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sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, OH . Point Pl. . .nt, wv

November 22, 1182

Ohio Lottery

Corn.. .coatlllued trom n.t
cy and Outlook summarizes the

;:
. MYSTERY FARM - Tbis week's mystery
.- farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
- Conservalloli District, is located somewhere in
_ .Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly cODtest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
.- guess to tbe Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
r Pomeroy, Oblo, 457119, or the GaUl polls ' Daily
;; Tribune, 825 Third Ave;, Gallipolis, Obio,

45631, and you may win a $5 pri~e from tbe
Ohio Valley PublisbiDg Co~ Leave your name,
address and telepboae number with your card
or Jetter. No telepbODe calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to tbe news·
paper off'K:e by 4 p.m. each WednesdaY. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lo!tery.
Next week, a GaJUa County farm will be featured by the Gallla Soil and Water Conservation District.

~Break
•

with tradition and nuke
your Thanksgiving turkey
·

~ WASHINGTON (AP) at 50 percent power for approxi-Let the bird stand for 20 min~Tbanks~vil)g cooks looking for a
mately 7 to 10 minutes per powtd utes after removing it from the
.(break wtth ·lladition can microwave
-less than two houn for an 11· microwave. This is critical because
;lhis Thanksgiving's turtey, sug- poun~ turkey. 1JliS prevents over- . food completes cooking during the
!3esis the manager Qf the Agricul- coolcing outer areas.
standing time. Final temperature
:ture Department's meat and poultry
- Always use a meat ther- should be 180 degrees FahrenheiL
·:llot line.
·
mometer to determine doneness.
The USDA's national toll-free
• Susan Conley lists these safety Check the bird in sevellll locations number for more information on
tips for microwaving a turkey:
before letting it stand. The turkey preparing meat and poultry safely
: -Choose a bird that weighs should be at least 170 degrees 1s 1-800-535-4555. For WashingJess than 12 pounds. There must be Fahrenheit when taken from the ton, D.C., area n!Sidents, it is 202'at least three inches of clearance microwave.
720-3333.
:between the bird and the sides and
:wp of the microwave oven.
Crossword Puzzle Answer
; If you try to squeeze too large a
bird mto too small an oven, the
iurkey will not cook properly.
Some pans may be overcooked,
others undercooked.
· -Use an oven cooking bag. !.:=+'::-¥=Specially designed nylon bags pro- L':f~
mote even cooking, which helps a r::
turkey reach a safe temperature 17-E
throughout.
.
- -RDIBte the bird and dish sev.eral times, even in ovens with a 17-P+'-'tumtable.
• -Don't microwave a stuffed
turke~. The bones and density of
the bird may not allow stuffmg to
reach a safe temperature.
-Microwave the unstuffed bird ~+.;;~

Little things
· Art Worth A lot
in
the Classified Section! '

· impact in the following way. "The
winncn will find it difficult to pin1 poiDt gains from the NAFTA, but
the loaers will clearly see the p8in. •
A mmii\der to farmers who need
to become certified as private pesticide applicators in order to purchas~ restricted-use pesticides. A
class will be held Tuesday, Novemher 24, 7-10 p.m. at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center in.
Pomeroy. The training will give
special empbasis on vegetable and
greenhouse categories. Farmers in
Meigs and surrounding c:ounties are
welcome· to perticipate. Farmers
who currently have private applica·
tor certification but need renewal
classes will want to attend sessions '
to be planned in both counties after
the fJrsl of the 'jUII. Call the Meigs
County Extension Office (9926696) for further details on the
November 2A class.
Now is the time when most
homeowners cut or purchase, and
begin to bum fuewood. Firewood
is a source of warmth and comfort,
but is also an important avenue for
pests to enter the borne. Most pesis
living in fuewood post no threat to
people, furniture or to the slruCture.
Nonetheless, homeowners often
becom"e concerned when· insects

emerge from wood which is
· brought indoors, and crawl or fly
about the house.
.
Control of f~wood pests is bell
accomplished by management of
the firewood iuelf. Spraying ~
wood with in4ecticides is NOT
necessary nor recommended and
could result in harmful vapors
when the wood is burned. A much
better approach is to: Store rue·

Bevo Francis .
classic ends

wood outdoon, only bringing in
what you plan to bum immedi•tely
or widlin 1 few holn. Position tite
woodpile away from the house and
off the ground. Bum older wood
first in order to minimize the time
during which new infestations can
become establislled.
.
Ed Vollbon Is the G•lll•
Couty Elltenlioa Aae•t, Aari·
culture.

PageS

LETART CORPORATION
PLANT ~3
UPPFR RT. 7, JUST PAST

•

Super Lotto:
6-U-14-15-35-36
Kicker:

'

5-4·2-11-0-9
Pick 3:
4-S-8
Pick 4:
1-2-2-9

•

•

I&lt;ANAUGA, OH.
BURLII.~ 011.
Vol 43, No. 1411
Copyrlgh~ 1992

ALL SIZES LIMESTON.
PLUS RIP RAP
•

&gt;

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

WASHINGTON (AP),.... The
flfSt estimate of fall pota10 production in the Unit¢ States is 364 mil·
lion hundredweight, 2 percent
below last year's record. _
Harvested acreage declined 5
percent while yields averaged 325
hundredweight pa- acre, 3 percent
more than the record of a year ago,
says a USDA report this month on
vegetableS.

OTHER DEALERS
Say They Have The Lower Prices•
OTHER DEALERS
..Try To _Say They a·ave The Best Deals. /

THE BEST DEAL IS S'tiLL•••

THE HOMETOWN DEAL!
Crossword Puzzle on Pas~ C-7

By DAN EVEN
slalion reported one death in South
Associated l;'ress Writer
·Carolina, but it couldn' t immediTornadoes skipped across 11 ately be confmned.
..
The unusual condJtJons were
states in the South and Midwest .
over the weekend, killing at least .caused by a. low.-movil)g southern
23 people and injuring hundreds. flow of mmst au off the Gulf of
Rescuers used dogs to search for Mexico that com~ined _with !"luch
victims in the twisted wreckage colder westerly wmds higher m the
that had been peoples' homes.
atmosphere •. said Henry SteigerThe tornadoes were pan of an waldt, a N~u~ "!'eather .Serv1ce
unusual November storm system meteorol~t ~Indianapolis.
that swept from Texas through the
In MJSSJSSlppl, a tornado
Southeast and north into Ohio and smashed through a Brandon mobile
Indiana
home park late Saturday, then
The rJISt toflllldoes hit Louisiana slcipped across town to ~ ~pscale
and Texas on Saturday, damaging neighborhood, where It k1ll.ed ,a
about 300 homes in Houston but . father, h1s son and ~wo of the boy s
causing only minor injuries. As the Cub ~cout ~udd1es who were
system spread east, brutal winds · spep,din.l! the 01 \lht.
smashed thousands of homes and . lt.JUSt whiSked ~~ough here
businesses caused scores of car like s.Jicmg hot b~tter, Constable
· ·d
'd
h h Marlln Mann sa1d. "We've got
acc1 ents an . e-:en tore a c urc _ two-story homes .not bigger than a
st;ee~&gt;l~ loose during a Sunday ser bag of firewood . They're wiped
v1ces m Woodstock, Ga.
,
"It was absolute total devasta· out
.
tion," Mississippi Gov . Kirk / ~h.e mob1le home shared by
Fordice said after touring hard-hit Sheli1a Rowell, .her husb~nd and
Rankin county, where 10 people two daughters. fl1pped on us roof.
died six.in a trailer park.
They were bruised but surv1ved.
O::.W from the storms and tor· . "It was all ~~ could _do .If hold
nli!oes included 15 in Mississippi; onto each oth.er.. she .SBJd., It was
six in Georgia; and one each in the most tem~rmg thmg I ve ever
Tennessee and Kentucky. A radio hved through.

At least 10 peopl~ were killed
and 86 injured in Brandon, about
15 miles east of Jackson, according
to Charlie Wilkinson, civil defense
director for Rankin County. Sixty
houses and dozens of mobile "·
homes were damaged.
Five storm-related deaths were
reported elsewhere in the state. An
elderly couple was killed when
their hQme in Clarkston was
destroyed. More than 200 injuries
were reported around the state. ·
About 75 ~pie at·the Mount
Carmel Bapt1st Church in Wood·
stock. Ga., escaped injury when a
twister blew the steeple off, throw·
ing it 200 yards into the church
cemetery.
Ann Cleveland said worshipers
had just finished singing "Amazing Grace" when the .tornado hit,
forcing them to duck under their
pews for cover.
Deputies used tracking dogs to
search for injured peOJ.&gt;Ie in the
debris of sevellll homes m Putilam
County, northeast o£ Macon, Ga.
In western Tennessee, a tornado
early Sunday overturned a mobile
home near Toone, killing a.n It year-old boy, officials said.

,t

•

'

I.~

·-· -~

~~

impending ruling.
,
COLuMBUS (AP) :_ The Pub· produce waste sludge.
But
in
a
statement,
the
company
Other criiics said scrubbers
lie Utilities Commission of Ohio is
said
specific
customers
costs
are
scheduled to decide Wednesday would cost more than lhe company
difficult
tb
estimate
because
they
whether American Eleclric Power calculates and endanger up to 7,000
depend on liow regulaton allocate
.
Co. will be allowed to install scrub- manufacturing jobs.
scrubber
costs 11mong the compaSWitching the fuel would lead to
bets at its Gavin plant in Cheshire.
ny's
seven
operating companies.
The $800 million cost of build·. closing the company's two coal
The company, an umbrella or,gaing the scrubbers to remove sulfur mines in Meigs County and elimidioxide emissions would increase nating I ,200 jobs, more than one- nization for Ohio Power wh1ch
residential rates by at least 4 per· third of the United Mine Worker.;' owns Gavin, predicted rates
cent or about $22 a year, the com- 3,000 remaining members in Jhe wouldn't go up more than 6 percent.
Ohio-West Virginia dislrict
pany said.
The controversy began because
"These scrubbers are of ultimate
The Ohio Chapter of the Sierra
Club opposes the plan. The group iinponance," said state Sen. Roben of the Clean Air Act of I 990,
believes switching Gavin to low- Nay, R-Barnesville. "For every which orders utilities to drasticaJJy
sulfur out-of-slate coal would be a coal min.lng job, there are six reduce sulfur dioxide emissions ,
better way to help the environment spinoff jobs. If we can't scrub the beginning in 1995.
The company is trying to make
coal and retain the jobs, the end
and would raise rates J.(i percent.
Some have said scrubbers are result will be monstrous welfare . Gavin meet the regulations. The
plant produces 400,000 tpns of sulenvironmentally unsound because and unemployment."
they make the plant less efficient, ' The company officials declined fur dioxide a year, about 25 percent
produce excess carbon dioxide and to be interviewed because of the of the company's total.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -Bill
Clinton filled a book with his many
campaign promises. Now, his
strategists are trying to identify a

handful of ''signatur(l ideas" apart from economic and health
proposals- that he'll promote
quickly after becoming president

".Let Us Prove To· You We Rave The Best. Deal"
1616
EASTERN
AVENUE
.
'

ON THE SPOT .
FINANCING!

•

GBO

•

Hometown Dealer

GALUPOLIS, OH.

(614) 446·3672
OR
1·10.521·0014
Mo1.·FrL 1:00·7:00 ..

Sat.. 1:00-4:00
.

Clos... Su•~J

A llultlmedla Inc. Newopaplf

NOT MUCH LEFT • P. . Joyner, facing,
gets a bug from 11tr siscer Sllerl7 Giordano out·
side Joyner's deslroyed • - Sanday in Bran-

CHRISTMAS FOR THE BIRDS · ·strings or popcorn, and
miniature orange rind baskets along with pinecones filled with ·
peanut butter and covered with bird feed made this a tree .for the
birds. The tree w8s prepared by tile Jade Junior Garden Club for
display at the aanual Cbrlstmu flo11oer show of the Meigs County
Gardea Club AfiiOCiation beld ·at Carleton Scliool over the week·end. Gl:vlng Joshua Bolin, a club member, a helping band witb
decorating tbe tree is his sister, Adrian Bolin. (See story on page
10)
.

