Christmas season at
~::'!· ;: ~J"!ill:~jul~e · S,200 ·post offices and said special
Following the July mark, hous· lobby ,directors will be put to worit
ing starts began to rise, boosted in in 7 ;lJXJ busy offices. The dim:ton

a

8

tained and that building activity
cent gain in February 1991. ·
Analysts had said size of lhe would improve at a more moderate
August advance could not be sus- · pace for the rest of the year.
In addition, mortgage rates averaged 8.13 percent in October, up
from 7.84 percent in mid-September, which had been the lowest
sin~ they dropped to 7,76 percent
in June 1973.
·
Rates hav~ continued to rise,
averaging 8.32 percent last week,
will be posta~ workers who can the highes1 since tlley hit 8.48 per.
answer questions, direct people to cent during the week ended last
the couect line and generally assist June26.
·
people who want·to mail items. ·
Single-family starts increased
Runyon took office in 1uly and 0.7 percent in October, to a 1.07
promptly launched a massive , million rale. This sector· has grown
resuucturil)g of the post office.
Clll'h month since July.
Without the money-saving meaBut the often-overbuilt multisures the Postal Service was facing family sector plunged 11 .8 percent
a $2.2 billion deficit in ftSCal 1993 to a I 57,000 rate. It was the second
and a 3S-ctnt siamp price in 1994, straight decline.
For the· firsl 10 months of the
Runyon sai~
,
. Cost·cuwng measures mclu~ year, overall starts still were 19.1
an offer of SIX-months pay to seruor percent above the same period of
workers who want to lake early 1991, when the housing industry
retirement. More than 46,000 was emerging from the recession.
Continued on page 3
Continued on page 3

•

I

�,

...

~ommentary
.

•

Pql 2 The Dlllly sentinel
Poftwio; •dclaport, Ohio

Thursd8y, Nowemblr 19, 1192

J OSeph rerA1RS

111 COurt Sbeet
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THB li'I'DitBIIT8 Or 1'D IIEI08-IIASON A11BA

So now, Weinltcqa' finds. him- 10.
self in the docJr, Wafsb'i desipetThey..., llllf.a ....... wwld
ed faD guy for Iran-Contra. Tile disrupt tho lllltll&amp; wjiiiUce illlniiabsurdity or this is that among aU Cootra - Rll a ,.,..._~ 1*1
the ~·s men wbo di•" 1e~ · over Weialtcqec's odterwiJc disthe ill-a~~~ceived anns-foc-hollages tillgJiillled career. Tiley abo .-y
plan, no one was more lldam.,tly tbat a plldoa -w be pen:eived
opposed than Reagan's defense by maay Amcril:au • aa act of
secretarv. Even Walsh ackoowl-. .lldf.... ..... by Bulb.., sbidd
· edges !bat facL
·
. himself ,from future charses of
~ Bush ~~ put an aid _,.,. ...,by Wabtl's pqccwo- _
to Weinberaer's political persecu~ ria(boomck
tion. The man faitl1fully St'.tved his
Tile best COUI'Ie. Bum's advisers
country. As a Cabinet off'teial, be lldl him, is ID let Clp -.1 trial. If
. observed the higl;lest ethical code. he wiu acquiual, !tis aood aame
That his upstanding~tation
· bas and reputatioa will be iestored,;
been publicly impu
by the spe- lbey say. If 1101. wdl, ..... wiD be
cial prosiccuror is bad enough. That Wcinbaga'a pu.,. " At 1eaa he
he should be made to 8land trial is will bave .... his day ia IDn
All w .... is ., IIIUdt booqr. If
notbinglessthanabaWISty.
Altliough Senate MiiDity Lead- BUlb p11U. Wciubeaga, it ~y
er Roben Dole, R-Kan., and se\Ti- .ww)d IIDp jultice from beiq delle
a! other leading Republicans bave · ia Iran-Coon.. R.._ber Weinurg~d the presiden~ to pardon br:rp bad !!Qihins ID do widt the
Wemberger before hts show trial arms-for-hosta&amp;es deal. Sure,
begins Jan. S, many of the squisby Weinberger probably would be
acquiued lly a fair-•inded jury.
ad~isers surrounding Bu~h (the
same snlart camp tb8t bas been pro- But why llboukllle ba~ to suffer
viding him sage counael from the rbe ditruptioa of !tis life and the
lime of his disastrous budget deal considerable Cllpease·tbat mountwitb !he Democrats to his recent ing alcpl cJeCa. will ~7
Tbe presideut'l adv11en are
disastrous re-election defeat) bave,
warned the president against doing disiraac- ia IIIIJCIIiul that a
jurJ trial is best for Weinberger
because be can clear bis 111111e.
Even if the jury acquils, many peo;;
ple will believe thai the former
$6o-a-PaV De.SiGtle~ · defense litLI-) bad ID be guilty
or somethiug (otberwise wby
Ht~6iT.
would the special .... tth bring
charges?). They will believe as
MY WiFe,
!bey do in the case of North and
PoindeUer,lhll Weiltberp simply
MY l&lt;iD$,
CafPucdNo
IIIIIICI1W:Ifld to bell the 1111lliPt about uow, Weiabelger
MaKeR ...
mut im..:fiue tllat he Ml been
biiiipiii
lJact ., the . . w!be
Silem witch triaiJ. Tile accued
were dllllked oa the boac. of a
late. If they cliowucd, they were
innocmt If !bey flolrd to tho surface UDdroWIIed lbey wae burned
at tbe state as witches. They
couldn't win either way.
President Busb should save
•
Weinberger from Walsb's witcb
hunt Far !bose of its wbo supported lhe ~ in good times !Mid
bad, tbis buly would be the way for
him 10 ~ office wilh style.
JOiepll PerJU.s iii a cvlw••lst
ror Tile SH Dler:o Uaio•-Trl·
bUilt ud a syadicated writer , .
o·
Newspaper £aterprlle Aaoda·
tioa"

George Buah willies an untrouD
.J..J
bled II'IDSition from public to private life -,. to leave office, in his
words, "witb style." But there· Election Day, !llvealed its political
remains one thorny matter for the calculation . .Most dastardly was
president to act upon before be . that, of the hundreds of pages of
moves on: He should offer a par- the former defense secretarfs
r
dOn to former Secretary of Defense notes lbat proseeuton could have
•.
ROBERT L WINGE1T
Casper Weinberger.
used in their hiJiily publicized
The
bonorabie
Mr.
Weinberger
indictment.
tbey deliberately chose
PubUsher
recently was re·indic~ by Iran- the one t!lat they 'thought w~ be
Contra special prosecutor most embarrassing to the president
PAT WIUTEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Walsh. 11ie 7S-year-old
Very simply, Weinbetpr is the
_Assistant PublisherfControUer
General Manager . Lawrence
Reapn Cabinet official is accused victim or a witdt bunL Earlier this
not of orchestrating lhe arms-for- year, Walsh's team tried to get
LE'ITERS OF OPINION 11e welcome. They 1bould 6e len than 300
hostqes deal SIX
· years· ago, but of •. "'
' "-·•· both Presi..
"einberger to unp..........
• words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
'
address ..,d telopbooe number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
be!f: an unwillinfl party to dents Reagan and Bush m Iran. W 's grand inquisiuon.
Contra in exchange for a misde110_1,;.po!_"'_"al-i-tie..
.._·-'bo-•ld_be_i.,.n-.sood
__
..._t.._._ad_dn:_ss_in,;.g-iss_u_.._·_
•.~--~--'
Specifically, Weinb~rger is meanor plea. Weinberger said no
charged with concealing 1,700 dice. So Walsh promptly slapped
pages of his personal records from him with five felony ~.
'
congressionaf and criminal investiWalsh desperately needs a con·
gators (even though the papers had viction of !IO!IIOOIIC, anyone, to jll'lbeen turned over to the Library of ti~y .the nearly six Yt;an ~d ~0
ConP.ess years earlier and were mtll!on he has spent mvesugaung
readtly available to investigators . Iran-Contra. He !hought he had
.
and the general public alike). He ba~ged Oliver North ~nd ' Jo~n
:•
By ROBERT E. MILLER
now facea five felony counts, each Pomdexler, but both thetr conv1c·
•:
Associated Prell Writer
of
which carries a maximum penal- lions were ovenumed l!eci!IISC the
:-coLUMBUS -Ohio's financial problems indicate lhat a major tax
ty
of
five years in prisqn and a fme special prosecutOr used their immui.Nireases looms down the road but Gov. George Voinovich and leg~slative
of
$250,000.
·.
nized congressional testimony
IPs are reluctant to talk about it
The
timing
of
the
latest
Weinagainst
them in brazen violation of
•'Still. V.oinovich, along with House Speaker Vern ~e. D-Wheelersberger
indictment,
on
the
ev.e
of
their
Fifth
Amendment rights.
botg. and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R..Cincinnati, dOn't rule it

-·

·pressure builds for
sales
tax increase
..

•

:'They.pointed out Friday that the state faces a budget ~cit of up to

S~ million in the fiscal year lhat ends June 30.
·1bat problem has to be solved and only then, with laid out conditions,

a

v.5b they think about the needs of the 1993-1995 bienpium, they said.

•:Voinovich ami the LegjslaDJ!ll are expected to come ':P with some.kind
of,. tax packa~ in December to solve the cunent deficit
·
·
•·~ut lhat wiD be chicken f~ compan:d to the $1 billion,or more thai
nltty be needed in the next two years for education and other major pro~s thatalrWy have been cutback to 1991 spending levels.
•:Many national economists .e saying lhat the economy wiD get better,
b~ 'at a slow pace, over the next year or so. They expect no big surge thai
cOuld solve Ohio's problems.
•:Voinovich and Riffe, at sqa:ate news conferences, hinted that if there
i;v. major tax increase, it probably will be in the 5 percent sale$ tax that .
· h8i stayed the same for a decade.
·
•:The state income tax, last inc:!1lased in 1983, is not seen as a likely tars!! foc what some say is a practicallli8SOD - it has nor bee1t showing the
~th needed to Slabilize the state for any substantial length of lime.
• ~The Ohio Pqblic Expendicures Council, a oon-parlisin lliSe&amp;rCh group,
sty$ the growth in personal inc:omC in Ohio between 1981 and 1991 7&amp;',2 percent, compared with 90.6 pen:ent nationally - was not driven by

PReTTY ~N

~a~

IND.

W. VA.

It»

South-Central Ohio
Tooight, mostly clOudy. Low 'in
the mid-40s. Friday, variable
cloudiness. High in tbe mid-60s.
chance mrain is 20 pm:ent
Exteaded forecast:
Saturday throuab Monday:

.

Donald Barno, council president, is not involved in the tax discussions.
The release of his study coincided last ~ with reports that an increase
in the sales tax may be ill the worts.
Bemo said Oh1o shares a national problem derived by fedeml pay- .
ments "that, for the most part. are not available foc tax 111venue generalinn at a time when SlateS are struggling to balance bUdgets.''
A 1-&lt;:ent increase in the sales tax would yield $756 million-$800 mil·
lion a year, the Ohio [)eputment of Taxation has estimaled.
·
Voinovich, pressed on the subject, ssid he would endorse no sales tax
increase unless it was eannarted for education reforms, and lhat, "I thinlc
it should be. voted on by the people." Riffe said esSelltiaUy the same.
"I'm not in favor of asking anybody for more money for education
As I swung out of the post
unless I am darned sure they are gomg to get somelhing for their money," office parking lot, the message
Voinovich said. ·.
·
·
"Fasten Your Seat Belt" glared
down at me from a sign. It was
unnecessary. ShacJrled as I was by
a harness belt, straining over my
down-filled coat so that I could
hardly shift, it would have been
, . By The AB!Ciated PnM
Today is Thlnday, Nov. 19, the 37Aih day of 1992. Tlic!1l are 42 days hard to forget I had already fas·
leDCd mine.
left in the
The U.S. Postal Service bad
Today's Higblight in·History:
On Nov. 19, 1863, President Lincoln delivered·his Gettysburg Address as obviously as~umed I was one of
he dedicated a 'national cemetery at the site of the Civil War flattlef~eld in· those lazy Spoilers of society wllo
did not fasten my seat belt, and
Peansylvania
taken up the moral cudgel to thump
'On this date:
.
-ill 1831, the 20th president of the United Stale$, Jamea Garf~eld, was me to my senses. I wished I could
stop and write them sign of my
born in Orange, Ohio.
.
·
In 19i7, 75 years ago, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was born own: "Stay Open On Veterans
Day, Like the Rest of Us Noit-Govin Allahabad.
emment
Working Stiffs." But I
, •. laJ~l9, !be U.S. 5&lt;;1111"' re~ the Treaty ~f Versaill~ by a vote of .
Iii favor to 39 agamst. shM of !he two-thirds majO!'Ity needed for didn't. There's enough righteous
telling of each other what to do in
country as it is.
~2, SO yem during Wocld War U, Rlllliln forces launcbed thisEverywhere
you turn, there's
their winter offensive apiost the Gennan.lliona tho Doll &amp;onL
person
or
group taking i~
another
In 1959, Ford Mob Co. announc:ed. i t - balling procluclion of the
upon themselves to keep the rest of
Edsel.
.
.
'
In 1969, Apollo 12 astronlllts Charlea Conrad and Alan ~ made us in line. '.'Tbank You For Not
Smoking." "Attend tbe Churcb oc
man'1 second landing on the moon.
, .
In 1977, Egyptian~~ Anwar Sllllt beclme the f111t Arab leader Synagogue of Your OIOice." "Say
No to Dru1s,!' "Vote."
to se1 foot in Israel as he began llll official visiL
•
"Vote.'~• Now there's one I've
In 1985, President Re1gan and Soviet leader Mildiail S. GOibachev
beard
enough times in the last few
met for the fii'SI time as theY held morning !Mid afternoon sessions at their
summit in Geneva.
In 1990, pop duo Milli VaniUi were stripped or their Grammy Award
because other singers had lent their voices to the "Girl You· Know It's
True" album.

.. .

. ~-~

. .. .
. .

..~. .

Continued from page 1 ,
Due to telephone maintenance at the bospital, the cOndition of
the victims could not be obtained.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pauol, Lewis was northbound and Grueser was southbound on C.R. 40 when they met on a CIIMI and collided.
Orueser was cited for not wearing a safety bell Both vehicles
sustained heavY, disabling damage and Weill towed from the scene.

Squads receive seven calls
Seven calls for

Today .in history
-

a

·ss

.P,,

fourth-grader caught turning in

othcn' faces, or that they lbought

Sarah Overstreet
. .so~
e~·· wen: "1, uh, well, smoking was a~ thing to do. It
·
uh, I JUSt think everyone ought to · was more as tf they were just

Vote."
.
'
'
wary o( being picW 1111 fii their
weeks to last a lifetime. Around
"I agree;" I told her. "But why habit, wbile tbe rest of tiS bave
election time, folks who normally did you ask me thst?"
plenty of our owD. "Wllll's acxt?"
believe it's a free country and we
"Well, uh, because I think it's a one of the men asked me. "A
aU have the right to determine our . g11111 privile ."
national ausade apina e~
own activities, become arbiters of
"I coulfo't agree more. But who doesa't watch bis fat and
moral propriety. HoUywood stars, why did you ask me that?"·
cholesterol intake, aoyoue wbo
elected officials, The League of
She turned away from me like a doeso 't emcise qulady or camc:s
Women Voters, television net- dog scolded foc it knew nor what.
bome lDl driob a few been .rter
works and even schoolchildren
work? This has become a witcb
dragged out o.f classes by zealous
But she was on!~ doing wbl!t we hunt."
network affdiates and stuck awk- have taught in th1s culture, that
I will continue to vote until I
wanDy in front of cue cards preach when we have ~enerally decided can't &amp;et to the polling bootb
to us: "Vote."
that somelhing IS or is not in our because I'm tied to intravenous
On Election Day, the lOth per- best interests, we have the rigbt to tubes or I'm too CODIIIose to fde
son to ask me if I'd voted tripped · peck away at others until they see absentee, and I will probably
my trigger. I was sitting in front of the lighL And if a national not-for- . always fastaa 117..,. belt. But rm• a computer terminal, trying to ham- profit organization is formed to anyone wbo sull believes tbat I
mer out a piece of work due an combat a practice, and acquires a need DIDR pesk:ains to make - a
hour before. But I punched the hu$e Sl8ff that has to be paid every betler pcnoo, bae's a few suggr.s"Save" button, sw1veled in my Frtday ,l wbolesale badgering tioos of signs you migbt put uo:
.. Don't Ell Rcc114eiL"--"tSal..
chair and looked her right in her becomes not only sanctiooed but a
lowered brow and asked calmly bitt boly quest
ads Yes, Snacb No." "Say No to
curiously, "Why did ·you ask me
This issue was brought home to Beer.'' "Aumd the Health Oub of
that?"
me mote clearly recently when I Your Choice." "Have You
Her brow reverted to intema- interviewed a local smokers' rights Flossed Your Ta:da Today?''
.
tiona! sign lan~ruage me1ning group. I didn't get tbe feeling iii . Saralt OnnCreet iii • .,-dl-.
"What did I do?"~• and her voice any way lhat these people belie~ cated writer. for Newspaper ,
softened to tbe dC&lt;:ibel level ofa they bad the right to puff away, m Enterprise A'Rdalioa.
·

Celebrating cellular-------

On Monday, Nov. 23 the 10millionth American will be
enrolled as a subscriber to a cellu·lar telephone system. That is only office. A farmer on a II'BCtor deals
nine years after the inception of the with his accountant
industry, and about 30 years ahead
But now it turns out that most
of schedule.
cellular phone sales are neither roc
There are some lessons and cars nor for businesses. Parents
observations to be gleaned from the give a cellular phqne 10 a daughter
mpid growth of ceifular:
out on a date, lessening worry
Beware of experts. AT&amp;T ("Dear, it's past cmfew. Where are
invented cellular and engaged you, dear?") Molhers on the wa9
McKinsey, a respected manage· home from Wl)rk pick up kids at
ment ftrm, to forecast the likely soccer practice while calling the
growth palh for cellular phones. supermarket for a delivery. CeUular
McKinsey's estimate was not 10 companies did not start tbe evil
million in 1992 - but 900,000 by . practice of car-jacking, but they
th9 year 2000. Not enough, said benefit from it. (Press auto-dial to
AT&amp;T, and' didn't proceed on cer- get a cop, quick.)
. Beware of governments trying
tain cellular lines. Last week, recognizing their error, AT&amp;T bought to be experts. There is some talk in
a one-third ~ in McCaw Cel· Clintonland about "industrial poli·
lular Communications. The cost cy," the belief that the U.S. govwu $3.8 billiol), which, as these emment should enpge in economthings are denominated, Is more ic p~ ·to bolster certain classes or
ucts. But if experts can't
than one Perot.
Coosumers. blow best. Cellular pick winners because they can't
, ~ oriJinally envisioned as mostly predict consumer behavior, what
a car phone for businesses. It can chance does government have?
How bad ,was tbat recession?
indeed form new enlelprises and
. increase the productivily of old About 7 mil1ioo new cellular cos·
ones. Cellular can make a cab driv- · tomen Clli1C on line during the last
er into' an on-call limo service. A ~ years, purchasing a nor-inexreal estate broker with a cellular- penalve servtee, when the economy
modem-fax-laptop in tbe car was alleaedly ia the piia.
doesn't waste much time in tlie
American businesaes can still do

Ben Wattenberg

Berry's World
YOU WON'i 8El1E'/E
.

NOW,

T\-\~'('RE

TttiSI•. ·

SAYING 11-\A\

WE'~E ~ar 'I~IGE.~Ol)S

TI-\AT WE CNti..
HfRE. fROM ASIA. OVE.R A
L.~NQ 6R\96E UP KOR1'\'\.
f'EOVL~S· ~

/ ·

•

il The American cellular industry
has created 1oo,ooo new jobs, and
leads the world. Prices for the ·
phones are way clown. (As opposed
to the phone service charges. which.
are only inching down.) Quality is
way up. A portable phone used to
be called "a brick" or a "bag
phone.'' Motorola, the world's
· biggest cellular company, produces
tbe lightest unit, S.9 ounces. The
Dick Tracy wristwatch/phone is on
its way.
Americans are working in Russia, Eastern Europe, China, Brazil
· and Jndia to build new ceUular systerns, by-passing the huge costs
involved in copper-wiring.
·
There 8111 ways 10 regulate wisely. The Federal Communications
Commission was a little slow to
act, but then Set up two competiton
in eacb of 734 markets- and was
smart enough to ·mostly get out of
tbe way. Now new techitologies are
· coming. The FCC willlieense more
competitors, and will try to stay
evenmoreoutoftheway.
Great inventi0111 are liberating.
New technology was suppoaed to
be regimenting. But that's not what .
bappened. Technology yields perS?£lal f~om. an Ame!'itllll spec111ty. It 11, not an acc1delit that
most of tbe remarkable modem
inventions come from America.

'

Air conditioning lets people live
most anywhere in America. Airplanes let people go most any-· ·
wbere. Television and VCRs let
people he informed and enter·
~ most anywbae, most anylime. Home office equipment PCs widt m00c"d and faa -lets
)le(lple wort 'liiOSt aywhenl they
c~-. lire. Trh/ures Jet JIID'
ple ...... to most aJODC, most aywbem a wire comea out w a wall
CeD~ l_els people lilt to people,
even without a waD, oc a wire..

assistance ·welll answered by units of the Meigs

Coumy Emergency Medical Service Wednesday.
At 8:14a.m. the Tuppers Plains squad ttansported Latischia
Holsinger to Camden Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, W: Va from an
accident scene 6n Route 618. Also on the scene were the Tuppers
Plains and Olive Fire Departments.
·
The Rutland Fire Department and squad responded 10 an accident on Route 124 near the Hilltop Grocery at 12:04 p.m. David
l;"riddy and Matthew Ahern refused treatment
At 10:30 a.m. the Middleport unit went to Overbrook for
Matthew Bums, who was taken 10 Pleasant Valley ~ita!; 816:29
p.m. the Rutland ,squad went to Noble-Summit R
for Ashley
Romine wbo was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 8:16
p.m. the Rutland unit lOOt Melissa Fife from her home on Star Hall
Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 8:58 p.m. the Middleport
squad transported Ann Corildl from Overbrook to Veterans Memorial; and at 9 p.m. the Meigs Co\utty transfer squad took Aries Dorst
from Veterans Memorial Hospital emergency roOm 10 the Alhens
Airport where she was taken by SkyMed to Cbildren's Hospital,
Columbus.
·
· ·
.
.

Thank you for not ,bothering me
1

Saturday, showers and thunderstorms likely. Lows in the 40s.
Highs from the mid-SOs to mid60s. Sunday, a chance of morning
rain. Lows in the 40s. Highs mostly
in the 50s. Monday, fair and cooler.
Lows in the 30s. Highs mostly in
the40s.

It? cal briefs...

-

J ~:Rather, it said the growth reflec~ Social Security, Medicare and MediQeid, velmUIS' benefits and other federal benefitS that cannot be tax:ed as

Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

_ ___;____ Weather-----

MY

..

~-·

sinJy

011112 A&lt;a&gt;W•Ilor. Inc.

coFFee
iT coST Me
eVeRYTHiNG .....

. 'cil growth

y-.

coaditinns and biJb

Accu-Weatber• forecut for

Bush should pardon Weinberger

''

irtoome.

Friday, Nov.lO
MICH..

The Daily Sentinel

0~

:Th:u:~:~:~~~No~v~~~m~bW~1~1~,~111~~~================~--------~P~o~m~e~ro~y~~M~Id~d~lepo~rt~,~O~h~lo~----------------------------~n.~~D~m~ly~Se~n~H~~~~P~~!a~·~~.
OHIO WP.Jthct
Plans for....contlouedrroin;••
Meigs announcements . :~~

Charges pending in case
Charges are pending in the Paul Stewart, be checked. It was
breaking and entering of five discovered that his two outbuildvacant houses and several outbuild- ings had the locks pried off the
doors. Upon checking the house,
. ings at Pity Me near Hobson.
According to a r~ from the Deputy Beegle found the door
Meigs County Shertff' s Depart- unlocked. Looking in, several items
ment, Olarles Stewan reported Sat- matcbing the description of the
urday that be discovered his vacant stolen items were spotted, accord·
· house (because of tbe landslide) ing to the report. Stewart, the
had been entcllld and it appeared owner, came to the scene after
: that someone had been staying being contaCted by the Middleport
. there. He believed entry was made Police. With hi~ consent and assistance the house was checked and
withln the past couple of days.
items
from the George Lemley resOn Wednesday, Chris Lemley
reported his bouse had been idence, the Chris Lemley residence,
entered and several items taken; He and from the Whiuingion residence
believed the house of his father, were lliCOvered.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
George Lemley, had also been
advised that from evidence found
entered.
On Wednesday afternoon, at the house, charges will probably
• Leslie Whittington Ir.. reported a be ftled against two juveniles.
Although the Paul Stewart
· camper, an outbuilding and a con·
verted bus had been entered and house was vacant, the utilities
items Stolen. He gave a description · 111maincd on as it was to be rented
of some of the items that were in December. The other residences
8111 vacant because of the landslide.
missinJ!.
,
Wh1le Deputy Robert Beegle
was on the scene, Whittington suggested the neighbor's house, dial of
Sally Ann Watson, 15, of 202
1/2 Spring Ave., Pomeroy, has
The Daily Senlioel
returned home, Pomeroy Chief of
(UWBJJS.IID)
Police Gerald Rought reported
Wednesday. The teenager whp dishblithed AYei'J aftentooa, Mon. .)'
......... ~. Ill Caan SLPMI'umoto),
appeared
over a week ago was with
Olllo b)' 11M Olllo VallO)
lilhiDI
i
friend,
police
said.
~11111-• lao., l'ww!O),

Returns home

OIJio ;;r.l
PI!. ttla-111111.
......
- atPmaob
Ohio.

fOIITiiASTER: .... -

p

0),

46'HII.

.,.c-tor

.._to

or--Ia

Datl~ntinel,

Ill Court 8t.,

Commiilee. alao feels the ~- ·
tive venture could make a differ·
ence in the O!lll:ome of the funding.
Mrs. Clark, on behalf of the
association, expms cd appreciation
to Scou Dillon, Pomeroy ViUa~e
council member, for his efforts m
· maintaining a supportive and coopemtive relationship between the
association IIIII the village.
Other matters
A donation of $100 will be
made to the Lions Club to be used
for expenses .inc:urre4 from build·
ing the roof for the parking lot
"stage. Kenny Uu, a member of the
Lions Club, stated more work is
planned foc the.stage area
- · Bank One announced it still has
Christmas bulbs available for sale
for $7 each. This year's ornament
features .Pomeroy High School.
Proceeds from the sale of the ornaments go toward the $500 donatiqn
made by the bank to the association
for .tbe purchase of the welcome
banners that hang in the business
district.
The next meeting wiD be Dec. 9
at 8:30 a.m. and officers will be
elected.

and export the American way o~
life. Americ:Ms - properly .wried about "values" tliese days.
But li~ !Mid the "individualism" tbat CIOI1ICS widl il, is a tey
A!nerican 'value. Pubcd 'If tech·
no1ogy, libenlta is IWIICfldll the
world. It'1 fOIIering
That's b«ooting our foeip
·cy. And we- in roc lola of
iL

democ::l.