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
· ARCANUM - Residents wen:
allowed back into their homes
today to chect damage following a
tornado that S&gt;¥epl tluough town,
injuring eight poople and damaging
dozens of houses and buslnes$cs.
The tornado was one of several
funnel clouds reponed in Ohio
Sunday night in westml and southwestern Ohio. No deaths were
reponed.
Another twister swept across
Preble County on the Indiana bor·
der, ·damaging about 20 buildings
and causing ~ injuries. authori·
ties said.
Residents who could not stay in
their homes in~ . in wtsiCm
Ohio about 25 miles oonbwc:st of
Dayton, had been taken to a shelter
in another town.
Police and Darke County sherifrs deputies were stationed at the
borders of town today, allowing
onI y reSidents inside, said a man
who identified himsdf ooly as corrections offJC« Miller at the sher·
iffs depanmenL ·
Jake McGlothin and was inside

~·

I .

his home when the storm hit about

6:30p.m.

" Inside it was like a bomb went
off -"'g lass everywhere," said
McGlothin, whose wife was treated
for cuts at Wayne Hospital in
Greenville.
Eight people were taken to the
hospital, said a nursing .supervisor
who wouldn't give her name. One,
a 22-monlh-old girl, was admitted
and was in fair condition today.
The others were treated and
released. The hospital had said
Sunday night that two people were
admittt.d
Arcanum Fire Chief Bud Grny
estimalal that 25 to 30 houses were
darnagecL
.
Trees and power ·hnes were
down throughout the village, and
residents' belongings were strewn
across lawns and streets. Water
beaters and dishwashers were in
the sbeets. Aluminum siding was
blown into treetops.
"It's the biggest thing that ever
hit this town for a long time, " Gray
said.

Electric power and telephone

service was out over much of the

village of ahour2,000 people.
Gray said utility crews turned
off natural gas lines in the village.
An area of I 0 to I 2 blocks on
the village's east side sustained the
most damage, Gray said. Residents
were taken to a shelter at the
Franklin-Monroe High School in
Pitsburg, about three miles east o.f
Arcanum.
.
Gray did not know how many
people s1ayed at the shelter.
.
Brad Flora, 26. was inside his
house when the storm hiL
.
" When we heard it, it was just
unbelievable. We just b)lsted our
butts to get down 10 the basement
as soon as we could," Aora said.
"It just came up real quick."
·
Forrest Harshbarger, a village
firefighter who was off duty was at
home when the tornado hit.
" The whole place staned shaking. You just heard what a nightmare was like," Harshbarger said.
A tornado hit Preble County, ·
also in western Ohio, about 6:40
p.m., said sheriff's Capt. Ron
Layne.

Jan.20.

One leading candidate is a vol.untary national-service program
offering college students federal
aid that could be repaid later by
community service as a teacher,
law enforcement officer, health·
care worker or school counselor.
Other front-burner ideas are
campaign finance reform, welfare
reform and shaking up the bureaucracy to make it smaller and more
'accountable.
Clinton campaigned on the
theme that he's ••a different lcind of
Democmt.••
The task now is to identify
"what are the ideaS that can Jeally
give definipon to your administra·
lion, that can reinforce the effon to ·
make change," said AI From, Clio·
ion's assistant director for doinestic
policy.
J'hose programs are known in
Clinton's transition lleadquaners as
the "signature ideas."
.
In an interview, From said the
"signature ·ideas" will proceed on
a parallel uaclt with other key elements of Clinton's agenda: reviving the economy and creating jobs,
and putting in plllce a comprehen. sive healtll-catc system.
·
Each of Clinton's campaign
promises has a politica) constiJuen·
cy that wants the new president to
put its priorities fmf. It is
inevitable that some interest aroups
wiU be disappointed.
. "In 10.weeks (before Clinton
takes offJCC) you can do a few initiatives," From said. "You can't
do the world. I'm not ftOing to
every groun and asldng, What do
you want?'f'

THE PILGRIM WAY • Shdeets ill andes
one uc1 six • Salaa c '« .n
tuy Sdtool
joined toptller • t'ridaJ lor • T•awqiYilll
program for tlleir ~ A tratlilioul "pil·
grim" meal was ~~ted, ~ sllls ud '""i•p

I.

---···

doo, Miss. Tornadoes passed through the area.
Saturday night killing 15 people and injuriqg:
more than 150 otben. (AP pboto)

Tornado
strikes
western
.Regulators set to decide
Ohio
town;
eight
injured
on Gavin scrubbers·

Aides making a 'promise'
list and. checking it twice

Ill Progra111 Cars have
bala ..ce of
ile•

1 Section, 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 23, 1992 ·

Killer tornadoes rampage
across .South, Midwest ,_.~

...,. DeDver aad Spread JJmedoae"

Potato production down

Cloudy and colder tonight.
Low around 40.

wtrt perrormed. Here, ftrst graders turn to ·
play a piJerlm pme, "spOOII ball", as tbelr Pllf·
nts watc•. l:lctured are Adam and Pamela
Jones, Stephanie and Connie Joees, and Brenda
and Misty Handley.

....,.

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\

Commentary
.

'.

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

,

MICH.

~

Private army helps Florida hurrlcane wctims ·
FLORIDA CITY, FLA. ll.

Mike KimmerliDg and a~ Wells
both Cline 10 find a fortune in the
rublllil ol H~ Andrew. They

'·

By Jack Anderso~J
and

•

PA.

Michael Binstein

• IColumbusI50" I

W. VA.

Budget solutions ~ould
mean Christmas tax boost

...wan

u.

1'\M iREEt:' TKE'· CUNTON

TRI\WS\TION 1'EAM.

Missing the point-on ·Justice Marshall ·

Tqday in history

In a recent issue of the Stanford
Law Review, two present members
of the Supreme Court - Sandra
Day O'Connor and Anthony
By The AJiioeiated ·Press
Today is Monday, Nov. 23, the 328tb day of 1992, There are 3g~days KeDf11l(ly- pay unusually personal
tributes to Thurfood Marshall.
left in the year.
.
Marshall, 0 Connor writes, by
.
Today's Highlight in History: .
the
power of his presence - a
On Nov. 23, 1889, the fll'SI jukebox made its debut in. San Francisco, at
power
gained through his life expeihe Palais Royale Saloon. The contraption, devised by Louis Glass, con- .
riences
- "reminded us ... that
sdled of in Edison tinfoil phonograph with four listerung rubes and a coin
judges,
u
safeguarders of the COilslQt for each tube. A nickel purchased a couple of' minutes of music.
·On this date: .
'
. .
slim lion, must constantly strive to
··In 1765, Frederick County, Maryland, repudiated the British Stamp narrow the gap between the idea of
equal justice and the reality of
AcL
• In 1804, the 14th president of the United SlaiCS, Franklin Pierce, was social mequality.... No one could
help but be moved by Justice Thurbam in Hillsboro, N.H.
good
Marshall's spirit; no one
·In 1903, singer Enrico Caruso made his American debut at the
could
avoid being .touched by his
Metropolitan Opera House in New York, appearinl! in "Rigoletto."
soul.''
·
.
•In 1936; the fll'SI edition .of "Life," the picture mllgiZine created by
Justice
Kennedy
says
that
"the
Henry R. Luce, was published.
.
compassion
of
Thurgood
Marshall
' In 1943, U.S; forces seized control of Tarawa and Makin from the
Japanese during the Central Pacific offensive in the Gilbert Islands' during is exhibit A for the proposition that
judicial reason cannot be divorced
World War II.
,
from the life experience of
In 194S, most wanime rationing of foods in the United Stales ended.
judges."
.
In 19S9,the musical "Fiorellill," with a score by Jerry Bock and lyrics
Unwittingly,
both
O'Connor
and
by Sheldon Hamick. and starring Tom Bosley as New Yolk City Mayor
Kenn.edy
have
demonstrated
that
F1orell0 La Guardia, opened on Broadway.
..In 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson proclaimed Nov. 2S a day of their own life experiences, so profoundly different from Marshall's,
· national mourning following the assassination of President John F.
have made it possible for them,
Kennedy.
, In 197l,the People's Republic of China was seated in the U.N. Securi- during the last tmn of the court, to
ty Council. .
.
· largely destroy the part of MarIn 1980, some 4,800 peQple were lcilled by a series of earthquakes that · shall's life work that was most
imponant 10 hill\.
devastated sou them Italy.
In her article, O'Connor emphaIn 1983, the Soviet deleJalion walked out of superpower talks on
. reducing medium-range nuclear weapons.in Europe. (The talks resumed sizes that through the 19S4 Brown
.v. Board of Educatinn case in March 1985.)
.
arg'ued before the Supreme Court
by Thurgood Marshall - this

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Berry's ·world

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lawyer for blaclc children in segregated public schools "compelled
us, as a nation, to come to _grips
with some of the contradictions
within ourselves."
And Kennedy, in a speech
before the American Bar Association.in San Francisco, noted that
~·ihe reason that Marbury v. Madison: and Brown v. Board of Educalioll ... silrvive is that their authority rose above the turmoil or the
event and the turmoils of the
time. ••
But, as The New York Times
has said in an editorial about the
present Supreme Court, its "commitment to finish the work of
Brown v. Board of Education
(now) hangs by a thread.'' The editorial was about the opinion written by Anthony Kennedy last
March -in Freeman v: PillS. Juslice O'Connor joined in that decision, as did all the other members
of this court. except for Clarence
Thomu who did not panicipate.
Writing for the court. Kennedy
ruled !hal if public schools are still
segregated because of residential
patterns - and not by law - there
is no constitutional remedy .to end
that separation of lh!l races.
This means that so widespread a
form of apartheid in American public schools is constitutionally cor-

Yet, the 11th Circuit judges •
rect. Thirty-two percent o(black
sbldents attend schools that are 90 understood - more deeply than
percent I!&gt; 100 percent free of Kennedy or O'Connor- that Mar- .
whites. Sixty-three percent of black shall and Brown v. Board or Edukids ' are in public schools that .are cation represent Oliver Wendell
'Holmes' understanding that "the
predominantly non-white.
Thurgood Marshall knew this law embodies the story of a
was coming. During oral argu- nation's development through
ments in a 1990 case, Board of many centuries, and it cannot be
Educat!on of Oklahoma v. Dowell, dealt with as if it contained only
Solicitor General Kenneth Starr the axioms and corollaries of a
was makinJ the argument that boo1c of mathematics.''
when housmg patterns lead to . The 11th Circuit said Oatly that
schools that are predominantly a school district must eliminate
.black or white, the Constitution is racial · sel'regation ''root and
branch" (a phrase Marshall had
nOt being violaled.
Justice Marshall asked Starr: used in the past). And it "may not
"But it still remains a segregated shirk its constitutional duties by
pointing to demogrsphic shifts."
school?"
"By virtue of residential segre- Where necessary, school officials
have to "con,sider pairing and clwigation,.it does," Starr answered.
"Then it's still a segre2ated lering or schools, drastic gerrymanschpol," Marshall repeated. l'o And dering or school zones, and grsde .
you don '1 think segregation is reorganization as well as busing.··
But these ways or ending segre- ·
unconslibltionall"
galion
in the schools ....: even when
Starr did not think it was under
t.
h
ere
are
no other ways :..... are
those circumstances. Nor do jushighly
unpopular
in the turmoils of
tices Kennedy, O'Coimor and their
theSe
limeS,
So
now
Kennedy and
brethren.
O'Connor
pay
tribute
to Thurgood
On the other hand, the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals - which Marshall by rcsurrecting the "sq~~~­
dealt with Freeman v. PillS on that rate but equal" ruling of PlessY v.
case1s way to the high court - had Ferguson. What a way to say good.
a much clearer view of the consti- bye.
tutional remewes still possible for
Nat .Hentorr is a uationally
segregated children. None of those reuowued authority on the First
judges had ever hail' the benefit or Amendm.eut and the rest or the
regularly being in the compelling Bill or Rights aud a writer ror
presence ol Justice Marshall.
NEA.

The election's -pro-choice Message

..

•
'•'

Nat'Hentqff

.....

~-

~.L~
C 1192 tNNEA. Inc

"He didn't publish, §O he perished."

should
taken
where
andInsights
when they
are be
found,
which
is
why my text for today comes from
Pat Robertson, the wizard of religious capitalism. Speaking on his
. television channel the night after
the· presidential results were in,
Robertson matter..of-factly said that
the battle over·abortion had been
lost, at least for the immediate
fut~. He couldn't undersland it.
but the American people had sided
with 11oose who marched behind the
banners of freedom of choice and
abortion rights.
For once, Robertson had it just
right, though it is probable that his
words were intended 10 mobilize
the faithful rather than to inform
them. On many subjects, the rnessage or Nov. 3 was mixed if not
downrJ:t confusing, but on the
'10 llllional prominence
by the Supreme Court nearlr two
decades ago in Roe v. Wade, 11 was
clear as crystal, The people voted
for the ltaiUI quo, which is 10 say
for. the individual woman •s right to
decide for henelf whether or 1101 to
have an abortion.
In some places, they did it

'
uodd•nc.
Ca ..ter Ill
n
1

•

,

,

explicitly, either by rejecting proposals that would have curtailed
abortion rights or by passing those
which would guarantee them. In
Maryland, for instance, the voters
emphatically declared that their
state would preserve freedom of
choice· no matter how a coilservalive court might eventually rule on
the continued validity of Roe. In
Missouri, voters rejected the gobernatorial bid of the state's attotney
general, a man synonymous with
the anti-abortion cause.
More generally, the voters .
endorsed Roe v. Wade by electing
Bill Clinton. The contrast drawn
during the campaign between his
position and that ofPreaident Bush
could not have been clearer. The
president, a laic-blooming convert
to the pro-life posldon, held tenaciously to it from begilllling to end.
Bill Clinton, who in the past was
. considerably more restrained in his
enthusiasm for llllhindeted freedom
~f ~boice, became a 100 percenter
· m 1ts. behalf. The economy was the
i/;

dominant issue, but no one who providiRg aboition counseling. He .
voted for Glinton had any doubt· supports the Freedom of Choice ~
about where he stood on choice as Act. a measure before Congress •
weD.
that would prevent the states "from '
That is one of the reasons why restricting ·abortion rights. He is .in
he ran no better than he did in favor of federal funding for poor •
many precincts in the South and up people's abortions.
and down the Mississippi River.
All these are pro-active possibil- ,
Sixty-one pCn;ent of all white bornagam Christians who voted on ilies. What is at least as imJlO!Ianl •
Nov. 3 went for Bush, the Episco- is the president's power or judicial .
palian. Jus~ 21 percent supponed appointment. from the district level
to the Supreme Coon. The high
Abortion had to figure prominently cOurt
exiSts in a Slate of uneasy tenin their calculations.
·
sion
today,
its last word on aborConversely, though many
tion
a
H
decision
earlier this year
women had to .think twice about
•
that
upheld
the
genmi
right 10 an ·
Clinton because of allegations
abQru~
while
approving
limited
aljoul his marital infidelity, 46 perrestrictions.
While
he
should
not
cent finally supported him comapply
a
sinaJe-~
lllSIIO
his
nom·
pared to 37 percent for the president. Again, it is not hard to inees, the president can ~ should
believe that the abortion issue ensure that none is committed to
legal theories he politically oppos'helped tip the balance.
es.
·
.In case there were any doubts
.about what his election would
Hoddlug Carter Ill, former
mean, the president-elect dispelled State Department spokesmah
thenJI\Jn his first Jll"sa conference •d award-wiD,In&amp;.reporter, edi·
and lhrough statements br his tor aud publlaher, Is presldeut ot
spokesmen. He Intends to lift the MaiDStreet, a Wasbln11ton, B.C .•
PI rule that prevents persamel at based televlalon production com•.
fedaally funded hesJth clinicS from pany aDd a writer for NEA.
· '

Ice

Sunny Pr. Cloudy Cloudy

Vis A•soc;.led Pross Grop/1/csNot

· C1992 Accu·W..Iher, Inc.

~..----Weather---Wednesday through Friday:
Wednesday, chance of rain .
Lows in the 30s and highs SO to 55.
Thanksgiving Day, a chance of
rain. Lows in the 30s. Highs in the
40s. Friday ; chance of rain or
snow. Lows aroUnd 30. Highs 35 to
40,
South Central
· Tonight,
cloudy and colder.
.. ,

Low around 40. North winds
around 10 mph becomng light and
variable. Tuesday, mostly cloudy
with a slight chance .or showers.
High in the mid-SOs. Chance of
rain iS 30 percent. Thanksgiving
Day outlook, cloudy with a chance
of rain. Morning lows in the mid30s and highs in the mid-405.

.

Meigs AAA receives grant
A grant of $48,000 has been for repairs. Low inc.ome and
made to the Buckeye Hills Area impaired elderly are given a prioriAgency on Aging which serve ty in receiving services.
Meigs and seven other SoutheastTom Evans, housing coordinator
ern Ohio counties by the Low and . for the agency, has worked with
Moderate Income Trust Fund ~o- over 241 clients in the past two
gram, Ohio Depaitmenl of.Devel- years. ''This grant will give us the
opmenL ·
flexibility to serve people who
Out of the 134 applications for haven't been eligible for services in
money,the Area Agency on Aging the past", said Evans. "We wiU be
was one of 38 organizations to be able to spend a little more for
awarded grants.
clients Jhat have multiple home
Providing home repair services repall' problems. These repairs realis a priority for the Area Agency on ly make a difference in their day to
Aging. A large percentage of rural day lives."
elders own their homes but often
The Area Agency on Aging is a
do· not have the resources to keep program of Buckeye RiDs-Hocking
them energy erficien1 and safe. Valley Regional Devc;lopment Dis~
Many impaired elders need to have trict and serves in · addition to
their homes more accessible so Meigs, Aihens, Hocking, Monroe,
they can continue to live indepen- Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washdently, an agency spokesman said.
ington Counties.
The Department of DevelopSenior citizens interested in the
ment fund.s ~~~ll ~e.. added to ., home repair program IJiay ~all the
Deparurlent of Agmg funds tb Options for Elders line at 1-800expand the pool of money available 331-2644.

Meigs EMS responds to calls
Meigs Emergency Services
units answer.ed the following calls
over the weekend: Saturday, 10:36
a.m ., Syracuse to Worchester
Street, Paul Voll to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 12:13 p.m.,
Rutland to Meigs· Mine 31, Mark
Rogers to Holzer Medical Cemer;
12:40 p.m., Columbia and Rutland
units to Cone Road; Alben Cone to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; 7:38
p.m., Syracuse unit went to Lee
Arcle Road, Maxine Philson to
Veterans; 9: 16 p.m., Pomeroy to
State ·Route 681, Arthur Shumway
to Veterans; 11:50 p.m .. Pomeroy
to Laurel Street, Linda Buckley to
Veterans.
Sunday, 12:01 a.m. , Racine
squad to Third Stteet, Jamie Biannon to Veterans; 3:35 a.m., Racine
to Third Street, Kevin Dugan to
Veterans; 12:20 p.m., Racine units
to State Route 124 .and County
Road 35 for an auto accident, vehi-

Free clothing day
The Salvation Atmy in Pomeroy
will hold free clothing day on
Wednesday from 10 a.m. until
noon. All area residents in need ol
clothing are welcome to partiCipate.

The Daily Sentinel
(U8P81tS.IMIOl
Publiahed every arteraoon, Monday
lhroqh Friday, IU Court St. Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley PUbtilhinJ
Compuy/Mu.Jtimedia Inc. . Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Plo. 99'.1·21116. Second cluo
..-lAP pal4 at"-rvy, Ohio.
·Me-: Tho Auoclaled · and the
Ohio Newapaper Auodatioft, National

Adverti•lnl Reprenntattve, Branham
Newopapor Saleo, 733 Third &amp;-.....

· New York, New York 10017.

.

POSTMASTER: Send oddnu challpiiD
The Daily Sen.tta.el, 111 Court St.,
l'ornero), OHio 48769.
8UB8CIUP'I10N IIATBR

117 Curler or lloi&lt;Jr JIG•II•

One Weell. ......... :..~ ............................. $1.60
One MDD.th ............................ - ..........16.96
One Year..... ..................................... f83.20

IINGLIOOPY
PBJOJ:

Dally............................................. ll5 Conil

Subocribers not cleoiriOW ID JlllY tho carti·
er m&amp;y~nmit iD. adiYUOI direct to The
Daily Seatinel on a three, •ix or 12
tiiDIItb buil. Credit will be pven carrier
eoehwoek .
No lllbMriptlono by mail ,......Utled tn
areu when home carrier aervice il
OYIIilable.

•Malllaltoorilldoooa '

Iaolde Melp COuot,y
13 Woob......................................... l21.84

cle and patient gone on arrival;
·3:32 p.m., Syracuse and Racine
units to State Route 124 for an
accident, Jacob Hill and Teny Hill
to Veterans; 3:48 p.m., Pomeroy to
Locust Street, Amber and James
Ward to Veterans.
Monday, 4:15 a.m., Middleport
to Mill Street for Milton Hood, to
Veterans.

Hospital news
Yeteraus Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS·
Colter Hayman, Pomeroy; Alben
Martin, Pomeroy; Paul Yaell, Syracuse; Julius Waldnig, Racine; Jena
Maxine Philson, Syracuse; and
Arthur Shumway.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES •
None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
None.
SUNDAIY DISCHARGES
None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Nov. 20 - Qliver'
Spurlock, Nina Rose, Nicole
Spradlin, Lakin Roach, Zelda Landrum, Clifford Boswell, John Wil·
son, Bonnie Bwke, Milton Brewer,,
Guy McWilliams, Edna Wallace .
Ernestine Withrow, Ci:~la Long,
Melva Sheets and Billie Barry.
Discharges Nov. 21 - Oral
Green, Virginia Ray, Dorothy
Israel, Susan Adams, Brenda
Wood, James Runyon, Roger Bam-.
. house, Be,ssie Burris, Martha Carpenter, Mrs. William Jeffers and
son, Mrs. John King _and daughter,
Phyllis ·Rice, William Trapp, Mrs.
Terry Adams and son, Mrs.
Thomu Johnson and daughter and
Melissa Lavender.
· Discharges Nov. 22 -Edward
Hiestand, Helen Johnson, George
Lemley, Jewel Mays, Jason Anderson; Lucinda Howard, Sonya
Shriver, Mrs. Terry Mullins and
daughter and Trenton Roseberry.
Birth Nov. 20 - Mr. and Mrs.
John King, daughter, Reedsville.
Births Nov. 21- Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Dowen. daughter, Longbot·
iom; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fink,
son, Longbottom, and Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Mullins, daughter, Albany.
Births Nov. 22- Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Burnett, son, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Estel Lavender, son,
New Haven, and Mr. and Mrs.
Anthony Lester, daughter, Jackson.