Danc:e plaoned
Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies
Auxil'
will ~a round and
square~ Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. with music by Smokey Mountain Boys. Public invited.
•

Services planned
Fajth Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom will have candlelight
Speclal meeting
communion services Wednesday at
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. .
7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed inviteS 9053 I adies Auxiliary will have a ·
the public.
special meeting Monday at }:30 ':
p.m.
AU members urged to. attend. ·
Christmas auction planned
Plans
will be made for the ChristThe Harrisonvil.le Elementary mas dinner.
PTO will hold a Christmas auction
Dec. 4 at 7 p.m. with Dan Smith,
Protram planned
auctioneer, at the school.
·
"Talking About Health and
Nutrition" will be presented at the
Youlb group to meet
American Legion HaD on
The Youth Group of Trinity Racine
Monday
at 7 p.m. There will be
Church will meet tonight (Thursfree
refreshments.
day) at 5 .P·~· at the church. All
. youth are mv1ted. At 6: IS p.m., aU
Revival to~~tlnued
parents are urged to attend a meetat the Stiversvi,lle Word;
mg for the planning of the Christ· of Revival
Faith
Church
Tommy em:~
mas program. This meeting will penter has been with
extended
through"
follow the youth meeting and snack
tonight
at
7:30p.m.
Public
invited:
.
time.

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!

CLEVELAND {AP) - The
Super Lotto jackpot will grow to
$12 million for Saturday nigbt's
game alter no one came up wilh aU
six numbers drawn Wednesday
night with $8 million at stake.

Continued from' page I
accepted.
Some wiD be replaced, but Runyon expects to cut the postal labor
force by at least 30,000 overall mostly manag~ - at a saving of
$800 million this year and $1.4
million annually in the future.
In addition, he llas dropped
some projects and restructured
agency debt, sharply cutting interest payments made by the agency.
"In July we were talking about
breaking even in 1992. Now we're
expecting an opemting surplus of
$500 million. And we're in a good
position-to break even in 1993," he
ssid. "All this adds up to two more
Christmases at today's rates.''
When it became an independent
agency in 1971 the Postal Service
was ord~ to operate like a business, breaking even over time. The
~ency no longer =ives tax substdies for openttions.
..

Hospital news .
Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Joseph Schuler,
Cheshire; Anna Cornell, Middle-

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA ,...,
446 4524

110\1 h. \J.( )\,:!

port.

Discharged: Brenda Jones and
Clarence Searls.

·GRADUATES • Sbawn
Cunningbam, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Cunnln&amp;ham,
Syracuse, aradu•ted Nov. 6
from lbe Oblo State Highway
Patrol Academy arter completing s1x months or tralniag.
Cunnlngbam Is a graduate or
Southern Hlgb School. He Is
now stationed at the Wal·
bridge Post in Wood County.

COLONY THEATRE
I!IMG!!T

DB. GIGGLES 1
STARnNG FRIDAY

,.,

THE LAST OF THE

MOHICANS

R

SHOW nMES:
Frl.·Sal·Sun. 7:30 l 8:30
Mon. thru lhura. One Evening
Show7:30

Adml•lon 11.50 I 44&amp;41123

Housing...

'

Continued from page 1
The October drop followed two
consecutive declines in new home
sales, which often depress builder
incentive. Sales were down I percent in September and 1.6 percent
in August. · The department is
scheduled to release the October
neW home sales report on Dec. 2.
Still, applications for building
permits, which some economists
consider a barometer of future
activity, rose 1.1 percent in October after a 4.6 percent increase a
month earlier.

..

Area death
Matthew Burns
Matthew llurns, 8S, Bidwell,
(Evergreen community), died
Wednesday, Nov. 18, 1992, at •
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point
Pleasant.
·
He was born March 26, 1907, in
Point Pleasant, son of the late
Christopher and Netty Mae
(Roush) Burns.
He was a retired, self-employed
painter and a member of the Chapel
Hill Church of Christ
Survivors include his wife,
Phyllis Halfhill, who he married
Oct 19, 1932; two brothers, Walter
Bums of Columbus, and Marcus
Burns of Ashtabula; three.sisters,
Leona Taylor .of GaUipolis. Lucille
Perry and. Marjorie Lon~, botb of
Albany; and several nteces and
nephews.
He was preceded in death by four brothers and three sisters.
·services will be beld I p.m. Saturday at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, widt the Rev. John Jeffrey
officiating. Burial will be in Gmvel
Hill Cemelery.
Friends may call ai the funeral
home on Friday from 4-8 p.m ..

'.

i. 12 ga. 2'A" Rifled Slugs

Abank has to decide what it

.

'

likes doing. It can spend its time worrying
&gt;

.

about coffee futures in Brazil.
Or the price ofreal estate in Tokyo. Or if its

Bank One, it can stay a little closer to

...

home. And be ready when the pickup decides

..

that Tuesday is a good day to die. At
Bank One, we always want to be in a position
to do "Whatever it takes" to help you

out the day you need us. Like today maybe.
·. - - -- - - --,

Direct ·
l.tms

2•29

299~

~ONIIIA1'D

ThC itMntioas e•pnl, enhul:e

will have i ThaoklgivinJ dinner
Saturday at 6:30p.m. 'lbole IIICN,Iing bring a covCred dish. Pubbc- ·,
in~~, :

Lottery numbers

O'DELLS
20 ga.

coarereucallft
SoutheQJ Local School District
will hold parent/teacher confer·
ences for lhe district on Tuesday
from 6-9 p.m. and Wednesdi!Y
from 8:30 a.m. to noon. There will
be no school in the district on
Wednesday.

Thanksgiving dinner
Lottridge Community Center

Postmaster

·-

11-.r: T!Jo _
.......... """ 1M
Olllo N-.r:,:; "--olloa, Nellonol
Alh-orllatq ~&amp;all.., Braahom
N-m
.• .78J Thhd AY.,ao,
,Now'61dtlotll1.
fte

the business district on Dec: 12
with extended hours by participating merchants, As a part of the festivities, a caroUng group is being
organized to stroll through town
and carol from 7-8 p.m. Anyone
interested in participating in the
caroling ~ should come 10 the
Bank One drive-thru parking lot at
6:30p.m. on that day. Lois .Bmt of
Trinity Cburch has agllled to head
up tbis group. A group advertisement roc the event will run Dec. 11
in The Daily Sentinel.
Revltallzatlou
The association agreed to support a cooperative venture between
the VIllage of Pomeroy and. the
Village of Middleport when applying for downtown revitalization
monies frot'r! lite Ohio Department
of Development In February of
f993.
Tbe idea for this cooperative
venture came from Mike Slroth of
SBA Consultants. He is Pomeroy's
revitalization consultant. AccordingiO StrOth, the veniUI'll means the
villages would present a unified
iumative with separate gmnt aPJ.llications. He feels this cooperative
veniUI'll is necessary because of the
unique situation of tile two villages.
The proposal was presented to
J&gt;omeroy Village Council on Monday and was received with enthusiasm. 1o1m Musser, chairman of the
Pcimeroy DowniOwn Revitalization

il.liO
.86

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IINOUCOPf
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HUNTING ~CENSE

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..;/",. Q1992 BANC ONE CORPORATION All loans au •ubj&lt;Cl Ia credi! apprcwal. 'O(f&lt;r gooct'on 36·month loans up to S5 000 J50 "

.

ld ;

1!!J finan ce ~harge ~~~ impacl lht ratt . ~or example, on a loan of $5,000 j~r 36 mont1is, lht paymtnts would bt S16I .J2 wiih a ~aU o/9.~t"

• Woob.. , .. , ................... ......., .... ,= .IIO
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!111M 19.99% APR). M1mmum loon omount ts $! ,5od. Offer expires Nov&lt;mber 30, !992.

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'

�I

Thunada~Novernber19,19V2

JOe Daily]Sentinel~·-

· . lnd~ana,

'

••

,

Meigs athletes honored at feast .
The annual fall sports b~quet
for Meigs High School.was held on
WednesdaY evening in the school's
cafeteria. Master of ceremorues for
the event was booster president Jim
Soulsby. Rick Ash gave the invocation and Susie Mash gave the benediction.
Reserve volleyball coach Dale
Harrison inu:oduced members of
his team. That team captured the
Tri-Valley Conference crown with
a 20-0 mart. On the season the
team won 41 .giulies and lost only
one in coasting to the title. Awards
were presented to Nitti Bentley,
Melissa Clifford, Cynthia CotteriU,
April Halley, Mandy Jones, Erica
Robie and Jaclyil Swartz.
Varsity coach Rick Ash present·
ed members of his team that finished with a 10-11 record. Varsity
volleyball awards were presented
to Amber BlactweU, BiUie Butcher, Bobbie Butcher, Vanessa
Compston, Lisa Fackler, Lee Henderson, Ginger Holcomb, Sarah
Pullins and Yvette Young. Young
was named to fust team all-TVC
• and fust team all district
Cheerleader advisor Kathy
Doidge inu:oduced members of her
cheerleader squads. Freshman
cheerleaders introduced included
JCim Crites, Sue Henderson ,'
Heather Knight, Keawanna Qualls,
Lori Russell, Teresa Simpson and
Cindi Stewar\.
Reserve cheerleaders getting
awards included Nikki Bell, Misty .
Birchf~eld, Jana Dailey and Amanda Well.
Varsity awards were then presented to Kelly Doidge, Crystal
Donohue, Kelley Gruescr, Cassie
Hubbard, Becky Meier, Kyla Sellers, Crystal Vaughan and Michelle
Young.
Football coach Mike Staggs
introduced members of his staff,
including Bob Ashley, Jeff Baker,
Greg Deel, Tim Faulk and Daryl
Owens .
Reserve football awards went to
Travis Abbott, Chad Burton, GllfY
.Canterberry, Bryan Colwell, Travis
Curtis, Kevin Edinger, Mike
Franckowiak, Don Goheen, Israel
Grimm, Brett Hanson, Mike Jarvis,
Travis Lipscomb, Bert Mash, Chad
McKinney, Mark Mills, Nick
Mills, Scott Peterson, Paul Pullins,
Paul Searls, Brent Smith, Cliff
Thomas, James White and Adam
Wyatt. ·
Varsity Football awards went to
manager Tim Baker, Nathan
Brown, Matt Clark, Matt Craddock, Mike Cremeans, Tom Cremeans, Aaron Drummer, Ben Fackler, David Fetty, Jered Hill, Bryan
Hoffman, Heath Hudson, Kevin
Lambert, Carlos Miana, Brett Newsome, Shawn Petrie, Jim Pullins,
Adam Sheets, Brian Smith, Shannon Staats, Steve Swatzell, Eric
Wagner, Mite Welsh and Walt
Williams.
Staggs presented special football awards to Steve Swatzell for
most valuable offensive lineman,
Jim Pullins. for most valuable
receiver and the most valuable
offensive back to Eric Wagner.
Defensive awards were presented
to Kievin Lamben for most valuable defensive lineman, Mike Cremeans and Mike Welsh for most
valuable defensive backs.
Other awards went to James
White for best freshman, Shannon
Staats for best SOJ)homore and Eric
Wagner for best junior. Most
improved offensive lineman went
·to Walt Williams, Shawn Petrie
woo the most improved defensive
lineman and most improved offensive back was Eric Waaner.
Coach Srags preeented the fust
.annual Chancey awards presented
to the best offensive player and the
best defensive player. The award is
named after long time head

Maraud!:f Coach Charles ~Y·

Steve S~tzeU won the award for

TVC ALL-ACADEMIC TEAM - Mmben
ol the aU academic team Ill die Tri-Valley COD·
rerence were latroduced Wedileaday lli~'::n•t lhe
Melp sports buqueL Pictured Ia lhe
t row
are (L·Jl) Kelly Ga·ueser, Crystal VaaJihali,

Kelly Doidge, Matt Clark nd Brio Smith. ID
tile back row are Lori Kelly, ·Katrina Turner,
Raadall Joilnston, Becky Meier, Michelle
· Young, Adam Sheets and Kevin Lambert.

'.
••

Golf coach John Krawsczyn
offensive and Mike &lt;;remeans won
the award on defense. A special introduced the reserve golf team.
coaches award was presented to Awards went to Jerod C&lt;d, Jerrod
Douglas, Richie Gilkey, Travis
manager Tim Baker.
All·TVC awards went to Mike Grate, Todd Mitch, Jason Taylor,
.Cremeans for rust ream and Kevin Scott Whitlatch, Tyler Wolfe,
Lambert, Jim Pullins and Steve . Krawsczyn then presented the
Tri-Valley Conference champion·
Swatzell for honorable mention.
Assistant coach Mike Kennedy golf team. The three time TVC
presented girls cross country champs also were sectional and
awards in the absence of head district runner-ups and a state final- ·
coach Jim OlophanL Awards went ist, fmishinj! sixth in Division II.
to Elizabeth Downie, Heather The team fmished with an outFranckowiak, Allison Gerlach, standing 97-13 record. ·varisty Golf
Mary Grueser, Susan Grueser, Jodi awards went to John Bentley, Jay
Imboden, Lori Kelly, Kelly Satter- Cremeans, Benny Ewing, Jay Har·
field, Katrina Turner. Melissa Wil- ris, Jason Hart', Chris Knight,
fong. Kelly, Satterlield and Susan Adam Krawsczyn, Reggie Pratt.
Grueser all were second team aJJ. Krawsczyn won the Parker LongTVC honorees.
.
Rod Harrison Memorial golfer of
Kennedy then presented awards the year award, the sophomore also
to the Tri-Valley Conference cham- won the TVC's most valuable
pion boys cross country team. The golfer award for the second year in
team was the rust team other than a row. Joining Krawsczyn on the
Belpre in 12 years to win the TVC first team all conference ~m were,
title. Awards went to Nathan John Bentley, Jay Harris, Jay CreBaloy, P.J . Chadwell, Phillip means and Jason Hart. Chris
Edmonds, Bobby JOhnson, Randall Knight won the coaches award.
Johnston, Crockett Roush, Bill
Krawsczyn also presented
Toundas. Baloy and Chadwell took awards to the Meigs County Golf
first team aii-TVC honors, while Course for being the hoine course
Phillip E~monds and Crockett of the team. The.team also dedicatRoush toot home second team
(Ste BANQUET on Page 5)
honors., ,

·l!dmoni&lt;IO .......... 7 9 3
W"umipe&amp; ..•..•..,.. 6 12 1
S~n'Je~e ............. 4 14 1

ln theNBA •••
EASTERN CONFERENCE
.
·AU..Ii: DIYiaioo ' ·
T....
,· 1W' L
Pd.
Odando ...................4 2 .«&gt;7
New Yodt.- ......•.... A
Miami •....•.•..•.••.•..•.•3

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•.216

LS
2.5

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Cbioaao •.•••..•.••..•.••..6 1. .8l7
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lndWY ..•.•................4 2
.«&gt;7
Chadoao •..•..•.•....••. .3 4 .429
CI.I!VI!LAND •....••. .3 4 .429
Atlan&amp;a •..••••.•.•..•..••..2 4
.333
Dooroil. .................2 4 .333

Mil-..............

1
1.5
3 .
3 .
3.S
3.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

· In a· seven-inning college game
in 1911 , future Hall of Farner
George Sisler fanned 20 of 21 bat·
ters.
·

,.L

GB

.600
.333

1
2.5

Pulllu (mO.t valuable receiver and ~011orable
mention all·TVC), Kevin Lambert (most valu·
able defeulve lineman nd bonorable meatioa
all·TVC) aDd SbaanoD Staats (most valuable
SOP,homore). Players DOt pictured are Walt
Wtlllams (most Improved o"easive linemaa),
Kevill Edlapr (most ltaproved defensive back)
and SbawD Petrie (most Improved defensive
lilleman).

San Anl0rlio .............2

4

.333

~

Doll.u ........ :..............l
Deo........................t

4

floddo St 19, Sicao 80
lndUm 103, Mmny SL 80

.167

3.5

Iowa SL 14, IDdiMla SL 69
Tau·ElPuo90.GoorpMua! 71

Hall or Fame member Frank
FriSch went straight from the Fordham University campus to the New
York Giants.

..l

.s

2.5
2.5
3
3

BIBB CLOftiiEIS
SlOPPING ·

YOUR

' IOp.m.

New .YoU:: at LA, Clippn, 10:30p.m.

Friday's games
Miami atPhiladeldlla,' 7:30
.
,. GoUcn. Sta~at d.lllaao. 7:~p.m.
• U1lh lllodi&amp;na. 7:30 p.lll.
: W~IICD It MIMelc:u.l p.m.
1o Portland at Sacramemo, I'"p.m.
auca,O at LA. ~ca. 10:30 p.m.

'Jn theNHL ....
VOLLEYBALL AWARD- Yvette Young was presented
awards ror belna named to first team aii-TVC and all district in volleyball. Young was the team's only seDior.
.
.

REDUCED 30%
LADIES SUITS &amp; DRESSES
REDUCED 30%
LADIES JANTZEN
SPORTSWEAR .
REDUCED 20%
·woMEN'S
LADIES
JOGGING SUITS
BLOUSES

THE POOR
.HOUSE TinS .
WINTER?
CONSIDER

THE MAPLES
Ranta are computed according
Income.
Lovely
to . your
apartments featuring wall to wan
carpeting, all appliances.

1·614-992·7022

REDUCED 20%

REDUCED

20%

Philadalpllia ....... 7 8 31

N.Y.Iolloden.... 7 9 1

W.................. 711 1

il_.

OPEl 9c20.S:OO
MOI.•Sit

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15 63 156
IS 62 tiS
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Qucboc .•.....•....••. 10 s 4 24 17 70
................ 9S221170SI
I 9 2 18 95 16
lllnfml ............. 4 13 1 9 47 T1
· Onowa............... 1 17 1 3 41101

Jluft"alo...............

BillketbaU

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE ·
T-

Norrl1 DlvWon
W L T J'lo. .GFGA

....... ,..... 11 I 0
Cldca1c. ........... ·9 s 3
T.................... 9 6 3
MiMoo&lt;u .••.•....• ? • 2
Tunpo Boy ........ ?10 2
SLLaub ............ 611 3

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21
21
211
211
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68 62
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65 82

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Leo An1oJeo ••..••. 12 6 2
V&amp;nCDUYrZ ........•· 10 7 l

•

2IS 16 68
211 92 76
7l 80 62

No. 19 Iowa SL 84
Jndlaaa SL 69
Sophomore Julius MichaHt
SCOied a career-high 24 points and
matched his personal best with
seven assists to lead the Hawteyes
to their rourth straight season-openins vk:tay. Justus Thigpen added
19 points for Iowa State, which
slklt 61.5 percent in the second half
and led by as many as 2S points.
Greg Thomas led Indiana State
with 18 points. .
No. 24 UCLA A, SL Louill54
The Bruins rallied from a 34-28
halftime deficit behind the 21
points and nine rebounds of l.oyQia
Marymount transfer Richard
Petruska. UCLA went on a 19-2
run in the second half that was
capped
Tyus Edney's three- ·
pomter
9:38 left that gave the

DALLAS COWBOYS -

Sianed

Mickey Pruiu,linobackor.

MINNI!SOTA VIKINGS - Reloued

Muk Duobab.K, linoback...
PHll.ADI!lJ'HIA EAGLES ~ Pl.ocod
Brill Haacr. lincbackw, on inj_~red rc·

urn. Activutd Ephuiana Danley, )

linebacker, from tho practice aquad .
Si~t~ld Anclnl Po-well, lincibttkcr, lO the

~'fa'~oH

STEELERS

-

Hockey
Nadoftal H~gLeque
EDMONTON 0
S - Rotumod
Tyler Wrial&lt;, ...-, to Swill Olnalt of
lho Wc:Rim ~oy 1.-.pe.
NEW YORK RANGERS - c.1lod up
Mike Hurlbut, de.faaeman, from Bina·
batnton of \he AmeriCift Hockey LelJ~M.
Senl Peter Ancfenaon, defen11xnan. to
Bin&amp;hamtan.

fAMPA BAY UOJITNING - Ro·
e&amp;l1ed SlOVo Mol.W, left wina, from At·
1anta rJ. tha lntematimal Hockey l a p

Utah beats Boston ~2-91
for first win in Garden
By HOWARD ULMAN
BOSTON (AP)- Boston Garden is becoming an easier place for
visitors to play. Even the Utah Jazz
can win there.
For the first time in their 18
years of e~istence, including the
fust five in New Orleans, the Jazz
won a regular-season ·game on the
Garden's parquet floor, breaking a
21-garne losing streak.
"Forget the jinx, forget everything else," said John Stockton,
whd had 14 assists and gave Utah a
big advantage at point guard. "It
feels good to win bere."
The 92-91 squeaker Wednesday
night carne against a Celtics team
struggling to .find itself after the
offseason retirement of Larry Bird
. and the decision not to re-sign
point guard John Bagley.
Both could have helped on the
last play.
With the Celtics trailing 92-91,
playmaker Sherman Douglas gave
the ball to Reggie Lewis, who
replaced Bird as the go-to guy, in
poor shooting position. Lewis lofted a shot from just inside the threepoint line with two seconds to go.
It bounced off the rim, and Kevin

McHale's tip fell short as the
buzzer sounded
••we just weren't organized on
the last play," Lewis said. "We're
trying to get used to each other.'"
Douglas also was victimized on
a key possession that gave Utah a
90-8~ lead with I :30 remaining.
Mter a timeout, Stockton eluded 1
Douglas, sank a layup off an
inbounds pass from Tyrone Corbin
and completed a three-point play ·
after he was fouled by Douglas.

••

UCINE GUN SHOP

'·

949·2161

•
I

(Continued from Page 4)
ed their season to the late Mary
Roush of the Riverside Golf
Course. A plaque was given to the
course in memory of Mrs. Roush.
Awards were also presented to athletic director Rick Ash, Jack Slavin
and Benny Ewing for their help.
Ash presented awards to the
members of the Tri-Valley Conference all academic team. Members
of the team inc hide Kevin Lambert,
Michelle Young, Randall Johnston,
Lori Kelly, Katrina Turner, Kelly
Doidge, Matt Clark, Adam Sheets,
Kelly Grueser, Crystal Vaughan,
Bryan Smith and Becky Meier.

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR .

,,

·

NOW

$11 995

SIOCkt17310,2doon~,oedan,6

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oyt., air, aUlD., PS, PB, power ·
windows, power aeat, power ·.
locka, lilt wheel, cruile, AM'FM .• .
alill'80, racial a, rear win. defog.

NOW

$12,995 $12,995
1988 OLDS
CUTLASS CIERA

1988 FORD

SlaCk

t 24141, 4 doors, aedan,
front wheel drive, 6 cyl., air, aulD.,

Stock t 301378, 4 doors, .....

PS, PB, cruise, AMIFM stereo ..:

PB, cruise, A!NFM 11111'80.

TAURUS .

front wheel drive, ai", auto., PS,

tape.

NOW

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ss,995

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1989 FORD PROBE
· · GT.

1989 FORD ESCORT
GT

Stoc:k t 300601, 2 doors, lmnt wl1elj
Stock I 301372, 2 doors, !rant ·
drive, 4 cyl. knbo, air, stand. ~ans ., PS, ... ,.. wheel drive, 4 cyl., Bit, aland.
PB, power window&amp;, pciwvr &amp;811\ power . : trans., PS, PB, tilt wheel, cnioe,
lock.s, tilt wheel, cruise, AMH.t stereo,
AMIFM stereo, buCka1sea!a.
bucket seats, rear win. 9Gfog., gauges.

NOW

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sa 995

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.$13,900

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SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMiCISTS
Get !fOurHif a llftle eunehlnel Reeeerch at the Unlverelt!f of Toronto
euggeete a Cfi~rrelatlon bet-n bulimia and ...eonel effected dleor·
dar (SAD). Rx: get up aarllar and Jncreeee expoeure to daylight, even
bright Indoor light II need be.

...

Stud!f at the Unlverelt!f of Plfteburgh ehowad even modut exerclee
can protect poet·menopaueal women agalnet heart dlaeeH and
oeteoporoele.
·

•••

Getting antlblotlca up to two houre before eurgel'!f hel!*l patlente
avoid Infection In a teat a1 LOS HoepHel In Salt Lake Clt!f. h worked
better than medication given aarller or alter the operation.

.

'

'

··~

It take• longer to haal broken bonea In amokere than In nonemoken,
according to • etud!f reported to me. Amarlcan· Acadam!f of
Orthopudlc Surg&amp;One. Lo-r blood Oll)'gen level• In emokere may
bethereuon.
• I.

. VItamin C aeeme to protect aperm from de1111ge that might Jeed to
birth defact1. R-rchere at the USDA Hum~n N111rltlon Lab recommend at Jeaat 60 mg. a da!f.

...

a..... IIIII&amp; R. ""·
-

UCIIII

221 THIRD AYI.

raar step bumper, gaug-.

sl~ir"G rear glala.

StocK t 231~1. 4
stand. trans., racials, ,~ ,..,,,...,
wheel base, sUding rear glan

Meigs banquet... ·

Rem.ington &amp; Wiachester De~r Slugs ••~$2.25 kx
Raveri P·25 ACP Plstols--................. $44.95
22 Cal. CCI Long R!fle SheDs ....·--· $1 0.95 llrkk
· BUT- gu,- TRADE
. .

wide bed,

NOW
SCORES 19 - Phoeni:r center Oliver Miller (ldt) goes up
against aD uDldeDtlned Sacramento rroatman ror two or his 19
points Ia his rll'8t NBA game Wednesday nigbt, which the Suns woo
127-lll. (AP)

.. Nlu.Jr.:.:: ~ipcd
...

injun&lt;~

llli1o., PS, PB, tit -1. auiae, AIM'II
radio, radialo, 112 lon, super cab, long

cruise,

-

back, from the pneUco oquod to

s1Dck' 2338t, • !ii10III drive, v.a.l!lr.

radals, roar win. defog.

Ii:::
injwod liaL

1
A1UNI"A PALCONS
Jtlf
Or•h•m, q111ncrbaclt. to tho practice
aqWid. Moved Dcnick Moore. N~in~

1990 DODGE
D-150· .

, air, auto., PS, PB, pcworwin-

Nollonll - • lloocdatlon

........

ne

SlaCk • .17330, 2 iloors, caope, 6

BOSTON CELTICS - Phced Ed
Pinckno , f..,..,d, on lite injwod lial Ac·
liva&amp;od
Webb, forwa!d. from tho
SUPERSONICS

Bruins a 55·44 lead. UCLA was
playing without Shon Tarver, its
leading retnrning acorer, who sus· ' ,
tained a thigh bruise after practice
onTuesday.
.
· SL Louis, just S-23 last season,
was playin$ its first game under
coach Charlte Spoonllopr.
Billitens were led by Scott Highmark's 20 points.
TeJW·EI Paso 90
George Mason 71
Eddie Rivera had 19 points and
six assists to lead the Miners, who
led 52-37 at halftime after a 25-7
run. ADtlone Gillespie added 16
points for Texas-EJ Paso, while
Johnny .Melvin had 15, Roy
Howard 14 and Ralph Davis 13.
Donald Ross led George Mason
with 17 points.

1992MERCURY
COUGAR

'

Waived Alan Haller, cornerbaCk, and
odliod bini to their pnelicooquod.

------.-----------~------~ ·
.,

:l2 63 62

•

BARR CLOTHIERS
f

·

N.Y. RIDJ"' ····· 9 7 2 lO

By London Fog and Sherwood

Wll..L YOUR
UTILITIES
PUT YOU IN

Palrkk Dl..,lon

)"...
W L T I'll. GFGA
Pilllblqh .......... 13 4 3 29 91 71
Newicney ... ..... 11 7 0

How.U, qutfielder, to the Minnuota
Twilu for Or.mln Reed, outfielder.
PITISBUROH PIRATES - R!1cacci
Vicon1e Palacio•, pitcher, .nd Oary
Vanho, oudicldcr•
SAN PIEGO PADRfS -Salt Dove
Eiia•d, pildlor, CMJiriablto Lu Vcau of
tho Pacilio C&lt;!ut LcaJUC-

SEATTLE

; WALES CONFERENCE
•

b.o..NEW
""""·YORK METS - Tndcd Pot

Waived Corey Oaillct. JU~·

•

ALL LADIES COATS
AND JACKETS

B-baU
Amerkan .Ltaaue
TEXAS RANGERS - NIIMII Jaclcie
Nollolllll Leap•
COLORADO ROCK.lES - Named
RCII Huoey, lint bote cooch: Amoo Olio,
hhtin&amp; coach; and Jerry Royster, lhird

Tonight's eames

.:
•••

Transactions

Moen duSOUI cooclt.

Golden State at Orlando. 7:30 p.m.
fie'!_I~.~ A~. 7:3Q p.m.
ClLI!VI!lANQ" Rootlal."4:30 .....

:

Flntround

Tulue70. w..... ,..
UCU. 68, St Low. S4

Ullh 92. B.,... 91
Od111d0 120, Phl1odeJphlo 110
Pboenix 127. iloenm&lt;i1to 111

ing in ISO games or more in 12
consecutive seasons for the Yankees.

Preseason NIT

3

.:zoo

s

Podlk Dl ... lon
Poollaod ••.••.•....•.••.• ..! 0 1.000
~ ....................!
1 .133
s..u~e ......................s
1
.133
sa.....-.............4 4 .500
LA.Ubn ..............J 3 .500
Ooldon Sllte ............3 4 .429
LA. Cippca ...........3 4 .429

Lou Gehrig set a record by play·

College basketball

.714

Son""'-

FOR FURTHER DEIAILS Wl TODAY

w.....,..".,..,.,

WL
lhoh .........................5 2
..................... ,3 2
MiMoo&lt;u .•..•.•..•..••.•2' 4

Mldw•l Divlolon

Dollu"
8:30p.m.
• Dctmit at O.W., 9 p.m.
L
Cbiceao va. SMale atlbc Kmadcmc. '

Equal Housing
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N.Y.Iollodcn II Booloa. 7:40p.m.
HutfOJd 11 Otuwa, 7:40 p.m.
Mala.ali&amp;Qucboc. 7:40p.m.
N.Y. R.naen..at Philadelphia, 7:40
p.m.
1.00 p.m.
Mitmaota at Tamp~ lily, 7:40p.m.
VancouWII' at Cllaay, 9:40p.m.
Torcmo at San lea, 10:40p.m.
Cticoao "Leo An&amp;da, 10:40 P'J'·
PiuabuqbllNcw laney, 7:40p.m.
Dc&lt;n&gt;i1 "w~ t:to p.m.

Wednesday's scores

Muet be 82 yewe of age or handlellppM

Tonight's llames

Frlday'saames

·~

STAY WARM lhis Wlnterl
ALL PRIMARY DnLmES PAID

17 60 74
13 66 81
9 56 93

GB '

3 · .571
3 .500

New la.y ..............3 4
W....................... .2 S
a...........................2 6
PhiJ1ddpl&gt;i! ..........! 4

T10111

•,.

The Green Wave forced 14
turnovers on the' way to a 35-20
halftime lead and WlgnCI', whicli
was led by Miladin Mutavdzic's 19
points, never got no elmer than 11.
"We aot off to a slow 1tart,"
Wagner coach-T!ID Clpltraw said.
••Anthony Reed really toot it to
us."
··
No.4 IDdlau 103
Murray SL 80
The Hoosiers made 37 or 42
free throws in the easy win, with
Greg Graham leading the way with
. 12 of 13 as he scored 22 points.
·
''The ri1ain thing is to concentrate,'' Graham said. "Free throws
are really going to be important b
us, because those are easy points.You're not going to get any easier
points than free throws."
The Hoosiers held Murray State
f" ld
Is nd · f ee
to two te goa a ' st~ r
throws ovet an 8-rninute span and
took a 48-28lead.
.
Calbert Cheaney and Alan Henderson each had 13 points for the
Hoosiers, while Frank Allen had 19
for the Racers.
·
No. 9 Florida SL 89, Sieaa 80
The Seminoles played without
starters Charlie Ward 'and Douglas
Edwards, but guards Bobby Sura
and Sam Cassell each had 24
points.
Ward is still tending to his
duties as starting quarterback for
Florida State's third-ranked football team, and the point guard
won't return until after its bowl
game. Edwards, a junior forward,
was suspended for academic rea. sons·
Cassell filled in for Ward by
handing out nine assists and Suni
took care of the outside shooting,
going 8 for 11, includin~ all four of
the Seminoles' three-pomters.
Senior guard Mike Brown
scored 28 points, including five
three-pointers, to lead Siena, while
Lee Mattltews added 22 points and
nine rebounds.

S cor c IJ oar (I

· FOOTBALL AWARDS - Football playen
redevlng awards at tile Melp sports baDquet
included (lroat roW, L·R) Steve. SwalzeD (most
valuable otfeulve lilleman, Cbaac:ey Offeulve
Award of E:recelleDce aad hononble meatJc.
all-TVC), Mike Cre•eaas (co-moat valuable
defensive back, Cbucey Defeulve Award of,
Excelleace and first team aii·TVC) aad Eric
Wagner (most valuable olfeaslve back and most
valuable jualor). In the back row are Jl•

Page I

Florida State among victors.

By Tbe Aleoclated Press
The preseason NIT is keeping
the college basketball cupcake
count down.
The early season is usually
filled with games between teams
that hav! liUie in common except
for uniforms and sneakers.
Thanks to the tournarnent that
started the season on Wednesday
niiht. there will be two matchups
of ranked teams in' Friday night's
semifmals~ ,
·
J;lourth-ranked Indiana beat
Murray SIBle 103-80 and wiD play
host to No. l7 'l'ulane, a 70-S4 win·
ner over Wagner. Ninth-ranted
Florida Staie downed Siena 89-80
and will play host to No. 19 Iowa
State, an 84-69 winner over Indiana
State.
·
In Wednes(lay night's •other
games, Texas-EI Paso beat George
Mason 90-71 and No. 24 UCLA
downed SL Louis 68-54. They wiD
P!&amp;r their quarterfinal game Friday
mgttt at UCLA.
Tonight, Delaware is at No. 6
Seton Hall and Tennessee visits
Rutgers, with the willllCfS meeting
Satunlay.
·The semiftnals will be Nov: 2S
in New York, with the champiOJ!Ship game two nights later.
Tulane scored the fust 1t J.lOints
.of the game on the way to VICtory
. over Wagner as Anthony Reed
scored 22 points, six in the opening
three minutes.
"For the first time out or the
~o~\ ,I think the kids did a good
JOb, Tulane coach Perry Clark
said. "The kids came out well.
~hey wer~ !l little fluster.ed at
times, but II was a good WID fqr
. us." ·
·
.
Now comes Indiana~ a Final
Four team last year th.at has four
sw,ren ~
. 'We .re f?ing up~ to~."
Clark satd. We are not Just gomg
up to P,lay a good game and come
home.

"

all·n~C) aDd P..J. Chadwell (first team all·
TVC). Pictured ID t•e R&amp;:oad row are Jodi
• Imbodea, Elizabeth ·Dowaie and Heather
Franckowiak.

The Dally Sentinel

In prese!lson NIT action,

Thuraday, November 19, 1992

CROSS COUNTRY AWARDS- WIDala1
cross COIIIItry awards at the Melp Athletic BaD·
quet ·were Natba Baloy (first team aii-TVC),
Kelly Satterfteld (aU-academic), Katrina Turaer
(secoad .team aii-TVC), Lori Kelly (second team

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Football '92!
Catch All The
Excitement!

I

New Jersey edges Buffalo 3-2
to keep Sabres winless on road •

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I

Sat., Nov. 21 ... MajOr Colleges - Dlv. 1·A
18
31
Aiizona State
t7
27 . S.M.U.
• eay!...
21
26
Texas
13
Booton College
31 • Army
130 · • Utah
2t
Brigham Young
• Califomia
26
28
Stanfold
• Cincinnati
24
20
Akron
26
SoUih Carolina
14
'Ciemaon
17
• Colorado
31
Iowa State
20
Floride
28 • Venderbi~
Wyoming
23
27
• H•waii
21
Michigan State
·n~nois
22
27
Iowa
30 •-Minnesota
19
Kansas
29 • Missouri
10
Tulane
'L.S.U.
26
21
&amp;at Carolina
• Memphis S!Bte
34
22
Miami
25 • Syracuse.·
23
Michigan
28 'OIIioStata
19
• Nelladii-Las Vegas .23
Montana Stata
13
• Nevada-Reno
33
Texas Southam
24
• New Mexico
25
Colorado State
Nonh Carolina
23 • DukB
21
14
• Nonh Caro~na State 28
WakB Forest
23
24
Toledo
• Northem Illinois
• Oklahoma Stata
25
Kansas State
' 21
35 • Oregon State
14
Oregon
Pittsburgh
• Penn State
38
10
lndana
27
• Purdie
31
Na&gt;y
• Rice
36
14
13
Rutgers
29 • Temple
27
Fresno State
25
' San Diego State
• San Jose Slate
33
New Mexico State
17
Souttlem Calilomia 27 'U.C.l.A.
15
• SW Louisiana
28
Ari&lt;ansas State
13
Kentucky
34
13
'T,ennessee
'Texas A &amp; M
34
T.C.U.
7
29
Houston
24
• Texos Teen
21 • Pacific
19
Utah Slate
. Virginia
23 • Virginia Tech
22
Washington
31 • Washington State
19
• West Virgini!l
29
louisiana Tech
14
• Arizona
Arbntlll

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Wisconsin '

26

• Northwestem

Major Colleges - PlY. 1·AA
Jackaon State
27
20
.
• Appalae~ian State 28 Wettam Carolina
24
Bethune-Cookman • 24 · ' Morgan State
23
Citadel
21 • Furman
20
Colgate
27 'Bucknell
24
Brown
'Columbia
28
23
• Connecticut
30
Rhode Island
12
Pennsylvania
• Cornell
28
21
Dartmouth
24 · • Princelon
22
• Delaware
Towson
41
. 13
Eastern Kentucky 27 • Morehead State
12
27
Georgia Southern 28 ·• Youngstown
• Holy Cross
34
Fordham
20
• HOWIIrd .
22
27. Delaware StaiB
Idaho .
29 • Boise State
15
• Lafayette
25
Lehigh
17
'Uberty
31
Kutz1own
16
Marshall
31 • Eaa1 ·Tennessee
7
• Middle Tennessee
34
Tenneuee Tech
17
Montana
30 • Idaho State
15
NE louisiana ·
25 • North Texas
15
• New Hampshire
Massaehusens
23
22
• Nonh Carolina A&amp; T 24
South Carolina State ·21
Nonheastern
31 • Boston U.
24
• Nonhern Iowa
28
SW Missouri
17
• Richmond
William &amp; Mary
33
27
• S.F. Austin
26
NW louisiana
24
• Sam Houston
26
SWTexas
20
• Samford
. 20
30
Central Florida
• Southern Illinois
27
Indiana .State
25
Southern U.
39 • Prairie View
3
\ • Tennesseo State
26
SE Missouri
19
Tennessee-Martin 27 • Austin Peay
23
Troy
30 • Nicholls State
10
'V.M.L
25
Tenn.-Chananooga 20
• Villanova
28
Maine
12
• Weber State
20
McNeese
t9
Western Kentucky 31 • Murray State
12
Yale
27 • Harvard
21

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PRO FORECAST

• •BUFFAL0.-..27
ATLANTA."..;;.17
·These two 1eams bave met-lilly five times in 19 years, tbe Bills willning lbc fust two and the Falcoos the last tbree.
Buffalo can't let up after.tough games with Pittsburgh and Miami
• • cmCAG0.--21
GREEN BAY.-13
Wilb a beaut of a faked punt and a bend·but.OOO't bleak defense, tbe Bears beat tbe Packets a m011th ago. 30.10.

fi~~~i~~~~~~

W very pme it plays, this.is a must win forc::;hicago.
DALLAS-"".34
••PBOENIX.""...20
The fust time the Cowboys and tbe Cardinals played, Mkbael Irvin caught t1J«ee toudJdown passes - 011e an 87·
yarder- as Dallas won 31.QO. The Cowboys bav~ lakeD fom stiaight from Pbocmix.
.
DETROIT-"-lP . CINCINNATL.---·14
The worst of lbc NFC Central and AR: Central face off. The Bengals bave won the last three in their series,
locluding a 42-7 drubbing in 1989, the last time they met.
KANSAS CITY---24 ••SEATI'LE..--12
· In the sec:ood week of the season, the Seabawks were bombed by their former quartetback, Dave Krieg, as Kansas
· City woo easily 26-7. The Chiefs sboiild win their founb straight from Seattle.
••L.A. RAIDERS".--28
DENVER---.26
.
The Broocos'17·13 win in the season opener began a Di&amp;btmarisb four-game losing S1reak for the Raiden. Neither
Marinovich nor Sdlroedcr bas inspiml L.A., but Elway, 100, bas been sporadic.
..MIAML-...31
HOUSTON.-M..27
Last year the Oilers beat the Dolpbins 17·13, and with HouSIOD figbdng for its post-season life, this one.sbould be
just as dose. At bome for lbc tlecmd straight week, Miami gets the nod
"MINNESOTA.--..33
CLEVFLAND.--16
The Vikings and ·Browns baven 't met since 1989, wben Clevelalld won in overtime, 23-17. The most telling sign of

Minnesota's Sllalgth is that it basn'tlet up apiost so-so teams.
N. Y. JETS.--..20
••NEW ENGLAND.--.~.14
In week five the winless Jets beat the winless palriotS 30-21 in the so-called Doughnut Bowl. Tbe 011ly real highlight
for either team baa been New York's fteaJdsb win over Miami.
PBILADELPIDA---.30 •• N.Y. GIANTS.-- •.24
This could be a srCat game or a yawner, depending on wbctber the Good Giants or the Bad Giants show up. The
•EaaJea have wa1 Ibm: sttaight In dJis ieriea. wblch began In 1933.
.
••PDTSBlJllGIL-....27 INDIANANPOLIS--- .!1
.
The S'ncelen bave won their 1,ut duee Jlllllel qainlt lhe Col!l. illcludiug a 21·3 victory last year. Indy 'bas
Improved draJDatlcaJJy lioa! ibeo, but tbat may DOt be evident in Ibis game.
••SAN DIEG0-.23 TAMPA BAY---17
Sioce they flnt pJafed in 1976, the Buc
haw yet 10 beat the ChlrJc:n ill lour altempiS. This )'ll8r Tampa Bay
bas sand a rew IIIIR poinlllhlt S.D., but pvc:a up a lot more.
SAN FRANCISC0-..29
·~A. RAMS--.20
The Rami played the 49cn almOil even in week flve,lollng 27-2A oo Mike Cofer's last·secoad field goal. San
Pilndsco balll't beea lmibly cauiiUat, but It abould bear doWn for Ibis one.
(Monday)
••NEW OJI UNS--.zl WASHINGTON.-- - .27
A JI'*'MieJ clluk: Mouday nipller - i crucllla-ie.for bodlltilllll, but lllpeclally the Rf4l•kloa. If New Orleam
.
playa to ill poteat!aJ it ww beat Walbloatoo for the flnt time in 13 ycen. . . .
. - .

c•-

-

Marlins, Rockies looking to future
with youngsters, some veteran talent

'WARNER

furnocn
Air C...tllon•s
~ Elfldttocy

... --

!her

ANDERSON'S
I

•

.

Three intraconfaranca matchups this weak loom large in the national, rankings picture. The first is among
' powers of lhe two-seasons-old Big East, Miami and Syracuse. The teams hava met only once over the past 12
years, a 33·~ Miami win in 1990. When Washington pummeled Stanford three weeks ago and made a strong
· (~ short-lived) case for the No. 1 ranking, the Hurricanes realized that Syracuse would be the place where
they'd need lo present some evidence of their own. W~h soma of the pressure off after Arizona's upset of
Washington, Miami won'l be concerned w~h winning by as large a margin as Washington's over Slanford, bU1
the Hurricanes will still have to work hard to win. The in1angible factor in this game is how well Syracuse
bounces·beck after a tough game with Boslon College lasl week.
In the Big Ten, Michigan visits Ohio State, againsl whom the Wolverines have wcin 50 of the 88 games
they've played dating back 10 1897. Since hs opening tie with Noire Dame, ·Michigan has bean virtually
unsloppable. The Buckeyes, on the other hand, have been something of a mystery this season, running ice·
cold or scalding hot, losing to Wisconsin and Illinois and bea1ing-of all teams-Syracuse. We might pick Ohio
State in an upset-if Michigan weran1 on such a roll.
1
In the PacKic 10, Washington-Washington Slate shapes up as a good game again after two years In which
Washinglon Slale finished a co,mbined 7-15 and was blown out by ·tlie Huskies 56·21 (in '91) and 55-10 (in
'9o). Washington, which holds a ~0-game advantage in the series since lhe teams first met in 1900, last lost to
the Cougars In 1988. But because Washington State is vastly improved, 1he Huskies don't stand much of a
chance of repeating their mOst recenl pertormances. Washington should win, but this year ~s first team will still
be playing altha end of the game.
Our acx:uracy is holding steady at .758. Through games of Nov. 7 we picked 1.441 right and 464 wronSJ.

r

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•

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HIGHLIGHTS

TIE' BOB

.. •• 1....

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY,

Deer firearm season
to start November 30

24

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THE BOB HARMON f:ORECAST

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.