1

ill w..u.......................................... l43.1&amp;
5I Woob..........................................$84.78
0 . - Molp Co.at,y

ta w.~r~.......................................... l23.40

w-...... . ,.,. . ................... . . . . .$46.110
5I Woob .......... .... ........... .,.,.............*MAO
28

Sei'lllnei-Pag~

68 cases proce.ssed in
..
Meigs County Court

Tuesday, Nov. 24

describe as a hippie colony but poop lives and dies by the seat of
nonetheless has become a lifeline liS panll, but mosdy they've lived
to many who lost everyth\rig they without substantial suppon frpm
had in Hurricane Andrew. Today, major ~~gencies.
are strangers working practically
PHP still provides food, water,
"Every time we're down and
shoulder-to-shoulder in a private
shoes and JUSI abou~ anything else out, we get a miracle," said Kim
army or relief workers - some
the residents of Florida City need Terry, 41, one of the two chefs at
seeking to do weir for themselves,
for daily survival.
.
the com~ who left his home in
othen 10 do good for others.
and a Southesit drawl, he complains
Using a grass-roots approach the Florida Keys and rode his bike
•
Boch, howeVer, have learned the about bein&amp;·slowed down by bust- that employs the barter system 75 miles north after .the iulricanc,
ROBERT L. WINGin"l'
first
rule of this war: Throw the ed insuraac:e companies and his instead or cumbersome paperwork,
Publisher
rule book out the window.
most .despised nemesis - buildin
.
g PHP has bee~ running circles
Miracles come in many fonns.
Kinuilerling, 27, was a jewelry perrmts.
There
was .the lime PHP was nearly
around
the.Red
Cross
and
other,
PAT WHITEHEAD
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
maker and F.t-time carpenter i~
"E!ghty percent of the damage more established' charities. In the · out of fuel for its generators, with
Assistant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
Central Florida who came to Flon- ~ere U due to the nej!lect and devastation that is Florida City, seelllinily no hope of getting moie .
•
da City two days after Andrew with • mcompetence of the msurance PHP volunteers complain that the Out of the blue, several local
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be lesi than 300
· an eye toward · making some comPIIJiies" and local authorities, Red Cross' only visible P.CCS,eDCe is policemen, who frequent the comwords: All Ieners are subjoc:t lo editins UJd must be sisnod with name,
money. He soon became a merce- Wells told our associate Jan on a Jocai billboard, while the Sal- pound during night shifts, showed
address UJd telepbolle number. No unsiiJIOd letters will be published. utters
nary-tumed-missiol)ary.
Moller. His solution: Get enough vation Army h$ a building-supply up with an entire drwn full of gasosbould be in good tute, oddRssin&amp; issues, 1101 personalities .•
Wells, SS, haJf:owner of G.J. qualified contractors and let them warehouse set up on the main bigh- line.
Hutton, a general contractor based do the Work, then worry about the way.
in central Florida, left a business building permits and goverilment
"We gel our stuff through pil''The Red Cross only went
veniJU'C in Idaho to cash in on the gridlock that ineviq~bly throws up where the cameras were," said Jeff lage and plunder. We're a bunc6 of
Andrew cleanup..He is a self-made roadblocks.
Armstrong, one of the few PHP half-crazed kamikazes," SaYS Alan
millionaire whom his friends refer
Kimmerling's profit motive volunteers who grew up in the area Tate, 41, who left his apartment in
to. as "Crocodile," after the· lead e.vaporatcd after watching the and who drifted 10 the organization Fon Lauderdale after the storm,
character in the movie "Crocodile National Guard preparing to dis- after Andrew left his farm looking intending to stay for a week. Three
Dundee."
.
.
card nearly $10,000 worth of food like a "IOOthpick factory." "I still · months later, he's stillliJere. His
By ROBERT E. MILLER
WeDs
has
been
worldng
ail
aver·
supplies
simply because they had haven't seen · them (the Red past includes singing lead vocals
,
AJiioelated Press Writer
age
of
18-hour
days
since
his
gotten
wet.
After entreaties to a ·Cross)" he said.
_COLUMBUS -House Speaker Vern Riffe says Ohio's budget deficit
for a rock band in New Yode, bouts
arrival,
signing
contracts
with
anystate
se0111or,
l!c .soon became the
is ~taning to paralyze the stale. He would like it solved before Christm$,
PHP volu~teers pride ,them- ·. of homelessness and drug abuse
one who has the means to pa"y for founder and president of People selves on bemg ,the enemy of and mosl recently a full-lime job as
for both the short· and long-range.
·
' State officials project a shortfall for the bieMiwn ending June 30 of his services. With his tradernarlc hat Helping People, a group that some bureaucracy and red tape. The ahandyman.
.
s_joo million to $325 milUon. Some project a deficit over the next. 30
.PHP is a collection or people u
eclectic as the needs they serve. .
mOnths or nearly $2 billion.
. Gov. Goorge Voinovich, a ~cpublican; and Riffe, 11 DeiiiOq'llt and Sen"You've got ex-cons, religious
people, and profeuionals, all
ate Pte$ident Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, say they hope to present bi• !~E'K 0\li ~ ~N"~LIN6 INCI'PEMT ON
pul!ing together to get the job
solutions to theLegislalum by Dec. IS.
YfNNSYLVANI~ A~E~UE. fENAT~ POI.E
, peep spending cuts already have been made, and they agree some son
done," said Terry. One volunteer,
of a ~ inmase is needed. They have along
or taxes, fees, loophole
nicknamed Tiny, even met ~is
' · , closings and lllher ideas bul so far, are wedded to none, they said. ·
futum bride 81 PHP. Tiny runs i\he
'\ . They may pial a major increase on the June ballot..
children's outreach program here,
\ Voinovich points oiat that the last two times Ohio had a major tax
which he says helps him coinpen. in~. - the original i:Jicome tax in 1972 and aits 90 pcltCIIt increase
"sate for not seeing his own chil·
in 1983 - voterS laltt re,ected efforts 10 repeal them.
dren, who are living in South Carolina.
•
: Voinovich said his immediale concern is the short-tinge problem;
.,.. But Riffe and Aronoff WilDt to look funlier ahead.. '
· TheJ:"'' out that many other problems await solutions, such as clean
Anthony Jacobs, who cooks for
aii, w
and wottm' compensation refcxms and others left behind last
the compound after Andrew
wea when lawmakers adjourned for a month's RlCCSS.
destroyed his home and his cater., Riffe said, "I want it (the budget) dealt with all at one time. As long as
ing business, tells or the elderly
you've got.that problem out there, that's all you can think abouL"
man and woman who live next .
But Riffe and the governor are being cautious.
·
door to the compound. They are
:Riffe barely held on to his House majority in the Nov. 3 elections, losunable to cook for themselves,
ing eight or 61 Democratic SQIS and seeing his margin drop to 53-46. ~
much less fix the giant hole that
Apparently mindful or the next House elections in 1994, he said he
Andrew ripped in their roof, and
win not endorse any particula' tax until the Republicans are aboard.
they suffer ~ diabetes and hjgh
Voinovich, whose rerm ends in 1994, said earlier, "I'm 1101 going to
cholesterol. PHP supplies them
juinp out front on this tax or that tax.''
·
with 'lhree catered sugar-free, low. : Voinovich said he would support an increase in the sales tax for educafat meals a day.
tion but only afr.er education raCli'IIIS. Even lheo, he wants the proposal
It's the kind of help the Red
pl8ced before vocen in a SlaleWide election.
&lt;Xoss isn't serving up.
A 1 pen:enl boolt in the S pen:enttax would ~ld $800 million a year.
Jack Ander.son and Michael
· Riffe said there is no~&amp; wrong with. "letting the people decide'~
Binstein
are writers ror United
€~
although that could be risky. If volers wd no, the Legislature hardly
Feature Syndicate, l'!c.
HULMf Ill 1tn. fOitf ~ 911\R·1ELE6111""'"""'"' ~
could come back and raise tues over their objections.
· Meanwhile, this is not the,fll'SIIime a tax mcrease h$ been considered
~lOse 10 Cbrislrnas. Former.Gov. J~n J. Gilligal) signed the. income tax
mto law Dec. 20, 1972, 10 days after 11 was ~ by the Legislature.

111 Cout Street
PomeloJ, Oldo
•DEVOTBD TO 'l'HB llf1'BitD1'8 OJ' 'IS IDIOIJ-IIASON AR&amp;A.

The Dally

OHIO Wcdtllet

hgl 2 The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio .
Monday, November 23, 1992
-.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 23,1992

A •storm warning" indicates that
winda 64 knoll and above, DO matter

how high the speed, not directly' 8180eiated with a tropical storm, are foreeast for the are_a.

•

•I.

Meigs County Court Judge restraining order issued, alcohol :
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 6.8 assessment ; Wayne Runyon , :
Pomeroy, eat belt violation, $20 ·
cases last week.
and
costs; Danny W. Thompson, :
Fined were: Gregory A. Taylor,
Long Bottom, DUl, $350 and costs, Newpon. speed, S15 and costs; Je.f- ·
10 days in jail, suspended to three, frey A. Morris, Syracuse, speed. '
operator' s license suspended for 90 costs only; Marilyn Teets. Akron, (
days, one year probation, alcohol expired registration, $10 and costs, ;
assessment. failuR: to register vehi- seat belt violation, costs only; ;
• cle, $10 and costs; failure to con· Michael Kelly, Bremen, speed, $29 :
ttol, $20 and costs, DUI, 30 days in and costs; Robert Gowhler, Ft.·
jail, suspended to 10, consecutive Myers, Fla., speed, $23 and costs; :
with other DUI charge, operator's Pearl E. West, Albany, seat belt :
In Observance or N11tl01i11l Education Week, employees or .
license
suspended for one year, violatior~. costs only; Thomas :
Peoples Banking and Trust presented a cake ol appreciation to
$450
and
costs, failure to control, Greathouse, Jr., seat belt violation. :
tbe teachers or Middleport Elementary Scbool. Middleport
$20
and
costs;
Richard Lyons, costs only; Leonard J. Shockey, ·:
Elementary School and the Peoples Bank are Partners In
Racine, assault, 30 days in jail, sus- Shade, receiving stolen property. ~
JiAiucatlon, a program that enc:ourages JN!rtldpatlon of aU parents
pended, one year probation, $100 costs, 10 days in jail, "suspended to :·
and teachers toward helping all students with their education. ·
and costs, restraining order issued; three, concurrent with driving :
Our teachers are a very vital part or our students' life and
Richard C. Werry, Racine, DUI, 10 under suspension sentence, two ;
they deserve our sincere support and appreciation of all their
days in jail, suspended to three, years probatiOn, driviqg under sus- :
bard work. The teachers at the school are: Teresa Lievlng, SbeUa
$350 and costs, upon enrollment pension, $75 and costs, ·10 days in.
Bevan, 1\fary Brauer, Paula Whitt, Liz Story, Pauline Horton,
and completion of the RTP school, jail, suspended to three, two years.
Twlla Childs, Randy Goldsberry, Rebecca Zurcher, Carolrn ·
$150 of fine and jail time will be probation, SQt belt violation, $2S;
Smith, Emma Ashley, Marcia Radabaugh, and Barb Logan.
suspended, operator's license sus- and costs.
Donald Hanning Is the principal at the school.
Donald R. Sommer, We§l
pended for 90 days; Paul Wilson,
Shade, seat bell violation, costs; Union , speed, $21 and cost~ ~
Edward Darnell, Logan, speed, $21
He~ Hill, Racine, DUl, 10 days
in ja1I, suspended to ihree, $350 and costs; Sara M. Oxley, Athens,
,
and costs, operator's license sus- speed, $21 and costs; Patricia A.
Ervin-, Racine, speed, $20 ~nd
pe~ded for 90 days, one year proJacob L. Schafer
Helen Crabtree
bation, upon enrollment and com- costs; Shelia A. Dickens, Racme,
Jacob L. Schafer, 81, of Colum- pletion of RTPscllool, $ISO of fme seat bell violation, $15 and costs;
Graveside services for Helen
bus,
died Sunday, Nov. 22, 1992 at and jail lime will be suspended.
Crabtree, 68, of Waverly, a fonner
James F. Wile, Pataskala, speed;·
Grant
Medical Center in Colum.
Meigs County resident, will be held
Barry Redman, Point Pleasant, $20 and costs; Linda Lambe~t •.,
Tuesday at I 0 a.in. at the Rock bus.
W.Va., failure to control, $100 and Wellston, speed, $20 and costs;
Springs Cemetery. The Rev. Roger
He was born in Marietta on July costs, $300 forfeiture to the Law Carol L. Fisher, Racine, speed, $24'
9. 1911 , son of the late George and Enforcement Trust Fund; Leonard and costs; Lola A. Sigmon, Dayton,
G~ace wiU officiate.
Born on Sept . 9, 1924, in Maud (Marlowe) Schafer.
A. Myers, Long Bottom, speed, speed, $24 and costs;· Mary J.. ·
Lawrence County, she was the
Survivors include his wife, Gar- $20 and costs; Charles P. Lyons, Smith, Athens, speed, Shane E: .
daughter of Harvey Crabtree and net (Burchett) Schafer, formerly of Long Bottom, assured clear dis- Pumhagen, Peebles. soeed. $25 anjl
Myrtle Gregory Crabtree. She is Middleport; daughter, Darla Smith tance, $10 and costs; Patricia L. · costs; Dcnnis..R. Jarvis, Albanx: ·
survived by a nephew, David Crab·
of Columbus, two grandchildren, Miller, Belpre, speed, $27 and speed, $22 and costs ; Tamara· ,
tree, South Point, and his family.
one brother, James A Schafer of costs; Richard M. Roser, Marietta, Theiss, Syracuse, speed, $30 al)d&lt;
Besides her parents she was preMariella; and two sisters, Mrs. Sara SQt belt violation, costs only; Paul costs; Paul R. Stephens, Pomeroy, .
ceded in death by several brothers
Bush of Gallipolis and Mary E. Perry, Athens, speed, $23 and operating a motor vel1icle' whilC '
Fenton of Marietta.
and sisters.
costs; Werner Brommett, Green- wearing ear phones over both ears, ·
Friends may call at the Ewing
Services will be held Tuesdsay wood, Ind., 'speed, $25 and. costs; $10 and costs; James F. Morgan,
Funeral Home today, 6to 9 p.m.
at I 0 a.m. 81 at the Evans Funeral Shawn M. Engle, Portland, seat Jr., Albany, driving under FR,A
. Home, 4171 E. Livingston Ave., belt violation, costs only; Matthew suspension, 10 days in jail, susJames Hawley .
Columbus. The Rev. William B. E. Katich, Louisville, Ohio, speed, pended to three, $1 00 and co~ts,'
Walker will officiate. Friends may $23 and costs; Charles M. Minnich, one year probation, assault, 30 daysPOMEROY - James W. E.
call one hour before the service.
Avon Lake, speed. $20 and costs; in jail, suspended to three , $100
Hawley, 64, 1128 East Main Stteet,
Gregory
C. Sheets, Pomeroy. seat and costs , one year probatiort;·
Pomeroy, died Friday, Nov. 20,
Jean Ann Vance
belt
violation,
$25 al)d costs ; Jen30 days in jail, suspended
1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospi ·
Jean Ann (Forest) Vance, 62, of nifer A. Hill, Euclid, speed, $26 assault,
to
10,
concurrent
with other charge, .
tal.
Wheelersburg, Ohio, died on Satur- .and costs; H21rry Bass, Rutland,
cos~s.
restraining
order issued; '·
Mr. Hawley was born Sept. 21,
day, Nov. 21, 1992, at Henderson- domestic violence, 30 days in jail,
Terry
M.
Stcthem,
Pomeroy
1928 in Syracuse. He was a son of
1 DUI,
viDe, Tenn.
suspended
to time served, $200 ana
$350
an'\&gt;
costs,
10
days
in
jail,
sus.'
Thelma Hood Hawley and the late
She was born on Aug. 8, 1930 costs, one year probation, restrainpended
to
th£ee,
one
year
probaEdward Hawley. He W$ employed
in Columbus, daughter of Ines ing order issued, restitution.
tion, operator's license suspendelt ·
with Kiser Aluminum. A veteran of
Marie Chambers Forest of ColumJacqweline
Van
Over,
Racine,
to
90 days, upon enrollment and.
the Korean Conflict, he was a 32nd
bus, and the late Vernon Cecil For- seat belt violation, $25 and costs;
completion
of the RTP schoof; '
Degree Mason, a member of the
est. She was a cook, and a member Henry Docrfer, Racine, seat belt
$150
of
fine
and jail time with fje '·
American Legion Drew Webster
of Portsmouth Senior Citizens.
.
violation,
$20
and
costs;
Rober
suspended;
Terry
McGuire, Jt ..
P.ost No. 39, the Eagles Club and
Survivors, besides her mother, Scribner, Albany, assured clear disRutland,
illegal
U-turn,
costs only.
the Meigs County Golf Club. ·
include four daughters: Mrs. Mike tance, $10 and costs; Donald R.
Forfeiting
bonds
were:
Howard '
Besides his mother, he is sur(Debrah) Faw of Rutland, Mrs . Spencer, Long Bottom, seat belt
Marie'
Kiser,
Racine,
speed,
$85;
vived by his wife, Lois Smith HawRichard (Pamela) Hellon, ~xter, violation, $25 and 'costs; Fred J.
Colburn,
Cleveland,
seat
belt
violaley, Pomeroy; three daughters and
Mrs. Stephen .(Brenda) Poners, Honacher, Coolville, spotlighting, tion, $40; Marynell Teets, Akron, ·
two sons·in•law, ·Rebecca arid
South Webster, lfnd Mrs. James $100 and 'costs; Ronald Lee Raley, stopping in roadway, $54; Jennifer'·
David Ellis, Pomeroy, Mary Beth
(Rebecca) Ferrell, Wheelersburg; a West Van Lear, Ky., spodighting,
Thornton, Canal Fulton, spec¢, :
and William Musser, Racine, and
son,Jay (Barbara) Vance of Logan, $250 and costs, forfeiture of spot- $85.
..
Deborah Hensley, Columbus; a son
W.Va.; a step-son, Barry Conley, light; Brenda Cotterill, Pomeroy,
and daughter-in-law, James Joseph
Joliet. Ill.; two sisters, Ruth Broth- improper backing, $10 and costs; Meigs bookmobile
and Pally Hawley, Pomeroy; four
ers of Columbus, and Margie Law- Scotty Tripp , Mason, W.Va.,
sisters Betty Ash, Syracuse, Marson of Winter Park, Fla.; a brother, assault, six months in jail, suspend- schedule announced
garet bailey, Chillicothe, Elaine
Jack Forest, Columbus; and 13 ed, $100 and costs, two years proThe Meigs County Bookmobile.·
Miller, Middleport, and Sharon
grandchildren.
bation,
restraining
order
issued,
will
make the following stops thiS
Bailey, Pomeroy; and nine grand·
Besides her father, she was pre- restitution; Terry Dunfee, week: TUESDAY· Pomeroy Nurs-:·
children.
ceded in death by her husb;md. Coolville, DUl, 10 days in jail, sus- ing and Rehabilitation Center; ·
Services will be Monday at I
Lawrence Vance, in 1984, and a pended to three, $350 and costs, 11:30a.m. to !2:30p.m., Darwin, I•.
p.m. at Victory Baptist &lt;::burch in
grandson, Barry Lee Hannon.
operntor's license suspended for 90 to 2 p.m., Burlingham, 2:30 to 4:30;:
Middleport with Rev. James
Funeral services wiU be held on days, upon enrollment and comple· p.m .• . Wildwobd Estates, 5 to '6
Keesee officiating. Burial will be in
Tuesday at I p.m. at Birchfield tion of the RTP school, $150 of p.m.; WEDNESDAY· Racine, 12
Beech Grove Cemetery. Military
Funeral Home in Rutland, with fine and jail time will be suspend- noon to 4 p.m., Letart Falls, 5 to 1;
graveside rites will be by Drew
Rev. Theron Durham officiating. ed, seat belt violation, $25 and p.m.; THURSDAY · Tuppers
Webster Post
Burial will be in Miles Cemetery in costs; Walter Haggy, Rutland. Plains, 1 to 3 p.m., Reedsville, 4to.:
Rutland.
Colter Hayman
speeding, $28 and costs.
Tp.m. ; FRIDAY - The Maples,
Frie,nds m~y call on Monday
Shailer Nobel, Pomeroy, DUI, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.,.Overbrook",
Colter H. Hayman, 80, of from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
10 days in jail, suspended to three, Center, 1:30 to 2 p.m., Pomeroy
Cheery Street, Racine, died St~n·
$350
and costs, operator's license Pike1 ~:30 to 4:30 p.m., and Baum ' .
Charles Weaver
day, Nov. 22, at Veterans Memori·
suspended for 90 days, upon enroll· Addiuon, 5 to 6 p.m.; SATIJRDM'
al Hospital.
Charles Rondo! Weaver, 68, of ment and completion of the RTP · Ru.tland, . 9 a.m. to 1 p.m .\ ·.
Born on Nov. 4, 1912 in West
Brimstone Ridge Road in school, $150 of fine and jail time , Danville, 2 to 3 p.m., Salem Cen.- ·
Virginia, he was the son of John
CoolviUc, died on Sunday morning, will be suspended, left of center, tcr, 3:30 to 5:30p.m.
Hayman and Gertrude Blake HayNov. 22, 1992 at his residence.
man. He is survived by two brothHe was born in Tanner, W.Va., $25 and costs, seat belt violation,
ers, Spencer Hayman, Suitland,
son of the late Jackson and Oleta $25 and costs; Michael Harmon,
Nelsonville, DUI, $450 and costs,
Md., and Quentin Hayman, East
Frymier Weaver.
•
The business offices of both
Liverpool, and a sister, Mattie FenSurviving are two brothers, 30 days in jail, suspended to I 0, Po~eroy and Middleport villages .
ter, Tucson, Arizona. Besides his
Clem and Blake Weaver, both of operator ' s license suspended for will be closed on both Thursdar, •
one year, one year probation, alcoparents ~e was preceded in death
CoolviUe.
Thanksgiving Day, and Friday so
by two sisters, Dorothy Hayman
Besides his parents, he was pre- hol assessment, failure to stop at that employees may enjoy a long •.
Durst and Althea Hayman Ellingceded in death by two brothers, sign, $10 and costs; Timothy holiday weekend, officials of the
James and Brown Weaver, and a Ohlinger, Long Botton:J, disorderly two communities announced today . ...
ton.
conduct , $20 and costs; John
He W$ a member of the Racine
sister, Nonna Gallaher,
Services will be held on Ohlinger, Pomeroy, disorderly con·
Masonic Lodge.
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at White· duct, $20 fine, suspended, costs;
Funeral services will be held
Blower Funeral Home in Coolville. Ethel I. Cave, Cheshire, speeding,
Tuesday at 1 p.m. Pastor William
Super Lollo
Hoback will officiate and burial
Burial will be in Fairview Ceme- $23 and costs; James Elkins, Yinton,
petty
theft.
10
days
in
jail,
sus,
twelve,
fourteen, fifteen,
(six
tery
in
Coolville.
will be in Greenwood Cemetery,
pended,
$100
fine,
suspended
to
thiny-five,
thirty-six)
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
Racine. Friends may call at the
Kicker
'
home on Tuesday fi'QIIl 7 to 9 p.m. $20, costs. one year probation;
funeral home 6 to 9 Monday.
Sandra McClure, Mason, W.Ya.,
. (five, four, two, eight , zero,
passing bad checks, $25 and costs, DlllC)
Carl S. Nichols
restitution. ~Pick 3 Numbers
Charles C. Wray
Harry Standafer, West Liberty,
(four, five, eight)
Ky., failed to display valid registra·
Carl S. Nichols, 73, of Main
Pick 4 Numbers
Street in Rutland, died qn Monday, • Charles C. Wray, 89, of Ashton, tion, costs only; Jason Riggs,
(one, two, two, nine)
Nov. 23. 1992 at Veterans Memori- W.Va., died on Sunday, Nov. 22, Pomeroy, passing bad checks, $25
al Hospital in Pomeroy following 1992 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
and costs, restitution; Greg Rob·
an extended illness. .
Arrangements are under the bins, Pomeroy, domestic violence,
A THEATER
He was born on Dec. 10, 1918 direction of Wilcoxen Funeral 30 days in jail, supsended to time
WITH A CHOICE!
in Pomeroy, son of the late Glenn Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va .
served, coSIS, one year probation,
and Benha Seyfried Nichols. He
was a U.S . mail carrier, and ·an
electrician with Imperial Electric.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Army
Air CQrps during World War II, a
member of the Rutland United
Methodist Church and a member of
the Feeney Bennett Post of the
American Legion in Middleport .
Surviving are a son, Carl S.
Nichols, Rutland; a niece, Mrs .
Sallll Day 'S.Ykt
Guy (Carol Ann) Harper, Middleport; and a nepheW, David Lyons,
All Parts Eltra ,
Gallipolis.
Includes: Cleaning, Ollng,
Services will be held on
AdJustmtlls, Gr•sl•
.
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland, with
Rev. Arthur Crabtree officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview Cemetery in Middl~n.
Friend$A1fay call at the funeral
horne on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p:m.