. By KEN RAPPOPORT
Nlll'th Stars 5, Capitals 4
Capitals goaltender Oo!'_
AP Hacke:r Writer
·
Mike McPhee and Shane Churla · Beaupre had 31 saves.
•
The Buffalo Sales are a differ· scored in a 47-sccond span of the
ODen 4, Cuucb 2 : •
ent team 011 lbc roid dum 1hey n
third period and Russ Counnall . Shayne Corson surpas~]h~
at home - even when tltey're scored lhe game-winner with 12 30().pouit nwk with a joll- ~
pla~g at a neutral site.
seconds left, rail ying Minnesota assist for Edmonton agailllt Van'The guys really wanted 10 get past Washington,
couver.
•
that monkey off our bw;:ks.' • said
The North Stan trailed 3-0 after
Corson, obtained lian the r.b:
Buffalo's Pat LaFontaine following one period and were down 4-2 trea1 Canadiens on Au1. 27 ~g
Wednesday night's 3-2 loss to the when McPhee got his Second grnl with Brent Gilchrist and Vladimir
New Jersey Devils. "We had the of the night with 6:06.lefL Churla Vuj1Ck for Vince Damphouuelntt
chances, we just didn't capitalize." tif41 it by fanishing a 2-on-1 break a draft pick, DOW has 301 JJ0i1* iia ·
It was yet lliiOiher road Joss for with Neal Broten with 5:19 to go, 439 ~· including 125 ~ .~
G1lchrist, Scott Mellanby i1Dd
the Sabres, DOW 0:8-2 in their last and Courtnall Jl!Qvided lbc game10 games away from the Memorial ~ with a wrist shot from well Kelly Buchbelger also scored. •' ;
Pavel Bure was the lone
Coliseum and 1·8·2 on the road above the right circle after taking a
•
couver scorer.
overall. 1be Sabres are 7· 1·0 at long ~ pus from Dave Gagner.
•
home.
.
TUesday night's game, playf41 in
Hamilton, 0111ario, was one of 2A
neutral-site games being playf41 in
the NHL this season under the new
contract settled last spring.
"I guess you can look at this as
With the deer population in He said that each deer must be:
a neutral game, so we feh if we got
our fora:hecking ~g and playM Meils County being Hmoderately taggoo.immediately upon har.iest·:
our system, we d have a F,OOd high , according 10 wildlife officer ing. The tags are given to hu!~Jeri­
chance," LaFontaine said. •But Keith Wood, the Nov. 30-Dec. 5 when they get their licenses. li'he:
they got the extra bounce or the gun season is sure to atttact plenty tagging also applies 10 land owberS;
who kill on their own proJl«iily.of hunters.
extra break when
needed i.L"
Propeity
owners are to make their:
The Ohio Department of Natural
Alexander Scmak s goal early in
·
own
tags
showing name,~the second period gave the Devils a Resources' Division of Wildlife
date
and
time
of the kill.
• ·:
victory over the Sabres ·before the officer· said that annuai1y the bar·
BLOCKED SHOT - MIDnesota wingman
tbe second period ot Wednesday night's NHL
Once
animals
have
been
&amp;ar-:
vest
in
Meigs
County
during
lhe
smallest neutral·si1C crowd·this seaMike Craig (20) watches his shot bounce away
game in Lanover, Md., which the North Stars
son.
archery, gun and muzzleloader sea· vested, they must be taken tq ali•
from Washiugton 10alie Don Beaupre durlug
won 5-4. (AP)
Just 6!}72 ticke1S were sold at sons is about 3,000. He expects official deer checking station:
Copps Coliseum, where a Toronto- about that many to be harvested before noon of the followinfday·
on which the harvest lliok place::
Quebec game on Tuesday night this year.
On
the last day of the season, Dec::
He emphasized that hunting of
drew 17,026. Anti-Sabres senti·
ment lingers with some Hamilton an wild animals except. deer, water· 5, deer must be checked in tiY 8::
fans wbo believe the Sabces' own· fow I, and coyotes is not allowed p.m. All deer harvested must IM;ers lobbioo against NHL expansi011 during the deer gun season nor dur- checked in the county where they:
to the city. When a few dozen ing the January state-wide primi· were taken or an adjacent cootJty.- ·
By RONALD BLUM
round. ... f woo't defend the deci- Sabres fans began chanting "Let's tive seasiln. l'cr9ons may hunt coy- If it is a deer 011 a specialiiiBillge•:
minor leaguers instead.
NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe
"We pmblf41 a little,.! guess," sion right now and say we did the go Buffalo" in the third period, otrs during the deer gun season as meat pennit, it has to be checklll iii•
::
the Colorado Rockies and Florida Yankees general manager Gene right thing because you just don't they were drowned out by booing long as they bave a cWTCIIt hunting the county where it is taken.
The
12
deer
checking
stationS
locals.
license
and
a
valid
deer
perinit
and
Marlins will be tenible, after all.
Michael said. "We thought maybe know. But that was the way we
It was the fifth of 24 games use a gun and ammunition legal for Meigs County are Baum Lu11jber·
The big names stayecl put in we could get him through the flfSt decided to go."
Co., Chester; Chancey's F~:
played at neutral sites this season; deer hunting, Wood said.
Tuesday •s expansion draft, while
Mart, Syracuse; The Dry DOck1•
homs
for
the
deer
gun
Hunting
three of the five bave been played
lhe Rockies and Marlins chose lit·
Burlillgltam; Eber' s Gulf, ~:
season
are
one-half
hour
before
in Hamilton.
Ue names and no-names.
Ellis
and Sons, Middleport; FatetC
sunrise
until
sunset
,
"We don't think we're going to
Valeri Zelepuldn and Tom
Run
State
Park, Reedsville; Hiirii'
Wood
stressed
the
need
forcoowin a pennant with the team we
Chorske also scored as the Devils
Farms
and
Greenhouse, .State 124;:
tacting
landowners
before
moving
have;." Marlins general manager
woo their third in a row to improve
01110
their
popeaty
to
hun1.
Hunting
near
Portland;
Joe's Country
Dave Dombrowski said. "But that
Bonds loo the Pittsburgh Pirates to 11· 7·0, second in the Patrick
By JOHN NADEL
ket,
Rutland;
O'Dell Lumlleri"
without
pennission
is
lhe
biggest
wasn't our philosophy going in.
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) to their third sttaight NL East tide Division. LaFontaine, with his complaint be faces, the off'K:er said. Pomeroy; Pick and Shovel Oio~:
We think we bave a bright future." - Reluctantly, Barry Bonds by hitting .311 with 34 homers and 700th NHL point, and Rob Ray
He said tbat every hunter is per· eery, Salem Center; S1Cynnt's Cuii:
Just not a winning one in 1993. attended a news conference calloo · 103 RBis. He also scoroo 109 nms scored for the Sabres.
mil1Cd
to take one deer, a buck or a and Supply, New Lima Road, lut;·
Florida's prospective pitching r'ota· to announce he •d won his second and walked ·1-27 times.
In other NHL games, it was
doe.
Hunters
can also lake a second land, and Sun-Fun Pennzoil·,:
tion of Jack Annstrong, Pat Rapp, National League Most Valuable
The left fielder also won the Hartford S, SL Louis 2; Minnesota ant1erless animal
.
. ,.'
if they have Raetne.
Dave Weathers and Scott .C hi· Player award in three years.
· MVP award in 1990 and was run· 5~ Washington 4; and Edmonton 4, obtained the
management
As for duck hunting, the t et:=
amparino has a com biDed career
Vancouver 2.
Reluctai!Uy, became it got in the ner-up to Pendleton last year.
permiL
lands
habitat stamps are avaiW!IC::
record of 34·51. .
5,
Blues
2
Wbalen
"I have a lot or reactions,"
way of a workout
Tagging
requirements
were
at
Eller's
Gulf in Racine and JOtri·
Colorado went for players with
Hartford
earned
its
400th
NHL
•' How many ballplayers have Blinds said. "Last year, statistically
- slightly more big league experi. started their intense workout pro- I thought I had a shot. I was very victory on their lOth try as they explainoo by the wildlife officer. Carryout in Pomeroy.
;· ::
ence,'but also won't challenge any- gram right ~!f&gt;W?" Bonds' father, happy ror Teny Pendleton. He's a scored three tim&lt;;s in three shifts in
one with !his cast.
. the second period to beat St. 'Louis.
wondered Wednesday. good friend of mine."
"We felt," general manager Bobby,
Andrew Cassels, Pat Verbeek
For winning MVP honors,
"And he'Jl been MVP two ot lhe
Bob Gebhard said, "we were able last three years.
and
Mark Janssens scored 1:41
Bonds gets a $250,000 bonus from
to put together a young but experiapart
as the Whalers ended a nine"And he's started iL He's been the Pirates. That raised his 1992
enced ballclub that can play wilh- talldng about it since Monday. On income to $5.05 million, including game winless streak (0-8·1) and
out being intimidated, as opposed Monday, he was saying, 'I've got bonuses•
won at home for just the second
to one with young guys with no to get .n:ady for the season.' Like it
time
in 11 games (2·8·1). Terry
It doesn't appear he'll be with
' experience.''
Yake,
called up from the AHL on
starts next week. I once watched the Pirates hext ·season because
As of now, Colorado's payroll one of his winter workou1S and I they probably can't accord him, Tuesday, and Geoff Sanderson
NilE • REEIOI • ISICS • I. SWISS • IEDS :
for a 25-man roster will be about thought he was crazy, doing !haL although no one is saying for sure each scored a goal and had an
IROOIS • CONVEUE • CONNIE • DEmR ~,
.$4 million.
assist for Hartford.
After the year. that he had, I 'didn't right now.
Florida is paying m~n than that think he was crazy.'' .
"I haven't closed the door to
HUSH PUPPIES • AUDinONS • NURSEMATES ;:
to just one player, reliever Bryan
The elder Bonds was a proud anything," Bonds said. "I don't --Sports briefs-Harvey. Hu salary is listed at father as his son became the lOth
DEARFOAMS • ISOIONER • lOIS
~
Hackey
$4,125,000 in 1993. Shortstop Walt player to win more !han one NL really want to get involved in the
TORONTO (AP) - Wayne
Weiss, obtained in a postdraft MVP, joininl! such Hall of Famers negotiations. My agent will let me Gretzky, encouraged by recent
LAYAWAY NOW FOR CffRISTMASI •
ttade, will get somewhere near lhe as Stan Mus1al, Willie Mays and know what's going on."
in
his
rehabilitation
pro·
progress
The teams reponedly most inter$760,000 be was paid by Qakland Ernie Banks.
hopes 10 return to the Los
' • Shop your local merc/UJnU thU
ested
in Bonds are lhe New York gram,
in 1992.
AnF,eles Kings by March.
And Barry wan1S more.
Yankees and Atlanta Braves. Dur·
"Our feeling was that players
•''
Holiday Semon. It IIUJku good teRie.
'The J!ll!t weclt been a big S1Cp
"I want to do it again,'" Bonds ing the NL playoffs: Bonds went
who were just breaking in at the said of the MVP award at the offiCe
(
forward, ' Gretzky said in inter·
bi.JI league level or were in the of his agent, Dennis Gilbert. "I'm house hunting in lhe Atlanta area.
views
with
two
Toronto
newspa••
Gilbert declined to discuss any pers. "There's a light at me end of
manors could make us a better club 28. I want to be the flfSt to do it
•
figures.
~
in the long run,'' Dombrowski four times.''
the
tunnel.
Two
weeks
ago,
it
Bonds and the Pirates have
said. "We didn't put as much
SHOE PLA.CE~
Bonds, a free agent, was an easy come very close to plaring in the wasn't there."
emphasis on•having players wbo winner over Atlanta's Terry
Gretzlcy
said
the
inflammation
•.'
, play at lhe big league level right PendJ.eton, receiving 18 of a possi- World Series in each of the last in his herniated disc is gradually
210
N.
SECOND
AVE.
three
yeats,
losing
to
Cincinnati
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO::
.
now." ·
• ble 2A fUSt-pJace VOleS in balloting
reducing
and
his
mobility
is
return·
Florida's lineup for opel!ing day by the Baseball Writers Associa- once and Atlanta twice in lhe NL
playoffs.
could have Jack Armstrong pitc~· tion of Altlefi!:a.
.,.,
ing, Steve Decker catching, Jeff
Conjne at first, Bret Barberie at followed by Pendleton with 232
Bonds finished wilh 304. poin1S,
second, Weiss at shortstop and points,
including four first-place
'
Gary Scott at third. Junior Felix, votes, and San Diego •s Gary
MQDty Farris and Chuck Carr could Sheffield with two fust-place voteS
be in the oud-.eld.
and 204 points.
Color11dO could have David
"I think this is probably the ·
Nioo on the. mound throwing to Joe most important one because !his
Girardi, Andres Galanaga at fust, one I'm giving to my mom. She
MEN'S SPORT COAlS
SCHOOL
Eric Young at second; Freddie deserves it," Bonds ·said of the
Benavides at shorwop and Charlie award:'
ANDBWEU
JACIEIS
Hayes at third. The potential out·
fieldez has Jetald Clark, Alex Cole --Spofts briefs-and Dante Bicheae.
_
REDUCED20%
REDUCED20%
Bisebal
· "We stayf41 away from guys
NEW YORK (AP) - In a swap
who won't be here in a year or
UYI DENIM JACIEIS
MEN'S SUITS
two," Gebhard said. "But yet we of outfielders, the New York Me1S
were able to bring 'in established. reacquired Darren Reed and sent
Lined &amp; Unlined
Slzes36·54
players, especially on the fom cor· Pat Howell to the Miooeso.ta
ners where we bave four guys who Twins. Reed, 27, hit .173.in 43
REDUCED 20% .
REDUCED 20%
can hit home runs and drive in runs games for Montreal and .182 in 14
games for the. Twins _last season.
in Mile Hi h Stadium."
·
••
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
· Co~ and Florida could sign Howell, 24, hll .187 m 31 games
MEN'S JACIEIS
t•
ftce qents, especially after Dec. 7, for the Mcts last season.
.,
'
KNIT SHIRTS
Oo... Suede &amp; lealler
Football
when draft-pick oompensatioo will
•
NEW YORK (AP) - New
end for many, but both teams
,•I
expect to have low payrolls when England quanerbac:k Scott Zolak,
REDUCED20%
REDUCED20%
'•'•'
who 1oo the Paaiots to their flfSt
lhe season opens.
If
"I don't think .we're going to be victory of the season in his ·first
MEN'S
All
,;
MEN'S
SWEATERS
career
start,
was
namod
AFC
offen·
very active in the ftce-agent field,"
.t.•
WEAtHER COAlS
Dombrowski said. "We have about sive player of the week. Zolak
Ill
Styles
....
20 plAyers we ~ that we feel completed 20 of 29 passes for 260
~
~
can play with our big-league club yards and two touchdowns iii the
•
REDUCED20%
REDUCED20%
at one time· or another next year. Paaiots' 37-34 overtime victory
We think we piclted up most of !Jur over Indianapolis.
San Diego safety Darren Car·
startins u-q, in the drafL"
MEl'S LONG ·SLEm
- named AFC defensive
rlngton
Big names like Danny Tartabull,
.JOHIIIG SUIIS
Jack Morris, Lee Smith and Sba- player of the week and Sill Fran·
IIIII SHIRTS
cilco
quartabllck
Steve
Young
and
won Dunston weren't touched
beciuse of high salaries and age. Atlanta safety Scott Case were
REDUCED20%
REDUGD
Off
But Pittsburgh lost Danny JIK:bm, honored in the NFC.
Carrlngtm bid four tiCklel and
the New Yollr: Yante. loll Clwlie
Ill
inren:ejJdon ill the Clwters' 14·
Hayes and California lost Harvey.
13
vic:toly over Cleveland; Young
'We'll probably have to do
threw
two IDUChdown JliSIICI in the
something to patch this up,"
fina111
mintllel in the 4llc:n' 21·20
. Piratca f!'lall lltaiiii&amp;Cr Tf41 Simvictory
over
NeW OrieiJla and Cue
mons said.
bid
10
tickles
and 8D in1ateption
The Yankees thought Hayes
in
the
Fakonl'
20-17 victory over
wouldn't be taken and that the
·Phoenix.
expansion teams would take their

.Prescription
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When The Time Comes
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YDDR CBIIS,.MIS SBDPPIIG
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.

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PJagl 8 The Dally Sentinel

Thui'May, NovMiber 11,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~' ·

-

~~::: Grambling

·&amp;:
11 •

:,:; By RICK WARNER
FootllaD Writer
:Ootball is a family affair at
ling
· R~inson has 1ieen coach-

ins lllere so long that five of his
~tf.i\ler playcu bave sons on the
1
team.
~'There could have been more,
bbtl guess a lot of the fellas had
dp'l&amp;hterS," joked Robinson, who
silited at Grambling Sl years ago.
I t-!le five .second-generation
players are running back Broderick
at!Jj, defensive lineman Rodney
d&amp;t and offensive linemen
, ; "

~

~:a
. batini,
lf'J

so he coached a high school team
to the stste championsh!P·" ,schonl
spokesman,Stanley LewiS sauL
The fsmily tradition at Gramblin~ ext~nds to Ro~inson's own ·
farmly. His son, Eddre Jr., played
quarterback for his f~ther and is
now the Tigers' offenSive backfield
coach.
Scratch aud suiff: Fordham
University admits that one of its
promotions stinks.
To push receiver Tom Garlick
for 1-AA All-America, the school
attached a piece of garlic to its
.
.

. ,
. -pus garhc stinks, the~~~
says, JUSt above an arrow pomung
to the smelly herb.
"Th.is '?ile doesn't.." i! says, just
a~ve a hst o~ G~hck s acco_mplishmen!J, wh1ch mel~ breaking
fordham ~ career recetvmg marks
m receptions, yards and touchdowns.. ,
_Garhck splay ~as added some
sp1ce to an otherw~ clr!'b season.
Tbe, Rams are 1-8 gomg mto Saturday s season finale at Holy Cross.
Powerful PAC: The Pac-10

Capriati to plav
{n Viruin_
ia Slz_·ms qua~.terfin. als
'J
b

l NEW
; ByYORK
BOB GREENE
Gabriela

powered into the quarterfinals of then battled into the ·tiebrel\ker,
this season~nding event with a 7-6 which Capriati dominated to move
S biuini saw the script and decided · (7-3), 6-1 victory.
inio the quarterfinals for the second
t ~han11p ,it. Jennif~r Capriali
. Fi~th-~eeded Arantxa Sa_ncbez lilliE i~ · thr~e trip,s to the Slims
afnpstdidn tsecanythingatall.
V1canokickedoffthefmalmghtof 'Championships.
r A1KI wben the night was over,
the first round by defeating Zina
It also took a while for Sanchez
S~batini and Capriati found they Garrison 7.(1 (7-0), 6-1. Earliet in Vicario to find a groove. The
v.biUd sec each other in the quarter- th.c week, Lori McNeil and Jana Spaniard trailed Gllirison 2-S in the
f41i1s of the Virginia Slims &lt;,:ham- Novotna won first-set liebreaks opening set bef~ fighting blick to
tJP.!ships.
before upsetting seeded players.
send the set into the tiebreaker.
• tapiiali left her contact lenses at
Sabatini, who won this tide on Garrison' continued her lackluster
h~c hotel Wednesday, and they
the Garden carpet in 1988, was play at Madison Square Garden,
v,l:(eR't delivered to ber at Madison having none of thai foolishness. In losing for the lith time in 13
Sft•~e Garden until five minutes
the fust-round finale, she brushed matches.
Frazier can be forgiven if she
biforc her opening round match aside Amy Frazier 6-0, 6-~.
ataJnst Helena Sutova. But it was
The quarterfinals begin today feels a liule discouraged today.
'list time Sukova had an advan- with fourth-seeded Martina · Willi 1bc crowd cheerin&amp; ber on
.
Navratilova taking on Sanchez in both English and Spanish, Saba.'I wouldn't have been able to Vicario, followed by No. I Monica tini had lillie trouble handing Fras~" Capriati said. "Everything Seles, seeking berthird mnseculive zier a lopsided loss in her first
ld have been blurry. I probably Slims Championships crown, fac- · appearance in the tournament.
ld have missed every ball."
ing Novotna
The Argentinian's groundNo such problem exisred for the
Capriati led 3-0 and 4-1 before strokes were deep and heavy, her
s venth-secded 16-ycar-old, who Sukova pulled even at4-4. The two serves powerful and well-placed,
'

~

P~,s re_lease..

(AP)-

her volleys crisp. Frazier was, in a
way, the perfect foil.
"In the beginning it was hard to
concentrate," Sabatini said. "She
wasn't giving me C[lough rhythm.
She was just hitting balls.
''In the second set, the balls
staned going in and she was play-

ing better."
Although Sabatini was easily
the favorite with die ~rowd, Frazier
drew a big round of applause when
she held serve-in the second game
of the second set, winning her first
game of the match. H\7 secondand last- came three games later
when she broke Sabatini's service.
After that, il was just a queston
on bow quickly the graceful Sabatini would advance into her quarterijnal match against Capriati. It toQk
61 minutes.

;·ourier, Sampras victorious . in ATP Championship action
·

·
Richard Krajicek and from a full
house of 9,000· fans in Frankfurt's
Festhalle, about' half had gone in
pursuit of wurst and beer.
·
After nearly three hours of routine back-and-forth tennis, Courier
bad a 6-7 (4-7), 7.(1 (7·1), 7-5 victory.
It may have been ugly, but the

~ .ily NESHA ST..UCEVIC
'f!tANKFURT, Germany (AP}
/fhe judgment came from the
~~~~rt. from the ~~Jan direct! y
i1volved.
!"Boring tennis,'' Jim Courier

-i

stid. &lt;

• Ji was the third game of the

·., &gt;iet of Courier's match against

..

-' ~

~

'

·su may boqt Cooper unless

.uckeyes win last.two games·.

•' ~OLUMBUS,
•
Ohio (AP) - .

"Obvioustr, I'm concerned
about pro~s' in all programs, be
said. "And that's my expectation
· about football, too.'·'
Cooper would become the fll'St
Ohio State coach with an 0-5
record against Michigan if the
Buckeyes lose.
But ' the· Dispatch said Gee
wasn't basing his decision solely
on Cooper's recoro on the f~eld. It
quoted sources as saying Cooper's
status has created divisiveness
within the university, the communitY and the alumni .
A liuyout of the remaining three
years of Cooper's contract would
cost the university $342,000, the
newspaper said. The Dispatch's
sources said the money would
come from the athletic de~ent,
not the university's genel1l fund.

· cr,.f~ State is prepared to dump

~football coach John Cooper if
Buck~yes lose a fifth straight
t~ to Michigan and a founh

tfJel

sraight bowl game, a newspaper
~today .
.
; lbe Columbus Dispatch, quothfg: unidentified highly placed uni~rsitY officials, reported that uni~~ity president Gordon Gee will
~ide after the Citrus Bowl on
Jlrt 1 wbcther to keep Cooper or
~1 out his contract.

.

.

'

~ The

newspaper said Cooper's
jciJ&gt;wiU bt secure for a sixth season
ifoQhio State beats Michigan on
Sil'.trday and the Southeastern
ference runner-up in the Citrus
tl in Orlando. Fla.
, ~uta loss to Michigan may cost
him his job, even if the Buckeyes
~n tbe bowl game, according to
tJt~ewspaper. ·
·
t the newsp8IICl said Gee would
ccin1ull with adlletic director Jim
J4ne&amp;, the bolrd of trustees and key
u.i!fjisi~=iDillllltors before

die

g

The State Department is Ulld«
fue for invesP&amp;aling. the Dllapol't
recotds of ptelident-elect
Olnton and bis Motber. I ~ete
, whOever uncovered the deed. We
don't really need Ibis kiDd of llllff
(Oing on. _Smacks too mucb of
Geslapo tacncs to me.

llilf

The annu&amp;l toy nm of the Melgs
County Bikers just grows and
grows each year. ·
The group is Sli11 collecdq tDyS
for its 111111111 project em Ulldr:rprivileged children IIIII will do ao until
Dec. 4. The toys will be distributed through applicationa which are
being taken throuah the tdeigs
Count}' Health ))epanmem and the
Meigs County Methodist Pariah
Coopeaalive. Tbe c!c:adline for filling out applicalions at eith« location is Dec. 4.
.
'I1Iere are some business houses
w~re you can ctroP off toys if you
wtsh 10 help. They are at Ioe's
Country Market in Rutland; Tbe
Farniers Bank, the Pomeroy Flower
Shops 8nd Meadow's Shoe Repair
in Pomeroy and at Hudilall's
Plumbing and Heating in MitldleporL There arc also cans in several
businesses of the COII!!ty and they
will be in plaoe until Dec. 18. ·
Bllters have aJao selecred several charities and services it will help
this year and in addition will be
giving $1,000 to a viUqe in the
county with thls money also to go
for tbe benefit rl children.

.

may be the best conference in the
country.
.
Four Pac-10 teams are ranked m
the tup 16, and every team in the
league except California and.~goo State bas a cbance to f1msb
with a winning~Oregon, ~nz~na State and
UCLA need vtCto(ICS Saturday to
go 6-5. Fifth-ranked Washington,
No. 14 Stanfot;d. No. 15 Southern
Cal, ~o. 16 Arizona and ~
Washington Slate have a combmed
record of36-12-2.

Tbc Associated Press poll and an
invitation to !he lndepen.de~ce
Bowl. It's thetr longest wmmng
streak in one season since 1944,
. their first na~onal rankin~ s~nce
1979, and tbeu ftrst bowl bid SlllCC
the Tangerine in 1979•.
Wake's 23-10 nctory over
Georgia Tech last Saturday was
Dooley's 97!h win in '!'e A~tic
Coast Confe~c, making_him _the
career leader 10 league ~tctones.
He coached North C~hna from
1967-77, then spent nme years at
Virginia Tech before coming to
Wonderrut Wake: Bill Dooley Wake in 1987.
.
is en)oying his last season at Wake
Dooley, whose brother Vince

Kosar practi·c··ng
WI.th Bro·wns
·

numerous reports all year
wbether thil Would be Cooplut season • Ohio State.
t 1oob lib the .favorite spon
i~ Ohio is no lonaer Ohio State
tbaD r - It's speculating 'lboul
io 'Srate fbodlall,'' Gee said.
· He aid all programs as a ma1ter
~ 11e reviewe(! at the end ·

~

ol

.

"rtuid mixed emotiOns between
1ears and' anger. I was caught in
between the two," said Coltrane
Curtis, 16, ot· Montclair, NJ., who
wore a.black "X" visor Wcdnesday. "'Ibis sbowed the h1D11811 side

to be."
Goebel was on the inactive list for
Krajicek is the first Dutchman . Kosar has been sidelined since that game.
to be ranked in the top 10 since Sept. 14, w~en his right ankle was
. The Browns hav_e an ~2 record
Tom Okker in 1975. He made the b~ as he was sacked by Miami wnh ~osar, 1-0 wtth Ph1lcox and
tournament as No. 10, after win- linebacker John Offerdahl. The 4-3 w1th Tomczak. Under Tomning in Antwerp and after higher- injury occurred in the SllCOnd quar- czak, howe~er, they hav~ not
ranked Ivan Lendl and Andre ter of the Monday night game, but reached 20 pomts on offense many
Agassi pulled out with injuries.
Kosar continued pia~ and nearly ope game.
.
"I was having fun, I was trying rallied the Browns to VICtory'in the
"He has come m bcre ~- won
to win a tennis match,'' Krajicek closing minutes.
four games for us, and be s mat~e
sai~ of Cot,Jrier's complaint about
The !'olphins won 27-23 !In · ~pm~ plays," B~lichThatick, said.
boring tenniS.
Mark Higgs touchdown run With
He s done a good job. ·
s why
Boris Becker (1-1) stayed in. seven secelDds 1efL
we signed him. I think we're still in
contention by beating Petr Korda
Doctors originally thought position to do something lbis
6-4, 6-2.
KOsar would need about six WCf'h year."

ofMalcolm.
"I thin~ he was seen as an

=

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~~.: !:::·~~;
man, the things he went through
with his f.mty.''

Curtis W1S one of about 300 students from Manhaaan and Mont. clair, NJ:, who filled tbe Victoria S
movie theater in Harlem to s'ee
Spike's latest- with permission
- instead of heading to class. The

Poet's
corner .
.
The mighty Ohio

I listen to an old Indian, to a
story as he .told
·
AbOut a stream of water, a long,
I
lime
old~ was ·sad. as us
come to his eyes
And as he bepn bis story, trying to keep from crying ·

Oll.f:

SAVINGS THROUGHOUT THE STORE

59.99

.

By LARRY McSHANE
Alloclated Press Writer
NEW YORK - Forget Siskel.
Ignore Ebert. The critics in Malcolm X's Harlem neighbortlood srudents who IIIISWeted Spike Lee's
call to see his new movie instea'd of
goin11. to sc~ool - gave the new
ftlm biograplly 300 thumbs up.

the way Pete Sampras, the defending champion, defeated Stefan
Edberg 6-3, 3:6,7-5.
·
Both men produced spectacular
rallies, sizzling passing shots and . .------~~~~!!'"'~~~~~~~~~~!!!~1111!!!~1111_!!!!~~~~!!!!
delighted the crowd, which of~n
gave them standing ovations.
Sampras, No. 3 in the world, is
now 2-0 in the toW11111Rent, while
Edberg dropped to 1-1 in the
round-ro&amp;in portion.
But the second-ranked Swede
could still emerge as No. I at the
end of the week if Courier slips
along the way. Courier has spent
35 weeks in the No. I spot, while
Edberg had held it for a total of 12
weeks over two periods of the year.
Courier's victory over Krajicek
means that Sampras cannot overtake Courier on computer points
that determine the No. I.
"Jim has deserved to be the No.
l, I haven~t won a Grand Slilm
event this year," said Sampras, 1
who was briefly No._2 this year.

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS
With' 1 Item!

.

~::~c~:S::O~:c;:t;:~ ~!g~~~S:t~~n:,~~~

•

It was many years ago, sitting
· 011 the bank of thls 11ream
·In just one hour of fisbivg, more
fish tban you could clean
.
He told. of berds of deer, they
would come to drink
And ao many other animals, ~t
be~ playing on the banks

He alao talked about today, said

992·2124

j (lee played down the report as

J'flt more IJICCulatioll- There have

•

"------,,-----------~

LAW'/,1Y NO~'/ FOR CHRISTM~\ ••• I? MONTHS 5Mr1f ,15 (J\S/1 1

.

ON FURNITURE .CO~:
wv ·

2ND STREET

773·5592

MASON
.
'

..•

NEW YORK (AP) - Whitney
Houston's "I Wtll Always Love
from Pomeroy. Rev. Dodd toot You" has Jumped from No. 12 to
Mr. Hummel's picture at that time No. 1 on Billboard magazine's
and now. has sent it along in case "bot 100" singles chart.
anyone would be interesred. The
The last si11gle to go to No. 1
subject is wcarina bis army uni- from out of tbe lOp 10 was ''Uncle
form and lbc small photo has been Albat, Adminll Halsey," recmled
in a flood. However, it is preyears ago by Paul and Linda
sentable. Hummel W1S serving in 20
McCartney, Paul Orcin, Billboard
the 33rd Infantry at the dme, If research analysis editor, said
you know the subject and would Wednesday.
like lbc Dbolo jasl srop by The Sen-.
Houston's "I Will AlWays Love
tinel oflice in Pomeroy. By the You" is on " .The Bodyguard"
way, RIIV. Dodd indic•tcs he would soundtrack, released by Arista
like to Jel together with Hummel Records. She n1akes her ftlm debut
if, indeM, thai is possible after all in that movie.
these years. Rev..Dodd and Hum"I Will Always Love You" was
mel wtte about 1.8 or 19 at tbe time written by Dolly Parton.
.
the photo was liken.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) An IIC4lJaintance has COine upon Kirk Cameron and his television
a big stack Of Life and Look maga- co-star and wife, Chelsea Noble,
zines from Wcrld War n years-in have starring roles in preparing an
excellent condition. If you arc a audio-video store being opened by
collecur IIIII would like to inquire Noble's brother.
about an _qlisit*!n let me know:The couple helped stock
1can probably put YOU in touch;
,
shelves, patch nail holes, clean
glass and answer the telephone this
PomerOy and Middleport will be week at tbe mall store that David
welcoming the Christmas 5eason MUeiier plans to open Saturday.
shortly after Thanksgiving with
Cameron, 22, and Noble, 27,
their annual parada. 'Pomeroy's have been out of the spotlight since
parade will be on Sunday afternoon
spring, when tbe seriet, "Growing
·following Thanksgiving while Pains," ended its seven-year run.
Middlcpon's will be on Thursday, Their wort for Mueller ends Satur·
Dec. 3, at 6 p.m. Merchants m day, when. they'll sign autographs
both Pomeroy and Middleport will, at the store.
·
however, stage open houses on
MucUer, 30, said Cameron and
Sunday afternoon, Nov. 29-the Noble also helped to finance the
day of the Pomeroy parade. The store, bis rtrSL
theme for the Middlepon parade
this rear will be "Avenue of
Trees . Incredible that some cities
LONDON (AP) - Some Royal
Air Force p1lots learned that .
have already done this.
Princess Diana enjoys proving
In case you hadn't noticed, one doubters wrong.
After Diana was told Wednesof the latest scientific studies has
found thai men who usc electric day that some people questioned
razors are more apt to get leukemia whether she would squeeze into a
than men who shave with the ttadi- fighter jet, she did just that. And
tional raz.or. So-another good she~ to enjoy it, despite the
·reason to sport a beard. Do keep discomforts of wearing a skirt in
thecockpiL
smiling.

be was ao asllanied
Just about tbat time, II clouded
up, it swted Ill lain
·
Then a tiny drop of wltel', as is
fell !rom tbe sky
It feU into the Slrcam of water,
an started to ao by ·
We WlllChed that droP of Water,
as we W8ldlcd it for iwlille
Then the drop of Wiler, dislppeared dahl befcR our cycs
How .could we uo 1 drop of
wa•,lt felllnlo 1 . . . _ ..
. No, it .,....a't 110 1Ddlln maaic,
the drop of Wiler WIS clllln
Flllllc Drebel
37496 I ~Q!* ROlli

.

. ~·.

Plans for. two fund raiseis were
made Tuesday when the Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital met in the hospital conference room.
. During the business session,
presided over by Mrs. Ubby Fish·
er, president, the group planned a
public jewelry sale 10 be held froiD
7 a.m; to 4 p.m. thls Friday in the
hospital conference room and a
craft and bake sale· in the bospital
lobby beginning at 8:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, Nov. 24.
Plans were made for the group's
annual Christmas dinner and. ~
to be held at 6:30p.m. on Friday,
Dec. 11, in the hospital cafeteria.
In lieu of the annual gift exchange,
members will take fOod items for
the needy to the partY. These items
will be turned over to the hosv.ital' s
food drive for the underprivileged
during the Christmas season. It
was announced that the hospital

. .Jddlepoi1. 45760

•.

employees and volnntCc:rs 1rill abo
adopt a family for Cllrisbl•
through lbc Angd 1ree
the M
. eigs County Depaw ar
Human Services.
·
A repon on was :gi- oa die
purchase of .a freezer ·DDil ID 1le
used in conjunction willa die A.iliary's gift shop. Small Pzt.al~~e
now being sold and 'Ius wen:
made also to be~ llawiq s.twlches for sale m ·the ilobbf. A
report -was also liven Cll the ,_.
chase of two Christmas IRlel fur
the hospital. One, ·a ~~line-foot bile,
· was purchased ·~\lr usc ill ..e ·
Skilled Nursin . Facili~ dlis ,_-.
while a secon:f,IRle, fum fa:t an.
will be used by lbe Home 9 ' t
Department The~_.
plans for decorate the ho!ipilal ...
the Christmas season 011 die wa:kend of De(:. .5 and 10 :apiD sp •••
the hospital holiday rdl;l0r .......__
ing contest. Depamnents of die

.

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Newspaper critics were full of
praise, and the reviews from the
mosdy black crowd were unfailingly upbeat for the three-hour, 21minute epic starring Denzel Washington.

· · ,.,

-.

Reg. I .H 165·565

room.

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•l..an:lasends
d ..... a uii:.g

• Adjusta-tilt•
display

opening da~. Non-student crowds
were heavy m Manhattan, with several theaters reporting fust-nighl .
sellouts.
..
The movie follows tdalcolm
from his days as a street hustler
through his association with the
Nation of Islam and his 196S murder in Harlem's Audubon Ball-

Ed:rw t

7

\

movie opened WednCsday at 1,200
theaters nationwide.
Lee had encouraged students to
see the film as a School assignment,
citing his own forced visit 10
"Gone With tbe Wind."
The 12Sth Street theater was·
happy to obli~e with a special
mcrimg screerung. A night earlier,
tbe cast and crew of "Malcolm X"
watched tbe movie in the same theater. ,_
Several New York City schools,
including Lee's alma mater, Junior
High Scliool 113 in Brooklyn, sent
groups of otnMnts to the movie on
- r--·

.•

"'lle1D.S.riEfi
t•iwfDIM:UIIit:
al:oer'· iltkiWGliM:V.S.I&amp;Iila . . . 1lirilal ~- iii New .

CIIT tJ%
,.,.
.,.

They
. take Spike's.advice, and
gtve 'Malcolm X'· t~umbs up

. 10 heal. Iiut it )}as ~,~!!inc
BEREA, Ohio (AP)- After a weeks.
two-month layoff, Bernie Kosar
"He'D start out going through
hils resumed practiCing with the drills and running some .scout
Clcvcliu1d Browns:
· • , plays,'-' Belichick sai(C"H~'s been
Kosar worked out with his • going throuah rehab. Now be's
teammates Wednesday fo1 the fli'Sl ready to take the next srep."
time since lie broke his ankle in
There's room for Kosar on the
September. Coach Bill Belichick, roster, b,c cause the Browns on
however, was unwilling to predict Wednesday released quarterback
when .Kosar would return to the . Brad Goebel and placed ,backup
startin~ lineup.
linebacker Richard Brown ' on
Belichick has already said Mike injured reserve. Brown !Ore ligl'Tomczak will continue as the ments in his right Icnee in.Sunday's
starter for Sunday's game against game and will ~o surgery this
the Vikings in Minnesota. Kosar week, the Browns SSid. .
'
said earlier this week he hoped to
Goebel~ been servmg !Ill die
be read&gt;: in time for the Browns' backup to Mike Tomczak m the
Nov. 29 home game against the absence of Kosar and Todd
Chicago Bears.
Philcox, who broke his thumb in a
"I can only I!O by what 1 see" Sept:'20 win over the Los ~eles
Belichick said. •'~'You can'tplan We, Raiders. Philccx was activ
for

'By CHUCK tdELVIN

'

'• (uture. . .

It's a small world.
George Skinner of Pomeroy
encountered the Rev. Frank Dodd
of Wlleelersburg, Ohio in a Gallipolis st.&lt;n.
.
They chatted and found
Pomeroy a familiar subject. Rev.
Dodd had served with tbe .-my in
Panama in the early thirties and one
of his friends, a Mr. Hummel, was

0
F~
~e~iln
Deacons have six ~yearu~aedtw~!~~~~~~~1..!:
straight wins, a No. 25 ranking in
.....,_

CALL
TbDAY

t 1 per declined to comment,
his omce lild.

~-·including f~.

·
victory brought Courier close] to
retaining the No. 1 ranking when
the $2.5 mlllion ATP World Championship of the top eight players in
the wcrld ends Sunday.
It also was a pay-back from
Courier's loss to the big-hitting
Dutchman on Saturday in the semifinals of the EEC Championship in
An:~'=nothing boring in

I • ' '

by Bob Hoeflich

State's Robinson has sons of former players on his team

Phillip Payne, Billy Norman and
Anthony Sunmons.
Ladd is the. son of former AFL
starErnieLadd.Fobbs' father, Lee,
and Simmons' dad, Anthony Sr.,
also played pro fooiball.
Robinson, whose team is 8-2
and ranked No. 1 among black colleges, has won more games (379)
than any other football coach in
NCAA ~istory. _Except for a twoyear penod durmg_ World War II,
Robinson has coached the Tigers
smce 1941.
"They didn't have enough players during the war 10 field a team,

Names in VMH .Auxilary plan fund raisers ......
the ·news
I\,._ ar

Beat of the Bend...

'"».;..

.

11llndltJ,. ~:aut 11 19, 1112'

~====:::::·::::::::::::::::;:;;;;;;;;--~;-----~--~-----:~:-~::~~----~----~--~~--~~--~~--~--~~~~a~r~·~·...­

.'A full two days of basketball attend the Alllletic Hall of Fame ~). who both scoml high- Toumarnent, is 4-2 entering Lyne 'pard and Michelle Crouse (So(), adults llld $1 for cblldren and high
action, coupled with a celebration banquet, set for .S in the Student ly m tbe SL Mary's game;
Center after defeating Kentucky Junior) as the sbootinjl •uard. school students. Rio Grande stu·
surrounding one of the nation's Center.
McMaster is under the guidance Christian 77-70 Tut.Uy. Pikeville Stephanie Gudorf (5-9, JUnior) is de!lts, facultY and stsff are admiued
· most-honored athletes of the past
Men's teiUIIS
of fll'St-ycar coach Joe Raao after a be~n its .season Nov. 7 against the small forwanl. llld all. three are free with ID.
half-centlll'y and his teammates, . The Redmen are 2-0 entering 19-11 finish in 1991-92. The Ohio State-Newark and is currently f!llini positions in the lineup they
HaDotFame
will highlight the lOth Bcvo Fran- their fray with the McMaster ~les opened their season OcL' 19 4-0 after posting a 90-81 victory either filled or alternated at last
Becoming the S6tb and ·57th
cis Classic this Friday and Saturday Eagles, a strong beginning thai saw and -will enter friday's game at 7-3 Tuesday over Ohio Valley College season.
members of Rio Grande Athletic
atlhl! University of Rio Grande.
John Lawhorn's club defeat two after splil!ing in a Canadian touma- of Parkersburg.
Rounding out lbe starters are Hall of Fame at Salurday's ~uet
Competition in the tournament, teams in the top 10 of the NAlA mentlast weekend:
Tricia Collins (6-0, IIJI)homore) at are Ron Lambert, HendCnonvllle,
Womea's games
named fer Rio Grande scoring sen- preseason poll last weelccnd.
Dave Smalley'~ revamoed Red- power forward and Lori Hamilton N.C., and Cary Coutts Kala, MarRasa's probable starting lineup
sation Clarence "BevoM Francis,
Spuqed by the work of senior includes Marc Sontrop (6-1, sopho- women team, a IDIXture of veteranS (6-0, junior) at the post. .
tinez, Ga., who each distinguished
begins' at 1:30 p.m. Friday with the forward Jeff Brown and some of · more, 6 assists per game) at the and newer players, has been wort:- .
The Pelicans' lineup will probathemselves in different sports at
wonten's teams· of Salem.Tcikyo the team's younger players, the point, backed by Derek Howard (6- ing on makinl! that combipation bly include .Danielle B~n (S-6, Rio Grande in the early 1970s.
(W.Va.) and tdidway (Ky.) facing Redmen defeated St. Ma~y·s 0, senior, 21 points per game) at mesh since losmg the season open- sophomore) at the point with Tracy
Lambert, a native of Alexandria,
off: The Rio Grande Red women (Texas) 92-85 in tbe opening round the other guard position. Forwards er to Findlay 79-74 last Saturday . Ewing (So(), freshman) at the other Va., played for Art Lanham's Redmeet Spalding (Ky.) at 3:30.
of the GeorgetOwn (Ky.) Classic on will be Shawn Francis (64, sopho- and then drubbing Wilberforce· defender's slot. Forwards will be ll)en baikeiball team in 1970-74,
Men's action begins at 7 with Nov. 13, and 1went on to win the more) and JeffZownir (6-6, senior, 10642 at home Tuesday.
Holly Riney (S-7, freshman) and during whicb he was im -MI·Mid·
Shawnee State playing Pikeville ~hampionship tilt With Georgetown 14 points), while Jack Vander Pol
Tonya
Farmer (S-8, freshman), Ohio Conference and District 22
However, if youth is the primary
(Ky;) and Rio Grande facing
80-78 the following nighL
(6-8, senior, 20 points, 12 concern of the Redwomen, they while Stephanie Warren (S-9 , selec\ion and captained the team. In
McMaster University, Hamilton,
· Rio Grande won the champi- rebounds) is the center.
. his senicr season, Lambert tied the
can imagine what it mu~ be like · freshman) is the center.
Ontario at 9.
onship of ~he 1991 Bevo Francis
In tlie other women's game, then-one game Lyne Center fliCOl'd
Regional interest will also focus for their opponents in Friday's conOn Saturoay, a women's game · Classic and will be looking to on the preceding men's game test with Spaldin'g, a 175-year-old Salem-Teikyo, which was 21-Siast for the inOst points scored in a sinwill be played at .1:30 p.m., fol- repeat through Ule worlc of co-cap- between the improvin~ Shawnee institution in Louisville. For the year under the guidance of fiftli- gle game (39).
,
lowed by a men's ctlntest at 3:30. tains Brown (6-5) and center Troy State club coached by J1m Arnzen, fll'St time in its history, Spalding is year coach Terry Shillingburg, ·
Kala, who hailed from AshtabuTbe Redwomen will play the Donaldson (6-8, senior), who have and Rick Scruggs' competitive fielding a w~n's baskeiball team goes up against the Midway squad la, lettered in women's basketball
remaining competition at 7 and the been in Lawhorn's starting lineup Pikeville squad. Arnzen, who has under the stewardship of Mi_chelle directed by fli'st-year mentor Iohn under Janinc Cox and Diane Lewis
Re4qlen are on the court at 9.
since their freshman season.
coached the Bears since the ere- Fries, and its appearance tn the · DIIIICJII. The Eagles were 6-27 last between 1970 and 1974, three
.
.
• SDecial activities bonoring FranThe other probable siarters for ation of the prograin in 1988, saw · classic will be its first lime oui in year,
years on the swim team.coacbcd by
cif.,liis coach, Newt Oliver, and Rio Grande are Jack Morgan (S-8, the team go 9-2llasl season, while . competition. (Spalding's ~ll'St·Y~
Salem-Teikyo opens its season Lewis and Gale Hendricks, 811(1, OI!C
~rs of the 1952-54 Redmen
freshman) ar point ltll8lt1. with Mau Scruggs, now in his fowth season men's team ts compeung th1s at Rio Grande, while Midway, year jn tennis under Pat Dunriick.
.tQt» will be held both days. A lunPowell (6-4, sophomore) at the wi.th the similarly-nicknamed weekend in a tournament at Union, loacted near LexinBtOn, is 0-1 after Co-captain of the women's basketcheon featuring the team and its shooting guard position. Joining Bears, guided them to a 15-18 cam- Ky.)
losing 78-71 to Kenrucky Christian ball team in 1973-74, Kata placed
.
place in history is set for 12:30 Brown at the small forward slot paign.
·
Experience is the word for all of in its opener Tuesday.
sixth in the state in the 100-meter
will be either Walter Stephens (64,
P~ -Saturday in the Student CenAdmission to all games is Slfor freestyle swimming event in 1971.
Shawnee State, which opened Smalley's starters, staning with
td(cl'flc team is also expected to sophomore) or Brett Coreno (6-S, Nov. 6 in the Lindsey-Wilson (Ky.) Gena Norris (5-3, junior) at point

.

The ·Daily Sentine~.~.

By The Bend

Competitive field plans entry 'into lOth Bevo Francis Classic·

/fsmege football notes...

•

7 22 •

.• e-.ur~~s

a Stores 20 numbers

--

•IGds . . . . .
llillllllzilllo..,_

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Reg. 21.15 White , 143-542.
Almond, 143·548

M eig·s to receive fiunds

all_ocated by the AHA
The American· Heart Associalion, Ohio Aff'lliate, has alloc:ated ·
over $1.5 million in Jlll!llic contributions to support vttal heart and
blood vessel research at medical
centen and universities .for the
1992-93 filcs1 year.
In .the 29 counties of Central
Ohio alone, of wbicb tdeigs ~ounty belongs, $S44 ,396 bas been
granted, the non-profit aaency
announced today.
Sandy Iannarelli, F.CSident of
tlle Mci&amp; County Division, says
thal20
tra1 Obio scientists from
Children's Hospital, Ohio State
University and Obio University
have received funding Ibis
"The AHA is dedicated to
reducina disability and death from
heart and blood vessel disease,"
emphasized lannarelli. "The
research ·these acientists Ire doing
will help us 1cam lliORI about these
.

y-. ·

diseases. This, in turn,- will benefit
all of us, not only in Meigs County
but across the nalion. While tdeigs
County is not directly receiving
monies for research, local lives will
be saved froni the findings these

plojects produce."
·
. "The AHA's gras.~-roots organi-

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

.,..
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·~

CIITI'/'11

zational structure helps identify
high quality research projects locally and nationally,'' lannarelli
explained. "Our volunteers direct
the review and selection of feUowship an4 grant applicants through a
peer review process. 'Ibis enhances
the integrity of the programs and
·reduces adminislradve costs.M
The Aincrican Heart Association Is the nation.' s largest voluntary bcalth organization that combats cilrdiovaSCIII•r diseases, which
kill ·nearly a million Americans
eich year.
·

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a Superb personal
AM/FM slereo
Reg. 34.15112·146

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11

7-lUnc:tian, :

.

~iddleport

Literary Club
members
give reports
.

Betty Fultz, Clarice ·Emn and when as a young girl she went to
Faye Wallace were named ~ the · )eaCh Ill a mountain mission in the
nominating committee whe11 the Great Smoky Mountains of North
Middleport Literary Club met . Carolina. It tells or tbe many J110b~Y at tbe hotno d Sn Owen.
lcms she enCOUDtered and of her,
Tho committee will pre~ent 1 dedication to the IISk, facing trials
slate rl ofticlen • the Dec;. 2 meet- thai no teacher in any school could
ina. A report 111 World Conummity imagine. It is the 11to1Y of the ScotDay, Nov. 6, wu pven. Wallai:C tish men and women who came to
re(iorted oa tbe llbllry mpmittee the mountains in the 1700's, their
nolina tbat Rulb l'bwea, ll1nila, 1111pe11ddons and history, some stowill select memcr111 boob for Flo- rles amuslns and many full of
renee Smith IIIII Mn. C•uiL The pathos. II was Christy's love and
club colleet 'In am- opDIIed 111o concern for the children which
meed"' wilh Bcltly Par~· enabled her to teach and endure
deal, thiDkins the hosras
wet- ha'dlbips.
.
C01J1ini tbe membcn. ·
, tdembers answered roll call
tdartha Hoover introduced wilh "I compciaon of acltooll then
Clarice Ervin 'll(bo reviewed the and now." Jeanette Thomas will
boc*, ~.by Catherine tdar- ho•t the uext meeting wilb Pa't
sball. Tbe book chronicle~- the Holter to review, "A Thousand
event• In
the life of her mother, Acres."
.

• Tandy 2500 RSX-HD
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a 120MB Hard Drive a 4MB RAM
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With .,_. fl!lllOioc.allDnl
rwtiCf)wiGII, AHio 8Mct
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�•
Page 1G-The o-ily Sentinel

Pomeroy-ollddleport, Ohio

Thul'ldly, November 19,1992

Annette Johnson hosts
a;uxiliary unit meyting
The Lewi$·Manley Auxiliary family of Marlboro, Md. in the
Unit No. 263, American Legioo, death of theii daughter. She was
met recently at the home of the granddaughter of Dorothy
Annette Johnson. A luncheon at Casey; a member of Lewis-Manley
Poncbosa preceded tbe meetiiJB.
UniL
Lomne Goggins )ftSided at tbe
Luella Patterson, education
· meeting during which the Cbrist· chairman, pvc a report and stated
mas dinner was planned for Dec. 8 that National Education Week is
at the ML Moriah BapliJt Chan:h being observed this week. Educain MiddleporL A SS gift ....change tion material from national head·
will beheld.
quarters will be placed in the
A donation .was sent to Eighth schools ind libraries.
District President Sharon Squires . Mrs. Richards stated n-om the
fur~eC~b~y~for "Firi~ Line" that a publication
the vetenns at Cbillicothe ·oo Dec. from September said the business
17. '
of·e~f!~nage is quietly booming
A report was given by FlorcJic and
hidden electronic devices
Richards oo the eigh~ district faD are prying secrets from phones,
conference hosted by K.T. Crossen busmess partners and fax
Unit No. 21 in October. She said machines.
.
the eighth district was in third place
Lula Hampton, legislative chairat the·time. A certifiCilte of award man, stated that several bills had
was received for the chaplain's been passed recently by the 102nd
· scrapbook with Mrs. Johnson, Congress including homeless veler· chainnan; and a certifJCale for vet- ans legislation.
erans affairs with Tomilto Lewis as
It was announced the unit has
chainnan:
reached membership goal.
· A round robin sympathy card
The meeting closed in ritualistic
was siped for the Hattie Stokes form.

Ohio Ulliwnity

College of Osteopathic Medkine

Family

Cllrlllmu lnclamel
' EMy W«tc: tram
holM. No c:Mh 11M
up. Stilt .. Mel
you'U IIIVW hllw to

Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Assoc:IIIC Professor
Question: Every time I eat a big foodpipe and drink a glass of Cold
meal, I suffer with heartburn after· wller to help wasli the acid back
wards. How can I prevent heart- into tbe stomach.
bum this Thanbgivinf1?
Better still, avoid heartburn in
Answer: According 10 folklore, · the first place. Don't eat large
the first Thanksgiving was .held in meals that over-ftU your stomach.
1623. That might also have been You will still be able to enjoy a
the year when the first case of Thanksgiving feast. bUt .make. sure
Thanksgiving heartburn occurred. to take a break between appea~.
Today, both the Thailksgiving tra· the main course and deasen. This
dition and the heartburn tradition will let your stom•dt empty a ~e
live on:
and reduce the pressure working
The words heartburn, indiges- apinst the muscle cloSing off the
tion, and sour stomach aU describe esoplr.lgus.
.
the same condition - a heavy,
Wilen eating the main course;
burning feeling under the breast· you can sample aU those traditional
bone. It's brought on by irritation favorites, but do so in reasonable
to the esophagus, the so-called quantities. Also, watdl your inllke
"foodpipe" that connects the mouth of certain foods that can raiae the
with the stomach. Where this fOod· stomach's acid level or relax ~e "
pipe enters the stomach, there iS a esophagus muscle. These sub·
both on tour and for civic, church band-like muscle that encircles iL stances include caffeine, alcohol,
and service organizations in,the When all is working properly, this chocolate, peppermint. declffcinat·
muscle only relaxes its grip on the ed coffee. omons, peppers, musate~, as well as for regular appearances in the church's worship ser- esophagus to let food pass into the tard, orange juice, tomato juice and
vices. For many years they were stomach, and then n promptly aspirin. There also seem' to be a
featured at the annual United squeezes· shut a~ain after the fOO!I link between cigarette smoking and
.National Bank Christmas Open has passed. A failure of the muscle heartburn. .
House. In July, they Celebram,os to keep the foodpipe closed off
Although it's not usually a seri· Ringers were featured performers allows stomach acid to back up into ous problem, you should be coniL The irril,lltion to the esophagus cerned if you get heartbur!l a loL
at AmeriFlora '92 in Columbus. ,
caused
by the sarong stomach acid The constant back-flow of acid into
Irvine has been involved with
is
what
causes
heartburn.
handbells for 13 years. She has a
the esophagus can lead 10 ulcers or
·
Question:
I
usually drink milk, other damage.
bachelor's degree fmmWest Vir·
ginia University and a master's eat a mint or take an lmtacid, lilce
I hope you can avoid heartburn
degree from Ohio University, both Maalox, to relieve my heartburn. Is this Thanksgiving, and' - on
in music educ;Won. She has taught that the best treannent?
behalf of all of us at the Ohio UniAnswer: Contrary to popular versitf Collefe of Osteopathic
general music, band, choir and
handbell choir at Little Hocking belief, drinking milk or eaung a Medicme - I d like to take this
school for 12 years. In addition to mint will not help relieve heart- opportunity 10 pass along our best
working with bells a_t school, she burn. Actually, these things can wishes fur a happy holiday season.
"Family MCcficme• is a weeldy
has taught handbell methods and make heartburn worse. Milk temdirected a bell choir at Ohio Uni- porarily soothes the esoph&amp;gus as it column. To submit questions, write
versity. She serves as accompanist passes through it, but it can cause to John C. Wolf, D.O., 250
for the Sanctuary Choir and assis· the stomach to make more acid and Grosvenor Hall, College of Osteotant organist for the church, as well thereby make heartburn worse. pathic Medicine, Ohio University,
as directing the Celebramos Peppermint will relax the muscle Athens, Ohio 45701.
that closes the foodpipe, and the
Ringers.
relaxed
muscle will allow more
First Presbyterian Church also
haS a three-octave set of American- stomach acid to back up into it.
made bandbeUs, and a two-octave thus worsening the heartburn. The
set of ha'!d chimes, used by the use of a·liquid antacid is the best of
Carrie Whaley and Bertin a
11eginning and intermediate groups your choices. It soothes the esopha~as
it
passes
through
it,
and
then
Warner,
formerly of Athens Coun·
. of children and youth.
1t
reduces
the
amwnt
of
acid
in
the
·
ty,
are
being
honored with a card
For · a number of years the
stomach.
However,
I
think
there
shower.
,
English handbeUs of First Presbyteare
still
better
choices.
Cards
and
Ieners
may
be
sent
to
rian Church were the only bells in
The
'best
way
to
treat
simple
them
in
care
of
the
Pomeroy
Nursthe Mid-Ohio Valley. New, more ·
than 16 churches and two schools cases of heartburn is to put gravity ing and Rehabilitation Center,
use bells in their musical programs. to work for you. Slaiid up 10 allow .. 36759 Rock . Springs Road,
the sl01118Ch acid to drain from your Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI.

.

-News notes

.

.

Vinyl Vertical
DOOR BLINDS .

Triloaoe (except Clauiroed Dioplay, B1111a... Card or Lepl
No-) willaloo appear Ia tho Polat Plouant Ropier and
the Daily Sem.t.iael, ....cbiDI ower 18,000 hoM..

Days
6

10
Monthly

.

(

(

446-GollpoU.
367..a-LI...
3811--VIaton
245-llo Gnnde
256-GttyaD Dlo&amp;.
64S-Anlolo Dloa.
379-Wal...t

992-Middteport/

BILL SLACK
992·2269
•

675-Pt, Pl......
458-l.oa
· S7~Apple Grove
773-Muoo

Pomeroy

985-a-.e.
843-Pottlaa•
247-Loto,. F.Ua

USED RAILROAD

S-Happy&lt;\d•

13-- llli\U'aace

6- Loot ..d Found
7- Loot aacl Found

14- B111iaeu TraiD1111
15-- Sehooh 4 Iaatructioo
16- RadiO, TV llr CB ·Repalr
17- Miac:oiia-aa
18- Wanted To Do

949-Raclae

895-Lota..

742-Roolen•
667-CooiYille

937-lluiFolo

~apes ror s1 s.98. get •
Bonul Check good on
f'lell:l Sean purc:hasU

2$-.-

PJ.r..tonaJ s.m...

.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MIINIENINCE

Aa... rorS..Ie
TrueD for Sale
17!&lt;..·v · -

l·IOO·I37·1460
Lawn Mowing.
Fertilizing, Wlltldlng,
· and Slltldlng.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

.t 4 WD'o

Mot.orcyelol
Boau &amp;:: Moton for Sale

RMklonllll&amp;c-..-..t
FIWEIUIIIOIM

RREWOOO FOR SALE

'I 1\\ II I '

49-ForLoue

a

s1- H-how Gonda
52- Sportiac Good.
53'- Antiquoa

,..,.
Pl...l&gt;u.,.t:Heatiac

HAULING

Exc•••tiac

General Haulias

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Re"sonable 'rates

Moblle Home Repilir
Upboletery

NTHI

JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

Bt:LL ETI\ BO.\RD 614-742-2138
CHARLIE'S
SULL DOZER

· WORI.
DRiftWAY WOU
and LIMESTOII .
Tho pr~ce

-

1011

ta-. _

be....-

.. see,eooand

IIIII'

$2S,OOPer .....

tor quollylng-

IWOIIIILI

to buy very n1c1 ...,.. on 3ll acno In

bldg,

U4 N. 2NO, MiDDLEPORT •
YW1 nlcl3 BR, LR. DR. Ill., 1V.

CAI814-882·7104tor

uru

992·7553

- . 4 B R , 3 - . 2 -•. - 1
BR IIJI. Poopetly 4,100 oq. ft. !arm

POIIIIOY, 01.

I.

11-13·'92·1 mo.

·--.--.Slop '

SAVE$50

ZENITH
4-heaciVCR
with an·~
POV'""""i"!!

DELIVEIY SIIVICE
l•all ...... Work

· PRI E REDUCED!

ownorllo•dtv a1 op to 110% o1 .,...._.

$15 MONTHLY'
oo SearsCharga PLUS·

cot - · 1 - yard. 2 lo4o.
In Goo 30'1.

Keti1rnont0 4 ..:yde dishwasher

~~~=;;nge
•

• 3-level wash .. ,
our most complete coverage!
• Deluxe silverware basket

~orcelaon­

$329

99

~--·

~oven $12MONTHLr

$27999 S111o10NTHLY'
I'IW1S41SI

• TwoS' &amp; two

{PD91421t

6' elements

w .....