--Area deaths--

Offices to close ·

L ottery

FI~EE

INSPECTION

SHAVER REPAIR CLINIC
(All Brands)

TUESDAY, NOV. 24, 4 P.M.·7

FRUTH PHARMACY

786 N. Second lve. • Middleport, Ohio

..

...

�'Sports
~innesota
By MIKE NADEL
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Min·
riesoJa Vikings coach Dennis Green
~as given his quarterbacks some!,hing to think about. Each wee)c,
his defense gives ~sing quarter·
backs somelhing to worry about
· Green benched Rich Gannon
after a horrendous first half and
wouldn't give him a vote of confidence after Sunday's 17-13 victory
over the Cleveland Bro~ns.
"To say we're not happy with
the passing a]tacJc, hey, I'm not
goi ng to (kid) you," said Green,

In the NFL ...
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
[aJlem

Dlvlllon

Team
W L T PtL PFPA
BWT&amp;l.o............... 9 l 0 .Ill 301 113

Miami ................

The Daily Sentinel

MondaY, November23,1992
Pagl 4

defeats Cleveland .17-13 after change of passers
who used Sean Salisbury at quartcrllack in the second half. "But in .
the meantime, we won the game."
They w~n because.• f~r the
founh week m al'QW, thel!' big-play
defense scored. In the span, the
Vikings' defense h115 six touch- .
downs - only one fewer than the.
offen~. ,
Th1s tlme Audray McMillian
was the he~o. intercepting three .
passes. W1th 9.:05 to play and
Cleveland leadmg 13-10, Mark
Bavaro wasn'.t able to catch Todd
Pbilcox's pass, McMillian made a ·

Chi"'O....................8 2

.801)

:s
ln..... ......................
Cl.EVELAN!l..........

.soo

Milw•uluw................6
Cbulooo .................

2
4

Allulu .....................3

l
5

Dcuoil. .....................2

1

4

.750
.ll6

I
25

.444
.315
.222

3.5
4
5.5

3

8 3 0 .721- 269193
lndianapolil: ....... 4 7 0 .364 147253

N.Y. Jou ............ 3 s. 0 .273 166226

Nc:wEnaland ..... 2 9 0 .1S2 ~ 62260 .

WESTERN CONFERE.NCE
Mhl•lll DMdon
W L Pet.
HouAora .... - ............ .5 2
.714
Ullh .........................6 3
.667

Ctntral Dlvlaioft

.Team

Pitu""'Sh .......... 8 3 0 .1'I1 226153
Houuoo .... ....... .. 6 5 0 ..54.5 246 197
CLEVELAND ... 5 6 0 .455 167 176
CINCINNATI .... 4 1 0 .364 197248
WStrn DM5Ion
0cnYCI ............... 7 4 0 .636 175 207

Seattle...

1 10 0 ·.091

5

.375

25

Drenv• .....................3
- . ................2
Dallu .......................l

6

.333

6

.250

3
3.5

6

.143

4

Padfk: DIYi•lon

Polll!ad ...................7
Seaulc ......................6
l'hocai&gt; ................... .l
LA. I..ake:n., ........... .S
LA. Cliwcn .......... .l
S1cratn~l0 ............. .4
Goldetl Slate ............4

73218

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eadem Di\'l.sloe

Twn
W L T PeL PFPA
1 D.U.. ................. 9 2 0 .118 263l62
' -itt.iladelphil ....... 7 4 0 -~36 25!161 .

Ttmpa B1y ........ 4 7 0 .364 1982S6
DcuoU................ 3 s o .m t96229

4 7 0 .164 200296

•.

4
4.5

NBY~dt

Montana ll, Idaho St. 14

•

UCLA 38, Solllhom Cal37
UNLV 36, M«&lt;u.na St. 1
Ullh SL 31, P!Oific u . 35
W.W.p SL 42, Wuhin.... 23

East
Alroy 64, COncordia, N.Y. 58

Midwest
BID St.. 72, Simon Fraser S7
Comdl68, Dubuque 62

For West
Cal St.·Bak.erafi.eld 92, San franciKO

St. 86

Tournaments
Pr~~~e~~onNIT

Q•arterftnab
Seton lbll 7l.. Tenn..oe 64

Tuesday's games

Wllhin~atNcwYoEk, 7:30p.m.
PhiladtJpl'lil•t O!.a.rlott£, 7:30 p.m.
Mllwaukoc al O.eweland, 7:30p.m.

Ohio high school
football playoffs

Miami at Indiana, 7:30!.·"'
San AJ;ltcll.io It Ponlan , 8 p._m.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- H~ •re
S1tu.rdty's Kaiornl fiJ\1111 1corcs for the
2ht annud Ohio High School Athletic

lA C1ippen It licu&amp;on, 8:JO p.m.
Ne.wJoraey•tSe.attle, lOp.m.

~aoatOoldc.\SUie, l0:30p.m.

Aaociati.oa alllc food)all piayoiT1:

AP Top 25 college
football poll

Future games
Thonday

Jlowt.on •tlleuoi.l. 12:30 p.m.
N.Y. OianlJ •tO.U.s, 4 p.m.
·

OW:IJO a1 CLEVE1J\ND, I p.m.
KaMas City 11 N.Y. Je:u, I p.m.
Miami at Naw OI:Jeuu, 1 p.m ..
New enpnd d Atlanu., l p.m.
Phocnil II Wuhin1ton, 1_p.m.
PitUbw&amp;hltCINClNNA11.1 p.m.
Tampa 81y va. 0rom B1y at Milw•u·
, • koe,Bllll'ala
I p.m. at....,....,
•-~--~ , 4 p.m.
MiMao&amp;a It L.A. 11!11, 4 p.m.
Phlla~a at San frlrteileo, 4 p.m.
LA. Raidmat San Diqo. I p.m.

Monet..;. Now. Jl
,.;..

In tlie NHL...
Palrlck Dlwlllolt

WLT .... GFGA
IS 4 3 33 '11 12
It 9 0 l2 64 68
10 8 2 22 7S 76
I 9 4 20 19 16
110 2 18 74 19
17 73 76 ..
32 99 69

2i l03 81
1A 19 63
19 102 84
l1 S3 81
3 44109

Atlkl'tiGeorae
Finn~ St.dlum

Cleve. St. fpdul38, Mcnwr 13

The Top Twenty Five tetm• in The
Auoci1tccl Preis 1992 c:olletc foatbtll
poll, wi.l.h first-place wo&amp;e~ in p~tcnthcu.a,
.recordathrouah Nov . 21, tou l paints
buod On 2.5 points for 1 fltlt place vote
tluvush one point for a 2Sth pl1ce wote,
and nnkina ln Wt week 's poll:

At 01)1011 WdcoiM SlacliUIIII
P'iqUI 20, Troy 7
At Maulllon Paul Brow,_

Tlatr Stadium

Youns11own Austintown Fitch 49,
Pickc:rinjlOn 7
At Klnp bland Claylon
,
NorUnnont GaJbi'Ulh Fltld
CinCinnati St. X1vicr 14, Cincinn1ti .
Andascxt 7

1.!•1
Ttam

Record

Pu. Week

1. Miami(61) .......... .10.0.0 1~49
2. Ahblm! (I) .........10-0.0 l,48l

I

2

3. Aaridl SL .............. 9-1--0 1,407
4. Tuu A&amp;M ......... 11-0-0 1,319

1,2.19
1.166
1,084
1,077
1,030
976
928

9
•
8
10
JI
5

12. Nebrasb ...............7·2--0
13. N . Corolino SL ......9·2·1

914

12

8l6
12i
653
57S

13
14
17

16. Miuia.lippi. St ....... 7-3-0
17.Ba~t.anCOUege ..... 8-;2-1
11. Tennes................. 7-3-0
19. Swlhr:m C.l ......... ~l· l

Division IV

3
4
1

5. NolreDame ............ 8·1·1
6. Florido .................... 8·2.0
1. MichiJ................... 8·0-3
8. SynCiliC ................. 9-2-0
9. o.o.p .................. S-2.0
10. Colorado ............... 9-1-1
11 . Wllllin&amp;u&gt;n ...........'l-2.0
14. Sunfc:ird ................ 9-3..0
IS. OJDO ST ..... .......... 8·2-I

WALES CONFERENCE

Division I

At Salem Reilly Stadium
Warren Kennedy 27, Akron Manch-

'*""2

\ Danld Sl.adlum
Huron 24, Elyri• C.tholic 23
~ 1 All.ulcu~ Fulloa Field
• IIIW'Iaville 49, Coal Growe DawaonBryantU

At Xenia Cox f'ldd
Cncinnati Academy

Brootville 7

18
19
20
lS

516
432
357

:ZO. NonhC!toWu ..... B-3.0
21. Wuhin&amp;ton SL. ..... B-3.0
22. Penn SL .................74.0

351
3l4
212

21

2J. Arir.ona .................6-4-1

2.57

16

2.4. Mi:t•inippi. ....... ,....7-3-0
25. Bngham Yowta ....S-4-0

204
114

l4

Norrb Dl•laion

TDeuoil ................
- . ..........
Tmonto ..............
OUCI&amp;O

W L T I'll. GFGA
12 9 0 1A 87 75
II 8 2 24 68 68
10 '1 3 23 63 S7

........ 10 9 3

Division I
At Malllllon Paullrown
Ttaer St.adhnn
Cleve. St.. lanuiu1 (12-0) v.
Youna110wn A111tintown-Fi\ch (l 0--2)
Salurd.ay, 1:3t p.m. •
At Dayton WelconM Sladlum
Cincinnati SL Xavier (tl-0) v. Piqu1
(10-2)

23

Pftate 2. ~r 2, Rice

DlwblonD
Friday, 7:11p.m.
At Btn.1 Georat Finnie Stadium
t..oWmllo(l:!-0) v. ~ (1:!..0)
AI Dayton Wekome Sladlum

2. Fruno Sme l, Rutgen I. Tuu 1,

SLLouis ............

7 ll

Major college
football scores

3

30 102 81
1J! 93 75

Vancouver ......... 11 S 2

24 92 66
II! 6S 88

Edrnon\Cft .......... 7 10 4
Winltipeg ..... ..... 7 13 I
San Ja~c .............

.,

w.,....

MimCIOLI 4, Buffalo 3

Tonight's games

Botlon 11 Otuwa, 7:40p.m.

WuhinJ\«&lt;at Montrul, 7 :40p.m.
PiUJbu.r&amp;J! at N.Y. R~am. 7:40p.m.
Tunpt.
•t Detroit, 7:-40p.m.

a.,

aue.aa 11 Vancouvor.l0:40 p.m.

Al Uma SLidlum
Liberty Center (II· I) v . Sl Hcruy (12·

Au.tin Pety 32, Tcm.·Martin 18

0)

Ciu.dcl20, fwrnlll 14

Transactions
Amtrlcu~pt

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Siancd
Rick SuLClitfc, piLChar, 11:1 a an&amp;-year ccntrocL

BuketbaU

21

Natlonaii·+....,U AllodaUon

N. Carolina Sl. 42, Wake Fcm:.t 14
Nonk Caolin! 31, Dillie 2i
Samford 20, Cent. Aoridl13
So.:~th Cuolina )t, Clemaon 13
y13
T.uMIIIOt Sl37, SEMiaiOWi 27
TIV)' 5L 21,1fu:bolla SL 0
VM131, Tn.·O . - 34, aJ'

Tueodoy's games

OOLDEN STATE WARRIORS Si.-:1 Bd Ntaly, fc.-wuf.

In theNBA ...