'

''

Sln-wa.r l&lt;lnmore 011 model
(PDt13211

•••
.'
.• 'r

ON ASEARS
DIEHARD BAnERY,

IIODI.EPOIII'- Homo .. 11n1 lor ,._ lull 11111111(1 out.

...._- ...... -·· 111.1

tlllb. . ... &amp; :
[omled fn M UCI ....
INNttaad, 2 BR, bllh. LA.

llll.,s~.lolaal­

.-&amp;anlcl-yul.

';' 0
•_
,r

Sales6999 .

to-··

COMMERCIAL 1111d RESIDENTIAL

61~~~~2::1~1:.~.60

1:00 P.M.

or 915·3839

,Factory 12
Gauge Choke

(No Sunday Calls)

2112192/lfn

10f.lllt8211 mo.

.------------.
GRAY'S TAXIDERMY ·,,
I'

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS

S~PTIC SYSTEMS

Deer. Heads....................*19000 · · ·

.

LAND CLEARING

.

·T urkeys •..•.•..

WATER &amp; SEWER '

2

HOME SITES

-.-.a._ _ n... .. - · -

too--

II!ADE - Good I~ 11&gt;m1
locMedon s..,.. mil, with a
DNMvllwiYou . . lnd5BR,
[R,
·cellr,
2-·
din,llfl.llll.
...., roc1111,
1 fll,
car

'

•aoROOftiG

,'

"

'

AND EVEinHING UNDERNUTH
GAUGES • ADDITIONS • SIDING

TROMM BUILDERS
Ou•fity Assured (o.,.,,,.,.
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 6 t4-742·232a
•j

,'

.

'

8'17Mn

e-12.nd8-10

"

TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PE11F0N1A11CE
I

II II II II II t

II II t

t

t

t I I

Been woiHng for a

t

I

I

t

t

t

I

t

I

I

I

I

II t I

I

t I I

t

to oorchoss acelllitr Jilooe? ,liMI1ED
TIME ONlY
5 95

.....
_
,_ .,...
.I County

loolll eervlce

69

permonlh
I

8R

..................
cuns

PMH:~

- ...

CELLULAR

p.111. $14.011

21 • 21: "Hotppy
Holdroy Open HouH"

DAVIDSON'S
PLUM liNG

CHRISTMAS

TREES

~

.

;a'

HOURI:

CreelriHtl

MIINII,ert, "lo

... rrou., llltllon far

5'- 8' Tall .

SR124
Ready Nov. 28

61.992·7144

more Info.
1CttH111211 mo.

Fresh Cut DeUy
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh. ·
742-3051

31904Leallag

lllotL-IaL1a.lpm
lunclliy: , .. p.m.

,, . t•

11·1742-1 -

pd.

...
..

......''"
' ..

,

~

- -. ..-llway

--~P-.111
Uio&amp;o'l.

Ill ACREAr DEAL

50th Wedding
Annlverury
November 19th,

,. ,..,.

. fU TIIIIIIVICI
Trl 1, r.-. 1-n1
Fi• £liltlil•
1M-. . . . . .

., ...-,,

........

1942
ROLAND and

'

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

11-1......1_

r::.-.:=;zJ . .•,

STElHEM

...

But,

. .

742·060

TRESSIE

...-

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

...... ' ........

Gwalltj HI ERide.cy

. OM thing 1..._

M- Ca•lllla•en, 1t1t .
haifi, fln:tiCII &amp;

1' win llwaya Jove llld

.

Now Water Heaten.

,..._._you.

' Bennetts Mobile Home ~~tbi1g &amp; Coolh:a

Loved Mel lldly
mlllld by hUe,blncl,
AoiMd; llld ohllclren,

1391Sift.rUciM.tRL
, :&lt;.1

arid

I ·'

; 1

r---------~----------~

YOUNG
Do you need • start
In INe?
18 yra •nd up. Earn u
much • you Wlllit, full
or p.rt time from your
home.Nocuh
lnveat"*lt, be your
own boN, evan If
you'N atllla atudenL
Thle le lncDIM that
kellpa going liVen
when you don't. .
' {614) 378-6153

w...,.. gollo do,

(

~.

•

114-802-2648
CRAFT CLASSES
10 "WaiiBukot" by ;

STARTS

..

12·5-tfn

SPORTSMAN
12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only

ILII pnLpA~~y
IIIII -Ill be on
OOIIiplaled and
-ln. IIIII WI.

.1\."

after 5 p.m.

LICENSED 1nd BONDED

PH. 614·992-5591

TROLLEY STATION

SUNDAYS

00

Call (304) 895-3386

HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel •nd Coal ·

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
CLUB

···!!·············..'175

. h ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••5400 per
'
FIS
Inch

LINES
•
BASEMENTS &amp; :_

992·3838

...... 134.8110.

-~

"

Vouchlrs

' '.J.t

TRAILER liTES,

IIIITlAND-- L1ni11 Rd. THII
3 BR ll&gt;ml hu a ballo, .......

QoodiiW-• . . - ....

ON.Y•

""'* -· Clll-~

"·

· New Homes • VInyl Siding .
New Garages • Replacement wrndows
Room Additions • Roofing
· .~

t.ANDCI.EARIIG
DRtVEWAYIINBTALlED
UMESTONE-TAUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

IN THE
ClAlllfiED

lllldl
.• 4.5
... gor
m/1,
. .- .... lot •

-

•DDLEPORT
• 2 Apt, - ·
op 2 BR, ballo, LR, llll. 0011111.
llluclo .,... w11n 1111. &amp; llllft.

11IIU 11/~/92

--·you
-··1.

..,

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC BYITEMS,
HOllE liTES lind

- . LR. DR. Ill.,-· .......

(

\

IYAACU&amp;E • IR 114 •
BoautMul riUICh type home
w/pennulone ' 114111(1 lld.
Hotna
hao.............
..
tLav• to
a....

HEMLOCK DROVE • typo- on 1 ..,.lol, 3 811.2

I

We

•ncl TRACIUtUE WORK

YOU

$12 MONTHL.'r ,.
(NV534411

In tl•• fOr holhlar ••l~.o.

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

BULLDO~ 1_8ACKHOE

HERE'£ AlAlf
entertaining•••

We Deliver In. ••
Gallia, Meigs, Mason and
Surrounding Counties

H WARD
EXCAVATING

·

_,.,y .uL8EIIRY HTI.
- IIYie. 2 or 3 bdlml..
LR, 1111 .. bllh. UIIMv 1111., larlle
ltlrD, II • - fro. low _.
'Bet,
... tUm., ........... grMI

HOME HEATING
OILS
-,
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLINE$

IHt1fL. u111y nn .. 1111 bu •••· 2

In ....... -~ ..... Ilion.

$24999

985·4473
667·6179

'·'

Eleetrlcal.t Refripn•tio~

S4- Miac:. Merehandl.e
SS- Buildi"'! Supp&amp;eo

..

BP · Oil CO.

FREE ESTIMA'RS

•

IULUnN IODD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

IVAACUIE • Tlila ono lloar

Stop &amp; Conipare

Ueshire, 01;

Hay 1: Grain
Sood .t Fenllber

45- Foraiohed Roo,..
46- Space for Rent
47- Waated to Rent
4i- Equipment for lleQl

.
·'

plln ll&gt;ml ... a - polce •
Clll be IGid - . , - • 2
cot (1111. 3 BR, 2 1111111, lg. lv,
~l.il!" 1111., 1111. -OYI, poiOII

Reillotl•ling

.

St. Rt, 7

949·2398or

·
42- Mobile Hom.. for Rent
43- Farnu for Real
44- ApartJMat for Real

you want it...
you·ve got it ...

'

.c;.,
••••
-c...,...

1- • •

. 6637

~Li.... rock

41- HoUHI for Ileal

SAVE$100
Feahn packed, 2 lux
VHS CGIICOIC!oo with gft
--*and a coupon
lor a FREE tolephoto linll'
i£537951

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. COIISTRUCTIOII
•New Homes

Call614·992~

I \I: \I &gt;I 1'1'1 II &gt;
,\ I I \ I &gt; I I I&lt; 1,

1\1 \I \1"

.Door Phts Ope..·- .'

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

•r

$69999

Wit• Pun••" of

&lt;J11P
Wanted to Boy

.33- Farnufor Sale
34.- Bu.ineu Buildinp

Real Estate General

s1o ·

With 2 Tra~ra

·10

a.JAYMAR :

OUII£ST VIDEO TAPE YAWl Mil
8\ly 4 N·Q&lt;ade TDK ....

(614) 37H153

8 1111 ·12 pm IIIII

~

- - - -- -

SPKW OfFER IS Ull GETTING
4TAPIS FOR ONLY 56 ·

IISTAWD PIIW

9¥7-$275.00 16z7-$450,00
OPIIEU IISTAWt-Yt IP-$200.00

882-N-oa....

56- Pet&amp; for Sale
11\\\11\1
57- MU1icallnttnull••ta
21- a....... Opportuaity sS:.. Fruito a: V"lletal.lea
22- Money to Loan
. 59- Fo~ Sale or Trade

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.0S/day

4-- Gina way

Auctioa

•LIGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

Galli'! County Melp County Maeon Co., WV
Area Code 614 An!a Code 61,4 An!a Code 304

Over 15 Words

11- Help Wani.,!
12- Si,...tiona Wanted

9- W..,ted to Boy

·&amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Chrlalmu m-v
llgllnl Income lhlt
kMpagolngwhln
yau 111111't.

· · Qualit.Y
Stone Co.

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

8- Public Sale llr

ro••ior, OltiD

Cltudfied page• cover the
/oUowingtelephone e:cchange• ...

CIASSD'.IEDS
GET RFStJJ..TS • FAm

428·1065

'

lS
IS
IS
IS
15

992-6215

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturdly
1:00 p.m. MOOIIay
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00p.m. Wedneoday
100p.m. Thundly
1:00 p.m. Friday

3$-Lot&amp;.t:Acreap
....:.--~---;;:;..-.ilii:i;o;nmi'iii:mF____ 36-llool Ltato waated

WALLPAPER
AND BLIND

.

Rate

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Poper
Tllellday Piper
Wedneoday Poper
Thunday Poper
Fridly Popor
Sunday Poper

Rates are for consecutive runs, brolcen up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads:

SHOP

'

Words

I·
3

• LEVOLOR.·

New

RATES
.

Card shower

SEAR$ HOME ELECTRONICS

sAT.a-12

• Ade o.atlkle the couaty your ad r\llll mut be pre,_;d
• Recei¥e dilcount for ada paid ln ad naco.
• Free Ad.: ' Gi•oaway and Fouad ad. uDder 15 word. will be
ru11 3 dar-atao charp.
• Price of M for aD capkalletten il double prtee of ad eoll
• 7 point liae type oaly wed
• Sentia~ il not re~pouihle .f or enon afte.r flr1t day (chock
for error• fir1t day ad run• in paper). C.U before 2 :00 p.m,
. day after publicatioa to make correction
• Ad. tbat •ull be pa~ ill advance are:
Card or Thanlu
Happy Ado
In Mmnorlam
Yard Salee
0 A cW.Ifoed adverU....ent plo.edla lhe Callipolio Daily

Handbell ring·ers ·to
.perform in Pomeroy

Coo

SA.M.-SP.M ••

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

Celebramos Hat?-dbell Ringers

Community _calendar

.STEEL INSULIIID
RAISED PINEL GAUGE DOOI

wwry.aaout

of Family Medicine

The Celebramos Handbell
Ringers of First Ptesbytcrian
Church, Parkersburg, W.Va., will
perform Nov. 29 at 3 p.m. at Trinity Church in Pomeroy. The public
is inviled.
·
The (:hoir, under the direction of
Community Calendar llems Council,'Friday, 6:30 p.m. Cos.t is Jane Irvine, plays a set o,f 52 chroappear two days before • event $12. All supplies included. Judy matically tuned handbells, east in
and the day of that event. Items Dixon is instructor. Call 992-6564 the Whitechapel Foundry in Lonmust be received weD In adWDCe or 992-7733 10 register.
don in 1961. Precision hand casting
to aasure publication In tbe cal'•
and tuning is unique 10 the Englishendar.
HARRISONVILLE • Har- made bronze bells, giving them a
risonville OES, annual installation $0mcwhat different ton·c quality
THURSDAY
of off'teers, Friday, 7:30p.m., at tbe than American-made insiruments.
COOLVH.LE- Revival at Wes- Harrisonvil,le Masonic Temple.
Handbells are rung singly or in
Iey-~gheny Church in Coolville,
Members bring potluck food for multiples with each ringer responlhrongh Sunday, 7:30 p.m. nighlly refreshments. Other ~hapters are sible for as few as four or as many
with:Rev. Willlam Cope of Salem. invited.
·
· as eight bells; and many techniqucs
Glen Easterling, pastor, invites the
and employed for effect and interpubljc.
SATURDAY •
est throughout the concert reperRUTLAND- There will be a
POMEROY - The Pomeroy round and square dance Saturday toire.
lncluded in the program will be
groujl of M will meet Thuisdsy at from 8 p.m. to midnight at the Rut- traditional
carols of the ChriSbnas
1 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic land Amezican Legion Hall. Music season, both sacred and secular.
Church in Pomeroy. CaD 992-5763 wilf be by C.J. and the Country The Celebramos Ringers ~ in
Gentlemen. Public invited.
for iJirormation.
age from 16-4S and have Several
years' CJ~perience in othec choirs of
ROCK SPRCNGS- The MiddleHENDERSON- Gallia-Twirlers the church.
port Child Conservation League Western Square Dance Club will
The 11-member choir consists
will-host a "Hobo" party Thursday hold a dance Saturday from 8-11 of Bryon Coffey, Jenny Hamrick,
at 6'!30 p.m. at the Rock Springs p.m. at the Henderson Community Lois Coffey, Jennifer Johnston,
Unijed Methodist Church. Mem- Cen!er in Henderson, W.Va. John Debi Wigal. Barbara Harris, Kathy
hers'of the South Cerib'al Disttict of Waugh will be the caller.
B'uclcingbam, Jean Wilson, Rhooda
Ohio Child .Conservation League ·
Jones and Dick and Nancy
wiU:be the guests.
.
MIDDLEPORT • Meigs County McCormiclc.
Retired Teachers will meet SaturAs members of the American
pPMEROY • The Meigs Coun· day at 12:30 p:m. at the Middleport Guild
of En
HandbeU Ringers,
ty ~tic Executive Commit· Masonic Temple. Rev. Kris Trein- the various
II choirs of First
tee wtU meet Thunday at 7:30·p.m. tong, Middleport Presbyterian -Presbyterian Church have attended
at tht Carpenters Hall.
Church will have the program.
festivals throughout the United
rtiPPERS PLAINS· VFW Post
KANAUGA - Liberty Moun- States and performed concerts for
No. '9053 will meet Thursday at taineers will perform Saturday at
7:30 p.m. at the post. Me111bers the DAV Center in Kanauga.
urged to attend.
A border di$Pute between the
•
MIDDLEPORT - Thanksgiving United States and Canada was
RACINE • Racine American crafts forkids, Middleport Arts resolved in 1842 with the signing
LegiOn Post 602 will meet Thurs- Council, Saturday, 6:30 p.m,.Cost oftbe Webster-Ashbwton Treaty.
day 817:30 p.m.
is $4 for kida ages 3-8. Shirin NugIn 1848, the Free- Soil Party
gud instructor. Call 992-2675 or ,nominated Martin Van Buren for
CHEs'IER • The Chester Town- 992-7733 tore~.
president at its convention in Bufship"Trustees will hold a special
falo, N.Y.
meting Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
Henry David ThOreau published
SALEM CENTER - Star
townhall.
"Walden"
in '1854. The book
Grange and Star Junior Grange,
described
his
experiences
while livannual Thanksgiving supper, SaturREEDSVlll.E -Riverview Gar- ·day at 6:30 J.&gt; .m. at ti!e Salem Cen- ing in a small cabin near Walden
den Club will meet Thursday at ter Fire Stauon. Meat provided by Pond in Massachusetts.
7:30·p.m. at the Reedsville Church the grange. Bring a covered dish:
King Edward Vll of England ·
of Christ. A Christmas workshop
was crowned in 1902, following
will be held directed by Betty
RACINE - An alumni football the death of his m'other, Queen
Boggs. Members bring fmger food pme between Eastern High School Victoria.
and :11 gift for a Pomeroy Nursing and Southern High School will be
and Rehabilitation Center residenL
held Saturl!ay at 7:30 p.m. at the
•'
Southern football field.
·
IWTLAND • Eye of tbC Storm,
READY MADE
a Defi ftlm, will be presented at the
SUNDAY
.Rutllnd Church of God on ThursVINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
POMEROY • The Meigs Counday at 7 p.m. Pas10r John Cortoran ty Historical Society will sponsor a
BLINDS
invites ~e public.
demonstration on making Advent
Wreaths using herbs on Sunday at
REEDSVILLE - Eastern High 2 p.m. at the Meigs County MuseSchool Fall Sports Banquet will be um. Mrs. Janet Theiss will present
Thunmy at 6:30 p.m. at the school the demonstration. Those wanting
to h(lnor football and volleyball to participate are 10 bring material
players and cheerleaders.
with them. For a list of materials
needed, call the museum at 992RUTLAND - Rutland Fire 3810 between I and 4 p.m.
Department turkey supper will be
ThurSday at Rutland Elementary at
POMEROY - Bob Hayes, a mis5 p.m. Tickets are available from sionary from Africa, will spealc at
Rolland Department Store, Buttons Hillside Baptist Church on Sunday
and Bows, Oallery Hair Arts, Clas- at 11 a.m.
sic Cuts and ftre department auxiliary members.
RUTLAND - Gospel concert,
FREE
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church,
MIDDLEPORT • Teddy bear Sunday, 2 p.m., featuring Kevin
ALTERATIONS --•-~
class, Middleport Arts Council, Spencer Family and Reflections
CUT TO
Thursday and Monday, 6:30 p.m. Trio. Putor Paul Taylor invites the
Cost is $ZS and includes supplies'. public.
SIZE!
"
Susan Baker, instructor. CaD 9927733 or 992·2675 to register.
LONG BOTTOM • Thanks$iv·
ing service at Long Bottom Umted
FRIDAY
PAT~O
ltfethodist Church will be Sunday
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full at 7:30 p.m. Public 'invited.
(7Bx84) While &amp; Alabaster
~I Church will have a Thanksgivmg dinner Friday lit 6 p.m.
Retail $79.95
.Ther~ will be a preaching and
singillg at 7 ~.m. With ~vic! Dailey
and the Oatley Famtly. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public.
offtccn were announud
dnisTER - There will be a for.New
two-)'Cit 1«ma when the Saaed
special meeting of Shade River Heart Catholic Women's Club of
lAlcl# No. 453 Fct:AM Friday at 7 · Pomaoy
met ecently.
'
p.m. :Work in tile Master Mason
degr~e. Refreshments will be
officers are·Cecilia Lisle,
ICIWIL AllliiiSter IDUOIII invited.
president; Marie Johnson, vicepreaidellt; Allee Freeman, secrePOMEROY • Reservations for tary; .Phyllia Hackett and Anna
the F()E I adies Auxililry No. 2171 Blackwood, treasurers; Donbeill
IIIIIOIIIAL 11111111 ~ON
IAIIFIIlD A¥1., MIIII-UIII
am.. dinner on Dec. 1 are due Filher, auditor; Donna Gibbs, hisMon~Frl. 1-11
·
~~i is S4 to the auxiliary lllrian and reporter.
: •••• 1-11~ lun. 1·1
Hosteaes for tbe meetln.R were
MIDDLEPORT- Ceramic tree OUta Heipton, Marilyn MOler llld
top anael claaa, Ml!fdlepon Arta . Pbyllil May.

Officers named

MOTHERS AT HOlE

\

.,

..,.,_
I-IOH72-5H7

_,

�Page 12-The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bn~ee BeaUle

Thuradey, November 18, 1812
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtpt

Apartment

44

ThU...ay, November 19,1992

~

,.DIDM'T I ~~~ 'rOO U6T Tilt£..,.
ro GO llOif£

tor Rent
3 Announcernenta

AAI&gt;

GwoiU..-ANWolllllgTo

•

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n.• ,.. .."'.. ..

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,.

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Viewing

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l"'lo I
........

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.

1- to form four simple worcu. •

I

•

SUAQYE

I I I . I' I

az • 101 Mawa

(])Sevedbrthelletl
~~~....,_One TV Stereo.

-

NO! SLOW DOWN!LOOK

4

i~E1°
=

.. POTHOLE!

OlJT FOR THE ...

a

"Baseball," says gramps, "is
a sport where people who
~ have rested all winter need
r-~-:-----..:.=..,w&amp;eks of training in the spring
L A G E Ry
lfor ~summer ol playing ......"

I
I~ I

Digest

octar

wot~c~

!Ill Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop Q
1:05 (JJ ~·• Company
1:30 ())
IIJ) NIC Ntwe
(]) Ed McMahon'a $Uti
8MICII
!lle ()) e ABC Newa 0
CZl WheN In the Wotlclla
Carman Selldlago? Stereo.

e

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ART TE

t---,lr-,I-'TI.3-:;..I-I

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0

.

8

~ B;quare One TV Stereo.
~. az•c88NeweQ
(!)le R - Stereo. 1;1

' •

I ' ~-

•

•

IS. .~ -

•

O Complete
by f1lling

tho chuckle quoted

you d evelop fr om step No. 3 Qelow.

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IONewZonvO
11:35 (I) Andy Grltlltlt

Lordly • Fluid · Cubic • Rodent • BUILD a DOOR
The new comic was very discouraged and tell he
wasn't getting the right breaks. A comic who had been
· in the business a ion~ time told him if opportunity didn't
. knock he should Bll -' o a DOOR .
.

RD

IIJI- ot Fortuno

~W~n
Ill a In
Edition 0
leroo. ·

CZl Ill

Mac!Pflfl,allrW

NORTH

BRIDGE -

.
()). Ma- ... Wllh
NaW~H!-_Q

i~rdyl[]

=-~Uon
2.rnent Tonight
Stereo.
Leap Stereo.
@ BporuCenter

Tw~NTHIVE I'IUND~~p

I

rO~

POt,..L.A,S
A FA(,fL.IFT1

f'I0\1\' MUC~ JUST
TO LOvi~P

. MY iODY7
TH,O.VE$ ·il-19
1P 1'1111 by IIIEA. ln.; ,

aMonaY*e
!Ill Ute Goee On Stereo.

JeopardJ.!ff. .

a

s-tereo. Q
())'• You let Your Ute

1111•- 0&lt;1 For11MWQ
az e Family Fauci ·

•

Chelle&amp; feels nosllolgk:.
Stereo. C
(]) MOVif: Ki!t(lte: Forblddan

Yard Sale

IUII(acta IR) (2:00)

C1J e

&amp; VIcinity

••• ...
Wlu do ... ~ "'
ALL Yord S.Loo Muot Bo Pold In
" "'' - ·
311101
71
•
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy bolore thl ed II to run.
Sundoy .edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
F111anc5al
Fridoy. lolondly edMion · • 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

21
Pomeroy,

&amp; VIcinity

~W&gt;nen T..- 111otrtc:t: Nioo rn
Countty.-.Up.114-211tlil17.·

41 Houses torRent

g:.•-•·

2 Bedroom In Oal!lpollo, Apco=.,_w/D ~G·
I
,
, ":: •~.

1~

14

-~
4 -ooom
HOuoe, Ror......oo,
Dopooft, Required.,,....,_,
Nloo - t a r ront, P~. 2

Business

_Opportunhy

Middleport

Trat:or Lot, With Bam. Pond,

!NOTICE!
OliO VALLEY PIJBLISIINQ CO.
Ncoml!ilndl 1lolt you do buol·
liMO w11h pocp~e· yau kMw lnd

:'.J
!::':.':-::
lll2-6858.

=::.=

All Yord Soloo Muol Bo Pold In
. Advonce. -..Jne: 1:oopm !hi NOT to oond monoy tlorOUIJ~ lhl SmaLL loUr room houM Clmp
dly bofore thl ed 1e to run, moll unUI you hi.. lnvNiogoled Conley, $110, por mon!h,
tundoy oclltJon.. 1:00pm Frldly, :::'hl=ollor=ln-:fg.=:=-:==-:--: ._17HI12.
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Q

Wanted 10 Rent

111m Qr B..u:J."\t.or ~
v- Anlund.
1211.
Wo- To Ron!: llalor Home
Fer
Trtp To S....h
13-15. Clli Poll14-

w:.:=.,:,Nov

10:oo..m. t:'~ ~~~~~~ ~ 42
4 clooo!N, counlod WboloNie, Dlrwct From
-·-.. oto'"llo':'oc.,
~ m-.
~- Tloe Factory.
droow,
AndSoil For Por111o. On

. . . . -= .-.
~-

100
1

h .S - .

__

w:;:
IIIL'illte

~=· No =iO!y

""'--""'--Of-:·--~_-3573._._·.l...-l qu-o. S.Joct
Avolloblo, Coli For lnl.vlew,
8
Public Sale
303·758-41315, Ext. 1001.

&amp; AuctiOn
awn. Rlil~na .SUPER BUSI·
=:-:-::----:--..,.,--,:----1 NESS OPPORTUNITY Oldor EaRick Purson AucNon Company, lobllo!lod ..,.,,_, O.....,Y,

full 111110 ouctionHr, comploto
auction
aervlc1.
Ucensad
1168,0hlo &amp; V/nt Vlrglnlo, 304173-5785.
cu:oe ML limo ouctlonoorf
Jlcenoed &amp;. bonded ototoo o
Ohio I Wool VIrginia, 304-11372278 or 837-2121.

9

Wanted to Buy

Don~ Jut* IIIIa!! Uo y..., NonWorldng l!olot Appllsnceo,
Color
TV'o
Ro_ft111oi'III-

FrMzera vc'R•e, MlcrOW8Vn,
Air Cond~lonoro, Qulllor. Ampo,
Etc. 614-25&amp;-1231l.

Now Or Almoot Now Woodbur-

ner lnHrt Pr1f1r Buck. 614-4411142.

UMd lloblle Homee, Call 814~.Q175.

Wontod To Buy: J101k Auioo
With Or Whhout lloiora. Coli

Lorry Llvoly. 614.:1118-8303.

Top Prlool Pold: AI, Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Rl1151o, Sllvor Co1no,
Gold Coin•. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Av.nue, Oalllpolle.

Employment Services

11

Help Wanted

; 'AVON' ALL AREAS! Shoro your
limo with us. You'll lovo Lho

compo1. 1-BOG-11124351.

ou, Conyoul With 01 And 02
Llcan•a. .U.O lncludee llodem
TWo Bodrocm Homo. Prlcod To
Soil AI: ...000 114-5111024.

31 Homes lor Sale

Mobile Homes

IAerchandise

for Rent

1 Bed"""" Ttolior, Ciooo To
DowrlOWII Oalllpoilll G.-y.
.IM-141-11111·
1111 Ttolier 2 astho, 2 aoc~roomo, Clnil".!_~r••Rolorwncoo
f!oqultocl,
.......,._,
PliO
Dotiooft,
No Polo, - 1 4
1
Aillr P.M.
2 Bedroom Fw-nlahed, At;. $250
Month. Ro-..., DopoeJt bqul...t. Na Polo WILli' - r
Pold, In City. 11t 441 31l'ri Aftlr
5:00 p.m. •
2 boclooom mo1o11o homo In
Racine .... IM • II! I.
2 bocltwm U.lior lor ront, IJIIcl.
diopaot, dlpoolt requlrld, 114-

room, living room, 3bdrm., wal~ 2 ledtuum Trailer, 114 441 2101.
In c!GOMt,liiUy osrpoled, 2 porblldruame
PI:' II'IOIIIh
~hoo, oJoct~c 11001, AC1 oiOYI,
rwlrlaorstor, 11-lroa, Homo
Ntl'raonk, Roclno, OH. 114-14..
11111:00 ,.M.
2210.
2 mobile homo . - Into ono
24x40 Jaa homo, 2 yro. old, 4 Wlll¥11 blcii'OOII'II, located Ohio
.en~. I . mi. from Holzer,
hl.ooo. 114 4411373 or 304- AI. 143. 104 - 21f4.

eao.

JiiL'*'~-~-=

3 ··_ , . , IClnl.-y
$210/llo.
RohNMNIO
o.-h
BEAIITII'UL IIOliS£ FOR sALE ~ulaM, 114 Ul Nl' Ajflf IS
Hlolottcal Corrw Lot • 111 P.M.
lloln 81. Pl. ~1
Vo.
I
Traltar Rlnl:
c:o..pLo~oty
2
Fuu
835QIIIo. 1200 Dopoelt. And
Bt!ho, I JMao! Bedroomo, HVAC, Clrpol. Avoliolllo ~ ... lloclner ...... 114lmmodlolly. 111 Ill 2201

--=

5 yoor old ltrlcll ._,., I 2 botho, 2 iorgo llnl- -

--·

I Bodtwm Tralior, Both I 112, I

Mlnutoo F.- H - Hoopitll.
In biMmenQI ...., panel, 114-141-7710.

184,100.--.
Broactnr lt., Mlddlap arL Two

oi~,
I
both, goo hoot,
nlcl lot
I Mlcihboftl oudi
6
, II4-LIIf.:lll:l, 114-

11:1-7307.

' " ' coda.o ..... 4 -

=:-:=-=:~=-=:~-::: ·'

LIM ~oplioft,
4J N.S2111;
1.

-n,

llolllllt homo lor ront or oolo on
--1101: 2 IR, II oiM!rlo,
~eel:
Jol'.naan'o llolllio
:IOOS.
•
Home Pirie.
•--

1m 1171 """' 114 Ton 4x4

:.'1th."'"•1111D~
11~~~·
--

E-

lllle Top Cope Texas cops

.

;

break up a gang war; tile

Oapper Band" is stopped.

M 1 Aut• , "" ;·
~ llliiM POO Finn. · :
-

Stereo. C
.
(!)le Tlii SlnqMon• Homer
wrecks his car during a
snowstorm then buys a snow
plow. Stereo.

-

EEKANDMEEK
.

::n:.":'.t: :.::'-11~1=~~

0

I]J•Ilul:•nce

A~R~k

11J Murder, She Wrote 0
12!1 Crook and Chaee

llollv- ..

Vl'RA FURNITURE AND AP.

PUANCES

114 4tl 4421 OR 114-448-3111

Plait-Up ........

campera&amp;

decides to enlisr. (PI 2 ol 2)
Stereo.
1:05 (JJ MOVIE: Platoon i.eeder

Motor~

0

(R)

Dooto .... ~j I' Toblo With I

or'o For s.lo: Ub \:,..::~·
&amp;tondord
••: flOur.:
• ...toy llza - . , . Door, po, 8oe AI
N; hlow lll!var
P:OU 2111o. fouttiiAva.,lllddapart.
Or 4 MNoo OUt 141 Ori LJ.Ptlta.
F,.. otandna -.1 11umor

~
Chain

MY ~ ~li'leii' 10

HE 6A'r5 He&amp; FIGt.IRED

QUIT SN-Ot&lt;.li'-G-

OUT AN eAeY WAY
TO QUIT.

'TODAY,,

Serv ICl' S

Concl!lon. 114-

t.

)

'

''

modol c - TV $150. *"
17W722.
.

Woolar Sill: Konmcoro
Walhll' Sill; OE Diver All:

m·

Konmoro DryW
OE Woohor 41"- Clrlworr hlln :t.IIYd,
U.. Now t225 Cut To $115: OE - . , &amp;tolloo I llg lund•
Dryor uu - 1 y.., Wlrnlntv
41" CoiLco , _ .... Yd
$ISO; 30" Eloctrlc Rongo IMj
w
To ClleMO F.-I
Frlgldolrt Ro~or F,_
!11Y Ft.MitU 11.41 Vel.
Frwo, 1111; Roltlgoraior ildO By
IJn!ng Onlr ., Yd.
st• Hornot GOld 1111; 8111111 OlhiL'Oull
Soloo: Llloo, c:ioft ......
Apo~-.t llza Rotrtgon:or· pJieo, 1111&lt; ,._... 8ole Looie

•1..

Oold ~ •
- L v ...,
Tlllal..,, •••

6r 711·

THEY CALLED

A TRUCE II

TH' SHOOTIN'S

Thnl'- 30th. Hunr ,.. ....

·8oltodonl

Rofrlanlor:

Floh .,... 1411 - - An.
lUI lne Tloplllat - , ltl...
........... tupplloo.
FUIIIIIIIIII l~lrtln

--~

-~
~~~nion..,.-·
III2Z

or-

ALL OllER II

llnigoiiWYnd Cltl~i:.: p.,.
• • • -......
. 114ttlll4t Aft• 7:00 p&amp;
,

loom,

•nd

"'ffil~. O.!Mpcolli

'orrJ orwo,

North Oo!Aalohool Arto, 3 led·
~-· J04475.1314 or .171- -W.ter, Tralll
- . Paid,
R~lor
aiil

- · Box fl-17, c/o Pl. Pft. RogJo.

!!!!, 2GD lloln 81, Point P!oount,
WY2HID.EOI

MONEY -MONEY -MONEY
$400 Wk. Or Mora Moiling Pool
c.rca lltllllna
AI
Rueh II' I -.AddOMII llanDtd ~: DIA
::rf•·lox .tt.~o,OH

&amp;n;--

-

...,.,_,DII, Dlpaul, ~~

r-mo I r"'-i'

32 Mobile Hom•
lor Sale

Apa~ent

lor Rent

a••

- . .......

Hue.,

• p.IIL

•

-

lnllrtor,

ASTRO-GRAPH

01110.,

• ......

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~out . . . . . ~~~~.

Plumbing &amp;

,PICKIM tJiuRIITURI

tleltlng

t&amp;ctour ·
'W'Birtbday

llltulitl~.

Hot
""· '
Jtnlollo
llol. Jill. , ·n- Ill
tl, WV,

-~ -

=-

,..,.,. , ...... With .....
lod,~liGI.

'

-~

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

Frank Stewart is a prolific bridge
writer. His lateSt book, "My Bridge
and Yours' (,11.95, P.O. Box 962,
Fayette, AL 35555), adopts a style first
used by Eng!Wtman ~nee Reese.
There are 70 deals, 44 of them tough
and 26 even tou(!ber. You "listen In'
on the tbou(!bts of Stewart as he bids
and playa his ·cards. However, unlike
Reese,: Stewart is happy to go off on
tangents. Also, you will find more debatable actions in Stewart's book but perhaps that makes it morerealistic.
Today's deal, number 35 in the book,
features what Reese termed a second·
degree ·assumption.
. .
North's three-club cue-bid showed
at least three h,earts and 10-plus
points.ll;ast didn't open two diamonds,
because he held two three-card ma·
jon: a decision with which I have sym·
pathy. But once be bad passed initial·
ly, bill three-diamond bid, with a
singletoti club, was pointless. Stewart's plunge strai(!bt into four hearts
was more tactical than technical. He

1.

Soutb '

West

Nortb

East

4•

2+
Pass

3+
Pass

3+
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +A

didn't expect to buy it in three hearts,
and his bid made it harder for the opponents to judge the situation.
West led the diamond ace and fol-• ·
lowed with the 10 when East encour- ·
aged.
Declarer judged, from the bidding, ·,
that the spade ace and heart king were
split, not both in one defender's hand.
So, if East had the heart king, West
would have the spade ace and the contract was in no jeopardy. But just in
case West had the heart king, Stewart
laid down the heart ace at trick three.
When the king dropped, declarer drew
trumps and had 10 tricks.

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

35 Unate~dy
38 Hump-

t Actreu-

backed
animal

Slmmona

5 Sharp

38 Arab country

8=-.U:.,

41 Chemlcal
aulllx

12 1111nt 10 ruin
t3 Saall

42 Soil

46 Polles alert
· · (lbbr.)

· 14 Enutr

15 lllblt:alland . 47 Fllh aperrn
11 OVer (pre!.) . 411 Food
17 Strip ill wood
container

tain-t
til Trlftlnt
21- Conlumed

50 llsture

5 t Govt. farm

agency

food

52 Year (Sp.)

22 Polllted arch
24 Traneplri

53 Large
conUnent

21 Rella

54 HypocriiY
55 Rodent
56 Judge

28 Nelli .••

2111ull-

llarta

movement

4 Head (al.)
5 San-, Calli.

DOWN

30 A numlllr
31 Cry ot
aurprlll
· 32 Grow old
33 VllaHty

1 Hugl

e Be adjacent

2 Sulllclent
3 Slow mualcal

1 Encircled

to

8 Roaat beet au

Alta's old !»Yfrlend returns.
Stereo. C
11J MOVI!': K·ttPG13) (2:00)
Stere6.
Q!INaallvtllaNow
1.any Kktg u.e1 ~
·
1D Failltt.Dnllt• MY...,._
Stereo. Q
1:30 ()) • IIJ) wtnga Joe and
Helen try to save Brian from
heartbr8ak. Stereo. [ ]

a

&amp;·~~ .

T AIIRUI. (April 20-Mar 201 Conditions
(J).
PrimaTime Live
In general are rather illy today, bul
Stereo.
CZl
..........
there is IIIII a possibility you could cepl·
Ill AIDS A-oau lor
acldreued, stamped envelope to tallze on a malerllli opportunity. Don't
Waat VIrginia (1:10) .
Matchmaker, c/o this n~ . P.O. throw In !he towel should :hinge gat a
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. bit rough.
1111• .~ K.- Landing
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. D-Ole. 2t) QEIIINI (Mar 21...1-111) You could ba
StereoiW.'ter
There's a chance your curloalty might adept at managing crlllcelaltuattona lor
gat the bel!er ol you today and prompt others 10Ciay, bul you might not be
5111700 Club Wll!t Pat
you lo ask problng (fuestlona ollrlends equally u adroll In handling your oo,vn
R~.·
allllin.
Don't
be
careleu
with
the
leher.
they'd
rathW
not
en-.
Be
10:01 (I) &lt;*all of the CNmplona
C~IR (,_ 2t...IUIJ 22) Although
considerate.
Clash ollhe SeKM: PaUl E.
CAPIIICOIIN (Dec. 2:Wa1i. 1l)lndoct· you're' a quid&lt; thinker today, your ftlli
Dangaroully va. Maduaa;
81-a could - e l y dilute your poa- tnoughll might not be your beet onM.
Dustin Rhodes and Barry
SibiHtlel lor achieYement today. Once Serloua llituatlona lhould be atudled
Windham vs. Ricky
you make a declaion, follow II 1hrough : trorn 1111 anglel before you act on them.
steaml:loat and Shane
until you achieVe the reaulto you dllire. LEO (..... D-Atil· 22) Guard agalnll
Douglas (R)
AQUARIUI (,.,;»feb. tl)ll you IIIII tile lncllnatlori today to prejudge otllell
befora all tile 8Ytdance Ia ln. Thla could
to Clarity your lnllructlonl properly,
Offe-r
eubordlnal• might not perform up to prove unwl18; your · emotlona might
CNWride.
your
logic.
'
On
your expectatlona today. Don't aAume
Calluinla: A...._ on lha
they know u milch about lila Ullgn· VIRGO (Aug. a le~ Ia) Being abla to
umlf1tstatuaot
menta u you do.
· make allilk puree from a - · • - Ia •
Ca
Ia. (0:30)
PISCEI (Feb. • "Lftll •1 Supp,_ 'poaalbiHty lor you today. II you 11M your
the urge today to gambia on thlnga ernarta, you might be able to tum .,. un- 1t:IIO (J) • • (I). Clllll.
about which you know 11'*. You'll do , likely development .Into eornetlllng
Ill..New•... .
OK- II you stay In your OWn J:)alilwlck.
profitable.
. .
(J) Nlgllt Court 1;1
• ~S (Miralt 21-April ttl You have a ~ (lepl. D-Oc!. Ia) Con!lltlona I .
atablllllng t n f t - o - otherS ldday, · 11m11.- to .,. · unptauant uperial~
aapecialy !hOM wltll whom you have mlglll be rep!lcated today. ~.
- t i e l . They're apt to come 10 you
IIIIa ttrna you'l know hOw to come out 01
81po!t8 Tortlgllt ,
wltll problema they can't reoolve.
ttunacelhecl.
111-ow
King
tro-Graph Matchmaker . can help you
understand what to do to make the rela·
ttorilhlp wort&lt;. Mall $2 plus a long, self·

1D:31lf~a:-a.7

Sow 11M! lletda you've already plowed,
before tumlng new eoll In the year
ahead. Y~r probabiMtleS tor aubsten·
tlal accornplllhrnent• could be rooted In
familiar areas.
,"
ICOIIJIIO (Oct.,24-Nov• 22) II you have
I!Ofll8lhlng tmpckta.nt to do today. try IQ
taddllt u early u pouillla. Youldr
petlllee and ellectl_. cou ....,. ~
to dlmlnllh M111e Clock tid&lt;l on. 'frylriQ
to pitch uP abrOken romance? Tile A"'

w.laltl - · No Wll Powr
Nllurol,
Oourontood.
Nttilod. 1110%
lrond
- · - Coil
303.C&amp;U213.

~

Over the .shoulder
of a writer

~~-:..9

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
com~~~o~~ homo -Jnao.
Hou,.: 'lion .... N. 114-4fl.

No'l. 20, 1112

~

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tin~ d. 100 ~ To LMI

'·- -··-................ , . ,.

SOUTH

National Invitation
Tournament, flrlt round: ,
Tennessee al Rutgers (L)
10:00 ())
IIJ) L.A. Law Becker Is
hlrad In a divorce caH.

- - T - A T , PI, At;,
1aw . . . . .
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Jocltton Plu Aru, Wookdoyo

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TH' FEUD IS

STOPPED II

Ouhl'a J
Follrlo.....·C?JIIo
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Hurvn
81rtll,
11271.
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Solol
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~ S1reel Slorlal
Slereo.
(!)1.
Helghta The band
is hlrad to play l1o nrst gig;

. HARK II

!1M RongoPD, 114-24W837 A~

OE

1:t

guest. Stereo. []
C1J • ()) • ttllci ilito:litoalftlr"O&lt;onntt no.
Sloans try to deral Charlie
and Gina's ralallonshlp.
Stereo. ~
Cll'·lll MYateryl Poirot gets a
strange letter trpm someone
calling hlmlell ABC. (PI 1) 1;1

Cell 114-441-4810.

Locot Compony. hlo lrnmodloto
oponlngt lOr mature, dopondobio worltora in thl o-..nt.
l=lol•~al ftoldo. If you oro
I In Joining o WIM!ng

l-IES GOING 10
HIMSE:t..F
ARRE.STeD.

·.~T

BARNEY
L• 5 P.M.

· Dwayne convinces rival gang
memberl to retain their
friendship, Stereo.
(J)
()).Room liir Two
Edle campaigns lor a raise
When Phil gall a larger
· salary. Stereo. 1;1
(!)ID Martin Sllon convinces
a talk-radio star to be on
· Martin's snow. Stereo. I;!
I:OOWe IIJI a..- Rebac;ca's
holiday dinner plana are

threatened by a surpiH

wlchlmnoy. ITood very Mnio.
$325. 3044TS-1113 lftw Bpm.
FuR Slza MollrMO And Box

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3044754111oft• 3pm.

(2:00)

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No DopoeiJ On Ront4.()wn:
Nolhlng Ever PnowrMid.

U·it·IZ

a...-Newal;l

--1111.

Entlllli,..,.nl Conlor'o t148 Or
SU2 Wslk· IMkaholvoo &amp;tort· 2151, MPIII or
1ng t2us; 'Roct~nore 1121-. .aora t.......
Arid Choon t2H Clr too.n

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!Ill Young R - As the Civil
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.4111,

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Exp~rilnced
Houaecl.. n.r
Noodod For I Hourw On Frldoya,
$5 An Nou• Must Hovo R - · 111 ui 0111 Aftor s P.M.
lnfont Bobyolltor In My Homo,

p!poo, ....
Claude Wint - Nlo Orlnclo, OH Coli 114~ Jllld. 24H121.
·
~
AI - · ..._. rooting and llldlng, 104f72.20IL
tar - . PI t - 58 Pets for Sale
on-; 1141112 ZW '
brick, -

LMv• And 4 Allot('
Chalra
$TIO, CuiYod O!ooo Chino "" ............ lylvenlo
Colllnolo, lllirilng AI: tm. I t " - TV . . _
,RIYOr Vo!loy O.k J&lt;urnll&amp;.ro, 814- · ,.-., ·~ em, ew.
lilt tar-·
448-4311.

Vlno 81100{,-t ~7311

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F1tea :d~ Allllwdx ada~

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s.a Avon.l14-441-3351.

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pr~n~...
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t.=y. odltlon

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Finn llalh, tM-215 5111.

()) •

o.na Delta
turns a roedl(ip Into a
pilgrimage to Patay Cline 's
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Ill War File: Ch
In

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..

EAST
.AJ9
•to 9 s
+QJ9 7 4 2
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By Pltllllp Alder

@ Collage .aketbi:U
National lnvltallon
Tournament, first round:
Delaware at Seton HaH (L)

7:35 (JJ Slnford • Son
1:110 ()) e IIJ) Out A" Nlgllt On
11M! eve of her birthday,

7

WEST
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7:01 &lt;Ji Beverly HIHIIIIilas
7:30 ()) • ail
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CIJ E-lnmerll onlgltt

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PlllLLIP
ALDER

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no hunting or Ira
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NatiCii

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EVENING

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CELEBRITY CIPHER
Ce~~MryQpNr o;; l e - . . ....-. fro~!:~•=
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I've• hed. lila hlppiMt three years ol my lite
tecerrtly. I've , _ felt ~ tree."
Bruce Sprlngateen.

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a

M-llle o.11r Sentinel

Pomeroy ..ddleport. Ohio

Thuraday, November 11, 1112

Students named to MLSD honor rolls
~ boaor roll far die fim nineweek srlldlDa period in die Meip

Ralston·, ·1acob Smith, Rebecca Gabriel Jenkins, R)'lll Kauff, Jolui · pes, Unzio Noainglwn, Sbela PillSmith.
•
'
Lentes Je88ica McCarty Melissa tenon, Melissa Ramsburg,
Local Scbool District bu beeQ 1 Fourth p111e- Whitney Ashley, Richmond, Amber snow'den, J.P. Micbelle Ramsburg, Melina
1111110U11CeCL
Abby Hurla, Michael Rawkins, Varian.
·
Reeves, Collin Rousb, Cbarles
81'111111_,. Elellleatary.
Derek Joluuoo, Chuity Stewart,
Fourtb grade'- Adam Barnett,' Searlcl, Amy See, Wendi SbrimFifth grade - Stacey Brewer, Racbel Taylor, C&amp;88ie Vaughan, ·Derrick Bolin, 2'«11ery Bolin, Ali- · plin, Jeanifer Sipnoa, Amy Smith,
Setb Baker, David Reyoolds, Carrio T~Jeuica Clapman, 11011 Hays, BJ. Kennedy, Bethany Sabrina Smith, Allen Southern,
Re1111e S~ BraDt DixOa. Nick Chasity
Zacbery Krautter, McMillin, Beatrice Morgan, Zinnia S,_.s. Adam Thomaa, AJ.
Michael
Justin Robson, Brooke Smith, Jan ntranyPriddy.
Vanghan, Nancy W!Ja)ey, JC88ica
Sixlh grade- Jennie Howenon, Story and SIICpllanie Wigal
Fifih gr119C - Amanda Miller, Wheeler, Matt Williams, Melissa
Jessica Johnson, TJ. Kins, l'alrick
r - o7 EJe. . .ta..,
Joshua Sorden, Brooke Willliuns. . Williams, Jwica Wright, Sandra
Martin, Austin Cm, Becky·JohnFirst grade- Kara Buffington,
Sixlh grade- Jamie Barrett, Car- Young.
·
son, Meli88l Holman.
Thurien Carter, Jay.nee Davis. ric llranbam. Kristin Brown. Tracv · Eigbth grade -Adam Barrett,
t..D. fiflh and sixth - Steven Michael Davis, Katelyn Hood, Coffey, Robbj, Diddle, Ben Jonathan Barnhart, Casey Booth.,
' Hoover, Andrew Kitehe!l, Jessi Brandi Thomas; Jordan Williams, . Fowler, Justin effers, Matthew Josh Butcher, Carl Carmicbael,
Hoffman, Crystal Wells, Lester Ty Ault,, Alisia Burton, Timmy Justice, Waylon McKinney, Tonya Desiree Clemons, Amy Clonch,
Lowery.
Doul!lu, Ashley O'Brieit, Shannon Miller, Alyson Patterson, Bmndy Eva Crabtree, James Ditty, Taryn
D.H. fourth lmd fifth- Marianne Partlow, Kindra •Sno.uffer, Paul Stanley, Stephen Thornton, Clay' Doidge, Shawn Fife, Jennifer
Carsey, Tammy Pletdter.
Will, AnaeJa Wilson.
ton Tromm.
Garey, Tara Grueser, John Kellr•.
D.H. sixth - Georginia Spears,
Second grade - Jassiline Carter,
D.R - Debra Barker, Samantha Libby King, Aimee Klocs, Enn
Gary Reitmiie.
Nicole Davis, Katie Jeffers, Peter Manhall, Jason Mc~g~~ Jeremy Krawsczyn, Shawn Leach, Josh
D.H. fifth and sixlh - Kim Bush, Jones, Kayio Davis, Maria Oren- Richmond, Suzanne Rwuuon, Con- Marshall Rick Marshall, Leigh
Daniel Kuhn.
ncr, Michelle Drenner, Robyn nie WilleL
,
Mash, J~ca MCElroy, Tim PeavHIII'Iilollville Elemeatary
Freeman, Heather Hysell, Carrie
~ Center Elementary
ley, Stacy Reed, Cynthia Sandy,
First grade - Tasba Boring, Myen, David McClure; Brandon
F':fst grade. - Dona)d· Barnett, Amber Slaven, Tun SteaiDS, Bever- ·
Brent Butcber; Kevin Butche.r, Ramsbura., Tamiko Riffle, Jeremy Pevm Erlewme, Adam Jones, ly Stewart, Stephanie Stewart,
ScottChaiJeli.MeaanDodson,Erin· Roush, Michele Runyon, Ben See, -J).ubrie Kopec, Tommy Moore, MarkAdamWhite,JoshWitherell.
Doughty, lW!dy llall, Janes Hems- Chris Smith, Cody Smith, Alicia . Shane NaPJ?IIr. Mary-Jane Partl&lt;l'!,
Melp High School
ley, Courtner Kennedy, Sarah Lee, ; Werry, Jennifer Zielinski
~ Pri&lt;!~Jy, J~ua Ray, JeSSJNinth grade- Amber Bennett,
Shane Lewts, Corey Longstreth, ·
Third grade - Carrie Abbott, ca Smtih, Phihp Smtih.
Anne Brown, Chris Qhapman,
Abranda Stormes, Mark Maue, Marvin Day, Caleb Ellis, Kimberly
. Sec!lnd gr~de - R~cbel Cynthia Cotttlill, Ryan Crisp, KrisDerek McD~I. Bobbi Sue Nap- Me~. Maggie Roseberry, Jes- Atgabright, .T nms ~· ~y ten Da.9sylva, Angela F'ISber, Jake
per, William Reeves, Sarah Sto- sica Rousb, Clara Sanders, Colfiell, Shaun ,Cnsl', Ausun Gannaway, Alison Gerlach, Israel
bart, Matthew Wandling, Holley Matthew Williamson, Jonathan Cross, Kevin Grant, Kristal John- Grimm, Angela Hale, Michael
Williams, Charles Williamson, Wilson, Ashley Hamilton, Kris ~Kelly _Johnston, Shenell ~K- Hawley, Dorothy Leifbeit, Mindy
MI"'IG III.U.COE.M X OPEN - New York grammar IICbool
Joshua Yost, Ashley Young.'
Jellldns, Sara Mooo, Nichole Runy- DIJht, Kristen NaJ.lper, Jenmfer Patterson Tanya Pbalin Kenda
. _ P.S..Wiea..e 1ft Nog Twin Cinema in Harlem on
Second grade - Justin Allen, on, BedJ Shaft'er.
Priddy, Amanda SmitiL
R
ld ' Lori Russell' Tracy
Fourtll ......... ·Ashley Hannahs,
Third grade ·- Joshua .Bass,
eyno •: s ·th Gary 's-•·
Wesley Call, Derrick Fackler,
"'
' k • Ch e Isea M~n t• Shaffer,
mtJames
'
..,....,y,
22 ~I 'tl:~~;~~ ~":rcltnc:~~ ~::
David Hall, Jami Hayes, Crylstal
Curtis ..Hanstine,
Andrea MeJ'tssa K tr
Cynthia Kim
Stewart,
D. White,
of"New York ltlldent wbo were able to follow the
Jacks, Jessica King, Ben tee, Krawsczyn, Chris Pickens, Shan- gomery, Joshua Napper, KriSiy RolQIIIC Williams
Christopher McDaniel, Jessica non Price, Alex Shule.r, Ashley Puckett, Misty Puckett, Jessica
Tenth giade _·Sarah Anderson,
tllila:la·s • •• spelllliag time ia 1 tbeater learning about the
llldMditilt:'dCe-illstead olsi«ing in a classroom (AP photo)
PreasL
ThOfllas, Christopher Ward, Andy Schuler
J
C ts H Iller Da · Be
Third grade - Joeline Allen, Davis, Mike Day, Hollie Griffith, . FoUrih grade - Kel)dra Cleland, . E : , 8:d'Fe:. Jarrod~J:
•·
Ashley Burbridge, Samuel Canter- Adam Shank, Brenna Sisson, · R~bert Johnson, JeSSJCa.Marcum, . Keilh Friend, Penny Gillispie, Kelbury, Ben Haley, Amber Haning, Michael Stacy.
EncMontgomery,~Rickard. . ley Grueser, Heidi Huffman, KimI .
Jenpifer Reeves, ReesWyant
Fifth grade -,'Amber Blackston,
. F'lfth grade- !Jrion Barrett. Lisa berly Jancy, .Mandy Jones, Misty
· Fourth grade- Christopher Dod- Melissa Davis, Amber Perkins, Btas, Steph.ame ~opec, Laura Lane, Lisa Montgomery', 'Shilo
son.
Ryan Pratt, Julie Spaun, Wes Pa~,Jeremiah Snulh.
Moore, Shannon Roush Sheriden
Fifth grade- Kyle Smiddie, Thoene, Mike Williamson, Grant
Stxth grade- Candy BjU'IIetl, RUSICil Adam Sheets, KJ;lly Lynn
James Stanley.
Abbott, Jackie Buck, C.D. Ellis, Beth Call. Dwigbt Icenhower, Lori S 'th 'B · u:-L-J Smilh J
Sixlh grade- Megan Drummer, Jennifer Shrimp lin, Whitney Kinnison, Jessica Pri~, KiJl! Rit- T:loc, sr::',.=Toomas.
Randy Haning, Jason Preast, Fran- Thoma!
terbeck, Rebekah Smtth,, Bndget Elaine Williams, Lisa Yeauger.
co Romuno.
.
Sixth grade - Missy Darnell, Vaughan.
Elevenlh grade - Rachel Bales,
study,
presented
at
lhe
annual
sciMiddleport!Eiementary
Misty
Hart,
Am,y
Jolmson,
Kristina
.
Sallsbul')'
Elemeal8ry
Anne
Marie BishoJ, Joey Casto,
II.JDANII!I.Q..mNEY
entific
meeting
of
the
American
First
grsde
-'David
Boyd,
Page
Keilnedy,Jennffi:rLiunbert,
Stefani
Ftrst
grade
-Jeremr
Banks,
Danielle
Crow, Paul Davis, Lisa
AI'SI:ic
Writer
Bradbury,
Kenny
Carsey,
Candace
Pickens,
Sean
Powell,
BJ.
Smith,
Nicole
Butcher,
B~
Collins,
~
Fackler,
Tracy
Fife, Jason George,
1N1EWV ORI.EANS - Well- ~
million
AmeriCasey,
Katie
Childs,
Rich~rd
Kasey
Williams,
Joruitban
Wratt,
·
F~eeman,
Jesse
.GtUeue,
Jamte
Danielle
Gray,
Joshua
Heck, David
3
p$ IINeduce dderly
hi
h
bloOd
d
Deweese,
Jeremy
Dingey,
Jennifer
Jennifer
Heck,
Clinton
Hendricks,
Higham,
Peter
Kling,
Pamela
MarHerdman
Johanna
Renee
Imboden
with cans handiv~. g_ ---l~ure, an
c an_..........
_. flkull pressure
..__ than
Dunn,
Ryan
Frazier,
Tyler.
French,
Tonya
.
Litchfield
Jonathan
tin,
TiaPratt,J,enny·Proffitt,
Jessica
...
_,
__
J'efli·-.
Andrea
...
~....._ •...o'
the co bon IS ~I""'~Y common A hi Hal'
• f • 81J1 db more: wu.ua.
1esstca
' Howe II ' Roberts Brandy Snider.
' . '
RosIer, 1oy Still ' Jordan S•-·
....,.....,
-·Joy O'Brien
"""""""""'
the
eld
I
It
.
.•
derl
s
ey
,ey
•
........
Jason
Miller
Cbatles
fllllllllwllca be&amp; JPl too low - ~ong . er Y· 15 an un y- Kimberly Johnson, Beth Landers,
D:H.' 1 _ Dav.id Gi¥ens, Megan
S.e cond grade • Marc Barr, Parter, ToddPerrv, eryStai.Powell,
'IIIIIID 61:)7 deciiile to seem- ;::::;tor m about 32,000 deaths '· Ashley Payne, Srica Poole, ~yan Givens, Jessica Gray, Eddie Jones, Dawna B~field, Ashley Eblin, Ann Riffie, Danfelle Scou, Cora
iliiJ' w(! i
Sll.ldy sugor not blood pn;..ure is ~. Donald StaggS. Ru~y Stew- Kathy Jones, Amber Piette, Char- J uley Eblin, Melody Felts, Ashley
Stephanie See Denise Shene.
tinel
lowend
h
.
·
art.
Ainber
Aldenon,
Jamae
Cllaplie
Ricbards,
Ryan
Terzoppoh;lUs.
Fiel~.
Justi!'
Gilkey,
Jon
Halar,
Shannon s~un, Jeff Traer•
diat people's
~
tii!JJ:s
~c:c:;l!lan,
Myles
French,
Jonathan
D.H.
11
Chuck
Aeiker,
Jenny
Cbns
Hanmg,
Bub':lin
Haye,
Jon
Angte White, Kevm
inqular beart·
8111011
2
a1
large
studies
·.
~
Larkins,
-John~.
Angie
Smith,
Bri~kles,
Jenny
Clark;
Jessica
·Meghan
Haynes,
Josh
g,
Jen·
.,_ w
' wliiEIIicir trealed