FootboU
Nallooal F-11 Laaue
DENVER BRONCOS - Pl..eed Sunmie 's mhh, rv.nnina b.clr., on injured re-

......

v.....,•1. v· · · Tcdl 3&amp;
W, X...C..y~y SL 1~

NEW YORK OIANJ'S - SiJ&gt;tod Ken
WilliJ, kjcier. Waived Bobby Abram1,

WiDWn A Noey 34, RU:Iunond 19

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AlllntJc DtvWM

L
3

PeL
.625

4

.S56
.-444
.429

5
4
6

•' Mioml ...................... 3 l
•• BotUJt ...................... l 1

Dl"'""

.«10

.m

.222

Midwest

GB
.5

I.S
l.S
2

2
3.5

Aknln 24, CindnnaQ 2:2.
IWnok 14, Michia~r~ SL 10
K.,... Sl. 10. a.lahomt St. 0

Mi&lt;maonl3. Ohio SL 13,1lc
Minn..u. 21, "Iowa l3
22,1Con!u 17
N. Jowal7, SW Mblow:i St. 12·
Nodh--.m T/, Wiloonan 2!1
IWII•ll,lndian• 10
S. llllaoi!42,1ndi!n! SL )l

SAI-l f'JlAN'OSCO 49ERS - Activat·
""""''*"·
1"'lfttlina

·"

ed Deater CUU~r,
jured -,.en-e.

back, from in-

TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS -

Siped Mtrk Dl.lc.kcns, dd'enlivo lineman.
Waived MUcB..tla-. widctocciver.

Ho&lt;key

~

· ByJOEKAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - It's
remarkable how Barry Sanders can
make it look so easy. And how the
Cincinnati Bengals' offense can
make everything so difficult,
. Sanders had another day of
hefty numbers and highlight-film
nlns Sunday, He became Detroit's
all-time leading rusher, piled up a
season-high 151 yards, and scored
the winning touchdown in the
Lions' 19·13 victory.
The fourth-year pro topped Billy
. Sims' mark of 5,106 yards with an
18-yard run in the second quarter,
and put the Lions in control with a
five-yar4 touchdown run in the
fourth quaner.
· Sanders not only accounted for
most of Detroit's offense - 154 of
the Lions' 277 total yards - he
outgained the entire Bengals'
offense by 59 yards.
He knew it would be that kind
of day on the Lions' first posses·
sion, when 'he ran 12 yards on a
draw play.
.
"Everything pretty much was
going our way,'' Sanders said.
''The ptays that we called worked.
When that happens, you can't beat
it. You've got to savor those

games.''

Detroh (3-8) wants more of
them. The Lions have gone to
Sanders more in the last three
games, and he's produced: 108, 94
and !51 yards. His 29 carries sun'
day were a season high.
"He's a great back,'' coach
Wayne Fontes said. "If we ean
stay in the game and can give the
ball to Barry, we've got a chance to
win."

· The Bengals (4· 7) had little
chance with their offense. Its 95
total yards were the second-fewest
in club history. Boomer Esiason
completed 12 of 25 for just 64
yards with two in1erceptions.
Esiason didn't complete a pass
to a wide receiver until Tim McGee
caught a six-ym:der .in !he closing
minutes. Esiason didn't even complete a pass longer than nine yards.
The running game was just as
bad, averaging 2.3 yards a carry.
Cincinnati's longest play of the
game was an 11-yard ·run by
Harold Green.
"I really bel.ieve we're a runoriented team first and a passing
team second," Esiason said.
"When we don't get the running
game going and we try to fall back
on passing, it's going to be very
difficulL"
·
"We just did not execute any·
thing," coach Dave Shula said.
"We could not run the ball. We
could not pass the ball.''
Not many Deuoit opponents

--Sports briefs--

Boseball

·-34.Kto....

Tunpt. B•y It Tort:WIU., 7:.0 p.m.
N.Y. ll&amp;andlnat WIM1pc&amp;,l:40p.m.

c.....,

C•tholic (12-0)

E. K..nuoky 31, M.......d SL 9
Florid•41 , Vmc!catlill21
Howard U. 3I,IJrellwue Sl. 28
LSU 24. Tul!no ! 2
1.
M&amp;!lhaJl49,E. TcmcuoeSllO
-$c.42.EoaC...Uno7
Middlc:Tmn. 21, Ttiii1CINOC Tech 0
N. CII'Olin1 AAT 24, S. Carolina S1.

Sunday's scores

..,.

Friday, 7:30p.m.
At Canlon FawuU StacUu1111
Independence (11 · 1} w. Newuk

lldh..,..c:..;.., 2,l\lorpll SL 0

Wnhington 6, Quebec: jl.
BWY•Io 4, Philadel~ ' 4 , ti£
N.Y. Wanders$ , £i:lmmton5, tie

;'

Dlwlllon V

South

t.oo An&amp;&lt;la o, r ...... •
OUcaao l. San Jwe 1

Valley

AcademyofP.E. (Il -l)

Alcarn SL 42, JtcUcn Sl, 3~
AfJPIL\chi• Sl 14, W. CIUQJinl 12
Alkwu SL 20, SW l.ouisi.anl. 7

N.Y. Iobndas4, C!J&amp;uy 3
N.Y. Rona&lt;n5, Wimip&lt;a4
St. 1...oui14, Tampa B1y l

NP Jersey ............ ..4

32, l.cllish 29

New HunpNn= 20, Mustchl.liCUS 13

Vancouver 9, Edmonlon 0

Gcarn~r~tcwn

Dlvhlon IV
Salurday,7 J1.1R.
At Berta Gtorte Fln.nle Slad.lum
Wmcn Xcnnody (I 1-1) w. Huron (8-4)
At G1htnna Llncaln Flt:kf.
Darne•villc (12-0)'. v , Cincinnati

.Miami 16, SynCUJt: 10

Pitllbura,b 2, New Jcncy 0·
Montrca13, Otttwll

,

lronlon (ll-G) v.
View (12-0)

. Pain 14, Comdl 7
Penn St. S1, Piusburah 13
Rutp3S, Tm~ple 10
Villanon 28, Maine 8
W• Virpua 23, Louisiana Tech 3

Saturday's scores
~-··Hut!""'2
SoMa •• !Moddphi&gt; 3

Tt.m
W
Orl!nclo .................. .s
New Yadi .....:......... .S
Wullinpn ..,.......... .4
l'hil!dolpl&gt;il .............3

Mentor LU.c C•thalic: (ll-0) v. Urn•
Both (10.2)
AI Dublin Sl.adlum

HolyCrou2I,Fordh~m 13

9 57 97

'

Dlv'-lonW
Frld!y, 7:31p.m.
At Marllfldd Arlin Fkld

BlaCkncll 2&amp;, Col.pte 2.1
Calwnbia 34, Brown 2.8
COMCICticut38, Rhode bland 0
Danm~th 34, PlinceLon 20
Det.wue SS, ToWIOR SL 27
Hanoard 14, Yale 0

IS 7S 89

4 J6 I

MIJ}sMemorial (ll· l)

Elllil

Smythe Dlwlilon
l.ol Angclc. ....... 14 6 2
Calpry ............:. 13 1 2

Colwnb111 Brookhncn (11 -1) v. St.

Ba~m Collcjc 41, Army 2A
801tm U. 2.5, Northt.uLem 19

23 71 67
2lt 80 78
17 69 &amp;4

Tampa Bay...... .. 9 12 2

P.E. 27,

Saturday, 1 p.m.

UCLA I.

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

or

Palrln_gs

Others ret:elvl•• votel: Haw•i.i 41,
Bowllna Gree• 31. K•nsu 16, lllinois 9,
Sauthem MWWi i S, v· . . 4, Wake
Forut 3, Arizona

AIL«aa.Gearae

Nad...t Hoclco1 tape
PHILADELP!DA FLYERS - Rc·
..u..t X.. Burlo, - · fn&gt;m llonhcy of .
\ht ...
k:lu Hackoay Llap.

''But I'm competitive enough to carrying the load. The Browns'
thi11k I'm good .enough to start,'! standout on Sunday was middle
linebacker Mike Johnson, who
Salisbury said.
A personal foul on Clevehmd's recovered a fumble by Glll)llon to
Ron Wolfley after a bad punt by set up Kevin Mack's one-yard
Brian Hansen gave Minnesota lhe touchdown run, jn1ercepted a pass
ba)l at the Browns' 27 early in the by Gannon to position Mau Stover
fourth quarter. Salisbury capped for a 30-yard field goal, and made
the shon drive ;.vith a 3-yard touch· 14 taCkles.
Like Green, Cleveland coach
down pass to Joe JohnSQD, making
Bill
Belichick didn't know who
it 13-10 with 9:2lto go.
would
start at quarterback next
On .Cleveland's next play •.
week.
Neither Tomczak nor
McMillian made his last - and
·
Philcox
looked good Sunday and
biggest _: interception.
Bernie
Kosar
may not he ready to
His tJu:ee pickoffs tied a club
reium
from
a
broken
ankle.
record accomplished nine other
Unlil&lt;e
Milinesota,
however, the
times, most recently by Todd S~ott
Browns
aren't
wiMing.
·
earlier this season. McMillian had
''To
watch
our
defense
plaY,
73 yards on his interception retwns
their
hearts-out
and
not
come
out
- more yardage than any Minwilh
a
victory
...
I'm
just
real
disnesota back, receiver or quarterappointed," Philcox said. "It's
back.
He bas seven pickoffs this sea- hard to look too much ahead now.
son after taking over in training We're in a tough spoL"
Added Cleveland c~nter Jay
camp for injure&lt;! cornerback Najee
Hilgenberg:
"We h!!ve an incredi,
Mustafaa (formerly Reggie Rut·
ble
cletense.
To not be able to win
land).
.
lhese
games
with the way they've
"It doesn't niauer to us what the
played
is
frustrating.
Teams that go
offense does, because our job is to
on
to
win
Super
Bowls
win games
go o"t there and stop the other
like
this."
team," McMillian said. "We can't
And, so far, the Vikings have
worry about the ·offense's frustrawon
their sbare.
tions.' '
'T
d rather be talking about
Cleveland is experiencing simiwinning
ugly," Scott said, "!han
lar frustrations.
standing
here talking about ~ow
Like Minnesota, its defense is
preuy we lost."

Detroit survives Cincinnati
comeback to post 19-13 victory
·

College basketball

A\lanl-1 v1. Boston 1t Hanford, 7:30
p .m.
Setnlc at Sacramento, J0 :30 p.m.

Omver at Seattle. 9 p.m.

38, Tcua Saulb~ 14

Mu.ica St. 34, Sin Jose St. 24
Oq,on 7, Oret.m St. 0
N~;~w

llllanford 41, CllilomiA 21

Tonight's games

Wuhia..,.... at Now Odouu, 9 p.m.

N.Y.t.Und&lt;n ....
Wu.flina\Gn........ I 12 I
• Ad.Mnl Dhillon
Manuul ............ IS 5 2.
~- ............... 12 6 4
Bas~.«~ ................ 11 5 2
BuffaJo............... I 10 3
1-Wt(ard ............. S 14 1
0tuw1 ............... 1 19 1

.400

1

TooJcbt's came

Pl&gt;il!delphil.......

.444

6

L.A. LU.m ·119, Dcnvet 1r:n

0 .364 200233

Douail19, CIN~1113

New Jc:ncy ........
N.Y. R11111ca .....

5

Chiclgo 128, PhocniA 111
Portland 11 s Detroit 90

G1een a,y 17, Chica8o 3
MiAmi 19. """""" 16
Pi..buqh 30,lndianaoalil l4
Philllddphi• 41, N.Y. Gianu 34
New Enabnd 24, N.Y, J~
Dollul~.-lO
.
L.A. Jlaidm 24, Dmvc:r 0
San FranciJc:o 27, L.A. Rams 10
San Di110 29, Tampt Bay 14
Kanlu City 24, Suale 14

PiuabutJJ&gt; ..........

25
3

Goldm Stile 114,Ncw Jersey 101

8Wfa1G41, A\J.trual4
Minn&lt;oou 17. CLEVEJ.\ND l3

T-

.625
.556

!d!ho62.Boi!&lt;SL 16
McNecae St. 23, Weber St. 22

Sunday's scores

Wuttrn Dlridoft

SanFnnciKo .... 9 2 0 .818 319.182
NewOdt:anS ...... 1 3 0 .700 19113&amp;

S•nday, Now. 29

1..5
25

New York 92,0rllndo 77
Ct.EVEl.AND t 19. D.Uu tOll
HOUIIM 103, San Antonio 100
Milw•ukce 105, I.ndilna 95
Denver 131 . Minne&amp;Ou. 111
Setule J 38, DcttoitlOl
L.A. Cippcn lli.PhoenU 107

Green a.y.......... 5 6 0 .4SS 161211
OU..p.............. 4 1 0 .364 271261

.