Ohio.Lottery

Eastern
fall athletes
are honored

Pick 3:

914

7

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7

study ral
' •ses c·au·tl•on·
• g elderly·
aboUt 1OWenn
.
blood preSSur.e t QQ f ar ·

. . . . .

7

•

Vol. 43, No.1 .til

Pomeroy-Midd_lepo~,

Copr!lght*l 1882

dea~15mte. faits 'whe8'1itooo pies- ,_~C:~~r~~an, Dart~'1=~ B~. Heidi =~· Healher Riftle, Juon
~!
if,.;a:;e~be~d.!~:
SJ
.
brought~ to about 8S. Casey Duilfee, Zack Gilkey, Cole Fisher:
·
Third grade - Bobbie BW'Son,
_ . ...._ ••• re filliD long-tune sure
~ut.
be~~~~
appears
to
go
up
Haggerty,
Lucy
HoWerton,
Toney
Rutland
Elemeatal')'
Zach
Davis, C.J. Estep, Levi
..jQ
~ p te Shenis of the Kaiser . Martinez, Abram Sayre, Carla
rust grade - Jessica Anderson, Gillett, Zac~ Gl~e. Ashle_.y
r

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1
esecond,
..._.......,_ ""enumberJIIIS lilllllc lU.IJiicltlls usually 1ry
· · - . 5 pTuwer~ andrpn:s­
ia die lU5 ID!C common
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clilaiJ:JIIiient&amp; 0111 blood-

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. ·

Perm~n~te ~eslth .mamtena~ce

organtzauon .m Piedmont, Caltf.,
said "wbit«oat hyperteOsion" _
·nervousness about doctors that
temporaril'y boosts 'blood .W..ssure
y•v

a cscx;. 6r: sbld¥ presented
a zaPirDa.m:owingbody
........ a ·•-die wisdom
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ID&gt;besJi8twy eleis actually
.
- -•- s;il IlL Bratt Egan of
· tk" r 4!AAiJCo£Wti!alnsin.
l'p ,.. SCIIiiia atitlior of the

'

oveaO:.:!;i one reason people are
.

Smith Jimmy Smith, Angel Stone, Tyler Barnes, Joanna Bowersock, Hoschar, Jusu~ Hoschar, A_ddte
Emily Story Zack Butdler Carrie Jennifer Cade, Robbi!l Council, Hubbard, Chns Neece, Mmdy
' .
'
ilm
O'Dell Amber Pro"'" Beth Rus
Darst, PeteJ Dttty, An~f Hysell, .shawna Davis Heidi G' ore Tru-~. ..;..
,
......
Brpoks Johns.on, Wtl Ka'!ff, ·' man Harmon.• ioshua HJr.\;k, Randy....,...;n, Cindy Six,~ Smith, AliiAn_tber Lee, Alisba Mohler, Misty Hudson, Don f!yseH, .. Joshua son Story, John Witherell. . .
Pamter Healber Pbalin Joshua Hysell, Beth Kauff, Nicole
Fourtb J11111e- Saral_l Cl!fford,
·Simpso~. Keilh Taylor, Beth Wil- McDaniel, Chiistina Miller, John. Amy Freck~r. Sandt ~tlke~,
fang, Hannab Woolard, Brandon
Nelson, M~tthew Salser, Jennifer ==~~·Grace KitChen,
Knapp. ..
,
Searles, Miranda Stewart, Jathan
Fifth _..... .,. erl Burdette
Third grade - Mike Dorst, Templeton, Jamitha Willford
. . ..- - Dev Y
•
Charles Eakins, Heather Fetty, ·
Second grade- Ashley Bartrum, MarJone Halar, Tiffany .Harder,
Headier Fry, Erin~. Joshua
Brook Bolin, Melissa Cremeans,
R~ws.ell ~_5JXWbal,
Anna
Lynch, Nick McLaughlin, Monica
Hollie Ferrell, Jessica Justice, Mal&gt;'!!,:'
Lacy'
.....
1i .~
.Moon, Sarah Reynolds, ' Tyler
lory King, Rachael Morris, Joshua
!X111R..-D-ill ~..'tb F0 1
Stanley, Samaptha Tilley, Corey DaviS, ~an
• ''""" . e ts,
Stewart, Brandon Werry, Tara
Vau$han, Allison Williamson, Tamra O.Dell, Ryan Ramsburg,
Wyatt, AnCirew Baker, Trevor
Buck, DCiana Eichinger, Michelle
Nicki Wines, Kenny ZuSJlllll.
• C~y Scarberry.
French, Corrie Hoover, Staesha
Third grade. Br'adley Baylor,
Melp Junior Hifh
·
Kennedy, Richard Michael, Erin
Aaron Bowersock, Erin Bush,
Sevenlh gmde - Davt~ ·Ander•
'
·
·
son, Rachel Ashier, Mtck Barr,
Billi Jo Bentley, Vmcent Broderick, Leigh-Ann Can~. Carly
Chasteen, Ginger Dlrit, BOld Dav. enport, Scott Dodson, Robin Donohue, Crystal Eblin, Chad Folmer,
Jason Frecker, Danielle Grueser,
Chad Hanson, Jennifer Hayman,
Myca Haynes, Stacy Hubbard,
Lynn Kennedy, Heidi Legar,
Michael Leifheit, Jill Lemley,
Jason Litchfield, Nancy Marlow,
Steven McCullough, Amanda Nap-

By KRIS COCHRAN
six counties, a publicly owned
OVP News Staff
landfill, and a designation agreeNew optioils for (UDdin' of tbe ment, according to Mike McCulsix-county solid waste district were Iough, Di~on of Soli4 and Infecunveiled Thursday evening during tious Waste ManaaemenL
!1 an,.Obio EliviJODn;lii;tal Prolection
"OEPA identities wilh tbe fo;ir
:•1 AJ¢ncy (OEPA) illfimaation ·ses- options," said McCullough, "We
· sion in Jacbon.
'
are waiting to see wbich is viable."
OEPA is in tbe process of draftOne of the new options, a desiging a plan for Alhens-Gallia-Hock- nation agreement, entails lhe dis·
· ing-Jackson-Meigs- Vinton trictclesignatingalandfdl(s), whicb
· (AGHJMV) Solid Waste District would receive all the waste and
d!Je to tbe·district's failure to ratify revenues, therefore remitting the
its own plan. .
.
monies back to the district, acconl. Funding options for the district ing to McCullou~.
could include assessments on · ."S'ome 'ftistrtcts are currently
. ·improved property in the district,· negotiating with landfills," he ·
:general revenQl: from the disbict's added. "We see nothing illegal ·
'
',, .
"

about Ibis process."
There are currently two operating facilities in the district and
dJree permits to inslall (PTis) are
being reViewed.
"We're not looking for a dumping ground," said McCullough.
"Tbe district will have to choose
one c:J. tbe four options by a certain
deadline."
Tbe public will have its chance
to view OEPA's plan 'sometime in
JanuarTc. 1993, according to
McCul ough, at which time the
plan will 11e sent out for a 30-day
public comment period to public
libraries, county commissiOners
and district ·offices, the largest

municipalities in each county, and
health districts.
·
Once the public comment period
is complete, ii1Dccting with the district to present the OEPA plan is
held, followed by a public hearing
to present the plan and obtain publie comment, according to an out-·
line by OEPA. The plan is then
revised based upon public comment
Mter the OEPA director's findings and mlers insbUcting the~trict to imJillement the plan, the district's policy committee, compiled
of health commissioners, ix?ard of
county commissioners, public offi.
cials, and township trustees, will

-

.... ..,..,. ••e

•

SA I.E

B':.u

TWelftb'\lgradefolfe. _ Debbie Alkire,

Tim Baker, Jennifer Barnhart, Loni
B~. Karen Bums, Paul Chad-

TOPS meets
Ruth Ann DeLong and Judy
Laudermilt were the best losers and·
Calista Searls and Belinda Dean
were runners-up at lhe recently
weekly meetings of Ohio TOPS
.Club No. S70 beld at lhe Carpen-·
ter's Hall in Pomeroy.
·
Fruit basket winners were GloKELSEY SHULER
ris Grifiln and Virginia Pooler won
the fruit basket a v· · · Dean
and Calista Searls won~gadget
gift.
.
.
, The club will bave a float in the
Steve Shuler 'and Pam Whaley
Christmas parades in Middleport annOU!Ij:C lhe birth of their dangh811!1~.
.
ter, Kelsey Dawn Shuler on Sept
Peggy Vming was announced as 24.
tlie new weigllt recorder.
ThJI infant weighed eight
Tbe Cbrlstmas party was pounds
and was 20 inChes long:
I11UIOIIIICed for Dec:. IS wilh memMaternal
grandparents are Gene
bers to brio&amp; gifta for the exchange. and Sheila Whaley
lllid Herb Wha~
VIrginia Smilh and Julia Hysell ley. Paternal gn;;;dparents
are Roes
were best KOPS loaer.
and
Beulah
Sliuler
inc!
Vivisn
Coy.
Nancy Manley preeented a program "TTPS Tool Bag."
Adl
The_poup meets e~ Tuesday
at the carpen~er's Hall widJ weighin at S p.m. lmd meeting at 6 p.m.
Call 992-2234 or 992'-S638 for
informlllion.

New arrival

'

.

5o/o

THE BERRY BASKET

COUim GIFIS aad DECOR
230 I Sixth SlrH..SyracuH, Ohio
. OPEN:
Wed. thru
11 am-5 pm

14)

a Mlddleport Elemental')' student, has that love
and Thursday alternooD enjoyed a special time
or reading with Norma Hawthorne, the Meigs
County Public Library's cbilclreo'&amp; services specialist. Saturday Author Steven Newburg will be
at the library to conduct a writing Wlli'kshop.

CHILDREN'S
BOOK
WEEK
"Read....Think...,Dream" is tbe tbeme or Children's Book Week being observed this week.
· Sponsore.il by tbe Cblldreo's Book Council,
Children's Book Week is a time to celebrate and
encour1p the love of reading. Scott Williamson,

·
report annually. to the district's plan."
Out-of-state
and out-of-district
board of directors. Tbe district
waste
was
one
of many cOncerns
repcxts annu.aJiy to OEPA, the out,
raised
by
membei'S
of the audi~.
lliie stated.
·
Both
were
key
r'easons
why the disThe OEPA plan, according to
trict'
s
plan
failed
during
both ratifi.
McCullough, is expected to be
•
implemented during March or cation periods.
McCullough stated that out~£.
April of 1993.
However, the disttict can submit state waste control looked que(a plan for approval during the last tionable, due to a recent Supreme
six months of the
period, Court decision prohibiting ~
said McCullough, an begin the .from ·refusing out-of-state was~,
ratification proceslf'all over. If Under lhe law, if the district had
approved, bppmg fees would be approved the plan, then it coulll
impose higher fees to curb the flow
returned..
.
of
out-of-state and out-of-district
. "Obv!ou.sly, the.way to go ;s
waste.
However. OEPA is kept
w;th a ~stnct P!an, satd Mc~ul­
Continued on page 3
Iough. We don t want to wnte a

threelear

Applications now available for
money for capital improvements

'::au Scott

well, Linda Cbapman, Jennifer
Chasteen.• Wendy Clark, Tabilha
,.._
Clark. Kimberly .... ~means. Leana
Cundiff, Elizabeth Downie, Kimberly Ferty, Headier Franckowiak,'
Allison Gannaway, Autumn Griffllh, Tracey Grueser, Randall Johnson, Lori Kelly, Gary Kerr, Yea~g Kong, Kevin Lambert, Melissa Maynard, Carlos Miana, Courtney Midkiff, Scott Moore, Lorena
Oiler, Kelly Phelps, Michael ·
Phillips. S~ie Price, Rick Lee
Price, Jenmfer Proffitt, Loretta ·
Reitmire, Regina Rider, Beth
Roush, Angela S~les, Virginia
Marie Shuler, Sheryl Thoma, ~na Turner, Mike Welsh, Holly
Williams, Michelle Young.

2 Secllono, 14 Poges 25 ...,,.
A Muhlm.clla Inc. NewoiM'I*

OEPA begins drafting·solid waste district plan

'C:

fnlin4"diat

cenL Hlgb In mld-450s.

Ohio; .Friday, November 20,1992

Wlllther

,

Low

•

=:d;,

.-.'II&amp;....,-....'8"·•

..

tonlgbt ID upper 401.
Saturday, Cbanc:e ol rain 88 per-

2934

Page4

iOWJet,

._.,2 2 ·

..

Pick4:

Local subdivisions in District
18, which inclpdes Meigs County,
can now .apply for fmancial assistance for lssile 2 monies for infrastructure capital improvements.
Applications are available now
from Buckeye Hills-Hockin~ Valley RegiOiial Developmem D;sttict.
The deadline for filing an application in this seventh rountt of Issue 2
monies is Dec. 23 at5 p.m.
Besides Meigs, Disttictl8 covers Atliens, Belmont, Hocking,
Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum,
NoMe, Perry ahd Washington
Counties.
.
The state-lss11e 2 program was
born out of a November, 1987
amendment to the Ohio Constitution which allows lhe state to use
'its general revenues toward providing financial assistance to local
subdivisions for capital improve·
ment infrastructure projects. ·
Specifically, the state can use
general revenues as debt support
for issuing up to $120 million il)
bonds each year, lhe proceeds of
which are to be used for project
financing pwposes. Tbe total pro-

videcl for under lhe program is $1.2· decision-making as to specific projects to be funded.
.
billion.
.
To
do
that
the
Ohio
General
Eligible infrastructure activities
include improvements of roads, Assembly created 19 Public Woiks
bridges, drinking water systems, Distticts to whi~h program apprqwaste waler facilities, storm water priations are allocated each year.
systems, and solidwaste handling District Public Works Integrating
Committees, consisting of local
facilities.
elected
officials representing all
A second way fcl' infrastructure
levels
of
local government, assemfunding is through lhe Local Transble
infrastructure
material from
portation Improvement Program
their~cts
and
make
recommen(L TIP) which was created as a
dations
to
the
Ohio
Public
Works
direct result of the July, 1989
Committee
where
fi'nal
funding
increase in the stale's psoiine tsx.
decisions are made.
Thi~ provil\es for one penny of the
Any local subdivision that
3.2 cent increase to be set asule to
· help local subdivisions fund road requires financial assistance to
and bridge improvements. Given move forward on infrastructure
expecied revenues of some $57 projects can apply for funding
milliOn, .its primary objective ~ to tluough the Public Works District
further support the efforts bemg Per capita or revenue sharing is ·not
· made by the state through the Issue a basis for consideration iri allocating funds. No particulat communi2 program.
The JlUIPOSe of bolh of the leg- ty has an entitlement to the funds.
Applications for funding are
islative programs is to establish a
available
.from the Buckeye Hillslong-term capital improvement
Hockin$
Valley
Regional Developplan:J and budgeting progr:un at
ment
Dtstrict,
614-374-9436,
either
the
level, as well as puumg m
place a system of decentralized Donna Russell or Boyer Simcox.

·

E. Bartow Jones dead at 87
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. served in the state Senate from
(AP) Former state Sen. E. Bartow 1948 to 1956·
Jones, father of Kentucky Gov.
Brereton Jones, once a RepubliBrereton Jones and for decades can lilre his father, swit,ched to the
.praised as one of Mason County's Democratic Party in 1975 when he
most powerful politicians, dted moved from West Virgiitia to Ken-·
today, a funeral director said. He tucky · ·
·
87
Bartow Jones' dau§hter, Sandy
was •
· k
d
Dunn, said her father s efforts to
"He ·had been real s;c • an 1 improve his community drew
know that he had been at the nurs- praise from all qlianers.
ing home," said LuAnne Bussell of
"He bad a high moral code of
the Crow-Hussell Funeml Home in ethics. His word was his bond. I
Point Pleasant. Family members think even people who didn' t like
said he bad been ill for 16 months.
led h
Mrs
Jones died in Mason &lt;;ounty, him r~ted im for that,"
·
where· his son Brereto~ was born · Du:!~er had been livin~ in the
and grew UP before movmg to Ken• house where he was born, she said.
tucky, Ano~ ~n, Ned Jones of_
Gov. Gaston Caperton said BarBarboursville, ts a state senator tow Jones was "one of West Virfrom C&amp;bell County.
.
·ginia' s most outstanding citizens,"
Bartow Jones, a Republican, a.respected businessman and public

--Local briefs--__,
Deer-vehicie wreck reported

No injuties w~ ~ following a deer-pickup truck wreck
on Ohio 7 in Salisbury 'roWttsbip Thursday around 11 p.m.
.
oBvid E. Stephens, 45, of lloyd, Ky., was soulhboundon Ohto 7
and struck and killed a deer tbat was attempting to cross the road·
way, the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the S~ Higbway Patrol repclted.

serVant who conveyed his values to
his famil .
"I belove his greatest legacy is
his outstanding children, who bave
also contributed much to their
stateS and communities in business
and in public service," Caperton
said.
U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd served
with Jones in the state Senate.
"West Virginia bas lost a great
citizen lind a very fine man,, and I
have lost a good friend," Byrd said.
Secrerary of State Ken Hechler,
who knew Bartow )ones for 30
years, once employed Jones' .
daughter, Kakki, in his congressiOiial office in the 1970s.
Hechler, a Democrat, said his
frieedship with Jones transcended
party lines.
"He raised a reallr. wonderful
family" Hechler said. 'He was certainly 'a leader in his community
and throughout the state."
Hechler called community service "the hallmark of Bartow
Jones' life."
Funeral arrangements were .

incomplete.

of Educadoo. Here, Chrli Snyder, aa 1nStrnc· .
donal tecllnoloPt from Ohio Uolvenlty IIISbts
Patricia Slirlver, foreground, I fiftil grade
lellcber, and 8Mid7 Bowen, a cook at the IIIChool.
All oltbe ICiiool'a stair -ben were invited to
participate Ia the pi'Op'am.

Lawmakers OK drunken driver ·bill·

Deer accidents reported .

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Friday that the
deparlment investipted two deer/Car accidents on Thursday.
The first accident took place on Thursday at 12:30 a.m., when
· Robert J. Damron, traveling east on State Route 681 near Happy
Hollow Road, struck a deer that ran into the padJ of his 1983
Oldsmobile. Damage was IIIOIIerate.
At 6:4!5 a.m. yesterday •. J..arry R. Mees of Portland wu westbound on State Route 124 in Lebmon Townsbip when be struCk a
deer, causing light damage to lhe.front of the 198'3 Oievrolet tbat he
was driving.
'

'

.

\

Five indictments anticipated

The Meigs County P10e:ut!DJ Atlomey'a offil:e llllici~ filing flve ocw indictments in Metp County Commoo Pleu Coia'1
sometime on Friday.
.
.
. The indictments are tile result of a gnnd jury ICSIIOII beld m the

COIItlnued on page 3

COMPUTER TRAINING - Starr memben
· at Cbeller Elementary Scbool, botb te1cbers
and supptil't staff, bepo a ftve•week computer
literat7 c011ne on Wedneada7. Tbe course is
funded throup die CODDI7'• Rural Demonstradoo Grant, received from 1ft Obln Department

. BARTOW JONES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State lawmakers passed a bill
allowing 1111thorilies to immediately
seize licenses from motorilts who
fail or refiJie to ta1te aiObiiety test.
The ptoposal Wll hwarded to
Gov. Oeor&amp;e Voinovicb on Thursday as the Leglllature JlQIIIId more
dJan I dozen meaures before headinti home tor the 'Jbanlrsgivlng and
pre-Cbristloa8 boliday. .
Both bouses will reconvene
Dec. IS.
Michael DaWIOII, dJe pemor's
·(ireu sec;dlly,llid VoiJioylcb wDI
study the leglJiatlon, along with
another bill deal!n' with liquor
lic~!JSCS, before dectding whether

to sign tbCm. · · ·
The Second bill aDows the state
to set countywide quotaS for licenses, eliminatlllg quotas for individual communities and IDWDihips. ,
Tbe ·Senate and House deferred
several ~loms until December,
including a projected bud&amp;et deficit
· of $300 million to $325 million,
w.hich may require an inc:reue in
taxes.
. Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-CiDcinnati, and House
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersbura, met priVIIIely with Voinovich
.to dllcus die deficit.
They reviewed a list of "rev~ enllllicemenll," but made no

decisions, Riffe saill'latcr.
Rep. William Healy, D-Canton,
won 93-1 Howse a~oval of the
bill that allows se1zinJ1 drivers •
licenses and closes loopholes in
Ohio's clrunlten driving laws.
PoiX:e lllready can lake licenses
from repeat offenden, but this bill
covers flrst-dme drivers wbo 1esJ
above •~ 0. percent on an alcobolblood test, fail a breatb test, or
tiruse to ta1te a test.
• . · ·
The bill requires the arresting .
officer to iasue a ~ clrivin&amp; .
permit. good for IS days. Theoffender gets a court hearina to
appeal dJe otherwise lllltomatic sixContinued on page 3

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