.625

Clw-

Central Dh'il&amp;otl
3 o .m 276174

Sunday 's scores

3
3
4

Saturday's scores

Mimaaoa .......... s

A~u ...............

0 1.000
2 .7SO

diving interception got up and ran agliin.
•
25 ~arcls for the ~$me.
"I hope our offense docsn' t
'It was a little h1gh," said begin thinking that it's a burden to
Philcox, w1to had re~ ineffec- the team. If it was, we'd be 3-8
live Mike Tomczak ·at the stan of instead of 8·3," Green sllid. "I
the fourth quarter. "When you hope you're not going to ask •me
don't throw a good ball, bad thmgs about this all week, We're 8·3.
happen."
We're one of the elite teams in the
The Browns (5-6) fell three league."
.
games behind Pittsburgh in the
Even if Gannon gave a lessAFC Central while the Vikings (3· . than-elite performance.
.
3) remaiaed three ahead of Green i · Gannon, who has one touch·
Bay in lhe NFC Central, so Green 'down pass in the last five games,
didn't seem too concerned that his completed only 5 of 12 passes for
defense had 1o bail out his offense 26 yards and was interee~ted twice.
In the previous week s loss to .
Houston, he was 9 of 28 for Ill
yards.
.'
"We made a dec1s1.on to go to
Sean simll!Y because it was a roush
Tolodo :15, N. lllinoi! I
ftrst half, ' said Green, whose club
YOWiptOwn SL 21, 0eorp Soulhcm
10
trailed 13·0 at halftime. "That
doesn't
mean that only Rich had a
Southwest
rough fmt half. There were penalB1y1ar 21, Teua 2.0
NE l...o.l.lmn• 47, North T.exu 2S
ties, dropped passes and mistakes
NW Lollislana 24, St.cphcn F. A~Utin
10
.
on shon yardage.
Rice 27. Navy 22
' ''As far as who's going to be the
SW Tens St.. 22. Sam HmaMn St. 22,
quanerback next week, I' ll be up
Uc
_
Sautha:m Mdh. 2A, Altllliu L9,
front with you: I haven't thought
Saullua:n U, 12, Prairie View 7
about it at all. I don 't shoot from
TowAAM 31, TCU!Chriltian 10
Tc:au Toth 44, Houlton 35
the hip. I want to think about i'L''
Far West
Gannon declined comment after
Arimn1 SL 7, Ari&amp;on• 6
the game. Salisbury, who completBrilllun \'.,..all. Ullh 22
Cofondo 3J , Iowa SL 10
ed 4 of 12 passes for 30 yards,
ColandoSt. 14, New Mu.ico 10
expects Gannon to stan against the
"-'oSt.4S, San Dieao St. 41
Hawaii42, WyominJ fl
Los Angeles Rams next weekend.

Allan&amp;l116, 8011011107
!Modclplli! 104,Newlcrscy9l
Wuhingtcn 126, Ulah -!.09
123. Miami Ill

Wdilingten ........ 6 4 0 .600 175167
' N.Y. Gi&gt;no ........ S 6 0 .455 248249
Phoenix ......... ..... 3 8 .0 .:m 1842Al

L.A. Ranu ......... 4 '

GB

SanAntonio ....&lt;. ........3

icaruu Oty ..... .. 7 4 0 .636 228172
SanOiCJo .......... 6 S 0 .S4S 187119
LA. Jtaiden ...... S 6 0 .4.5S 176171

.Football
BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Skip
Hall resigned as Boise State's
coach Saturday followi~g lhe Broncos' 62-161oss to ldabo. He leave$
with a 5-6 record this year and a
42-28 record overall.
Skiing .
BEAVER CREEK, Colo. (AP)
-Julie Parisien of the United
States beat an iotemational field
Sunday in a slalom race that served
as a warm-up for next weekend's
World Cup opener in Park City,
Utah. Parisien had a two-run time
of I minuiC, 30.79 seconds to edge
Slovenia's Nawa .Bokal by 0.77
seconds.
On Satu'rdal in Avon, Colo.,
Diann Roffe o the United States
beat Parisien by 0.46 seconds in a
giant slalom. Roffe had a two-run
time of 2 minu1es, .13.39 seconds.

have had to admit thaL The Lions
had the 20th ranked defense in the
NFL:; including the second-worst
run defense.
·
"I never saw our defense more
magnificent than today,'' Fonte's
said. "They played super. They
held an excellen.t quarterback down
for most of the game."
The Bengals held down Erik
Kramer, who completed 12 of 25
for 141 yards but threw three interceptions in his second start. One
was returned 66 yards for a touch·
down by ·linebacker James Francis,
cuuing the lead to 16-13 with 10:40
left.
But Mel Gray stole the Bengals'
momentum by returning the kickoff
52 yards, and Kramer completed
his most important pass of the
game, a 32-yarder to Herman
Moore on lhird-and-12. That set up
Jason Hanson's fourth fteld goal, a
29-yarder wilh 3:561efL
The Bengals got the ball one
more time, but four consecutive
passes by Esiason were incomplete
at midfield. And Sanders did the
res!, carrying three straight times
for a fU'St down that clinched it
II was appropriate that Sanders

ftnished off ihe Bcngals on one of
lhe most notable days of his career.
He's now rushed for 5,202 yards in
less than four years, and he went
info the record books with characICristic flair.
On one 32-yard run, Santlers
spun off one taeklcr, sidestepped
another and bounced off a third.
"He's a great back. He can
change directions and cut on a
dime, •• Bengals linebacker Ricardo
McDonald said. "Holding him to
100 yards is a tremendous accom·
plishnlent."
.
"Barry Sanders is one of those
guys who· shows you something
thai you'll never see again," Francis said.
Sanders didn't show any particular emotion wben he reached the
record in the second quarter. He
enjoyed the record quietly.
"It feels ~ood," he said.
•'Everybody wtll pay attention to
Barry Sanders, but for the last 3 1{2
years I wasn't the only one out
there running the ball. A lot of
credit has to go to a lot of other
gu~s besides me. I don't think I'm
bemg modest, I think l'm being
realistic."

:;Bevo Classic .~itle won.by
Rio
with
victory
over
Shawnee
•
•

Troy Donlldlon ..t Mia Powell each connected for 22 poiMS
Saturday in Lyne Cenler 1o . _ .
Shawt~~:e SIIIC Uaiveuity a 96-72
1oss 111c1 win the lide mille..-.
end's. lOth Bevo Fmncis Oassjc
Jeff Brown, ntmed '¥alaable player for the ·t ounwaeat,
brouglll down 11 of the lellll' s 3S
rebounds to help the.ti........., ~
off the Bears' doacd
' . Powell, who had eipt m- I]
attempts from the dt= oonnea..
Sank a trey at the balflime buulcr•
¥ive Ria Grande a ·nino-poiat bd.
us biggest margin· up until dtal
poinL From tbere, the R......... cap.
1talized on their penchiDt for outside shooting lmd made the - d
their 34 tries·at the foul line .., silt
1 25 for 73.s' percent, with Dould· .
son 'olitg lo line II times IDd manecbng on eighL
Jim Arnzen's Beats drew Slro1l&amp;
performances from Travis iMeny .
and Ryan Hudson to keep diemselves in the game and choJteq.e
Rio Grande's control olthe tloor in
the first half. Brian Dyer - ciedited with .five of Shawnee Sl:atc"s
20 boards, again showing that the
Redmen prefer io win .!be pme
through rebounding.
"Our guys did well down die
· stretch and we had ex&lt;'~'llmt senior
leadership," Redmcn mentor John
Lawhorn said. "In a game 'like this

a«-.

aladlc:w.IIIJDI:l_.,..Jnl•
l.yfasl,llll-•)11• 'lialliiadle
Iiiii•
• I I .-.: lllll.'u
b::J fKiarlat.•
De Rc '
- M' f d iD
ra.~~~~m,. \
5
lie frve
assists pro'l'idcd IJJ Brow. and
IOJIEllllilslorils lleadl·
w lly
AI
....,_ . . . . _orllis.
--.
"'We piL;uhrida a kl. or fan..
INit we"Ye plio play a lillie

lhe bench, and it will happen,"
Lawhorn said.
.
The :Redmen sank 31 of 59 lries
from lhe Boor for 52.5 percent, and
IIQIChed a 4.S perccm showing from
the three by netting nine of 20
all.elllpiS. The Bears were 40.8 per·
cent on shooting (29-71, 10-27
from three for 37 percent), but
were lllowed only 10 !tips to the
line, for which they were success·
futon four.
In the consolation game,
__.,.:or.; Almm Sllil. "'Lming. to Pikeville (Ky.) overcame a twoRio • RiD is •
._ wlial' s. poinl defiCit to McMaster (Ontario)
li • •ire b • is mire a live. to. edge the Eagles 105-103. The
paill ~ _. 10 kl illl:l awa)' Bears' Rodney Fuller pumped in
&amp;..-.llio••"¥ afpys11 28 points and .teammate- Jf&gt;d,Y
a. p to. _. - ~ so IIWIY 'Thompson had 24, but McMaster s
jO\•
that Derek Howard connected for 31 to
kdd af py J'll:l .. _.-..
lead all scorers.
Tw p a 1111111 fcdiJIIalloul
In additiQII to Brown, the All·
dlis &amp;fOII/P; lllc added. "We just Tournament Team consisted of
llaw-to kam m. a aip.tlile Donaldson and Stephens, and
• •a"•
Shawnee State's Merry and Mike
A'.. -c" LawLw fda 11101e oE Helton.
d i e - . . . , me llcm in on
Shawnee State (5-3) hosts Find·
die .,.,_, lois e &amp;i*&amp; yoomger lay Tuesday, and Rio Grande is on
~ : • a' die z- with the road again for a Tuesday
die paRI wmlt or fa ' • Jack encounter with West Virginia
MuiJNI _.lie a.sde sltowD by Stale. Pikeville (5-1) enrus KJAC
• • l h - Willlla' S. ... ••. who . action Tuesday at Union, and
IIIII 11 poiiiS. Sc:llilll' '" ht Lyn- McMaster uavels to Toronto on
dell Saydt:r _. T• Qiidjan alSo· Nov. 28.
tept Rio Grude"s -eatum Box scores:
.-&amp;illfleiMII:orllllf.. · .
RIO GRANDE (96) -LaMont
"'We 1me 10 JIEl- pys oiJ Harris, 1.{1-2; Jawanza Childs, ().4.

I,._

-.-.:....,a-

-.._.,bind

The University of Rio Gr:ancle
women's basketball team ~ved
a ftrSt half offensive SW]ll'ise from
Midway (Ky.) io ,post a 98-13 lrin
and net the championShip of !be
1Oth Bevo Francis Classic Sawnlay
at Lyne Center.
Balanced scoring and ·a team
effon that saw almost all or o..e
Smalley's bench get into the fay
propelled theRedwomen IO~DI
of the lead by the half. ud ~
Rio Grande ahead for .the pme s
remainder.
"Midway executed weU, had a
game plan and stuck wid• il.•
Smalley said. "We fumly •belicYe.
however, that as a result of our
conditioning and athleticism, !to'C
will beat teams in ·the second balf
during this season.
"I think the kids have le.ocd
not to hang their heads when a sint·
ation like the one we laced with
Midway occurs," the ooaeh ~
as the Redwomen went to 3·1.
"Our press will prevail in lhe .11C\C·
ond half."
John Duncan's Midway cl.lib,
which had defeated Salem-Tdtyo
(W.Va.) on Friday to get into lie
championship tilt, \nC!UDI,Cd u
impressive sbootins perceata~c
{I8·21 for 67 ~) m die apce-

iiJ&amp;lO ·
to)lllllkllioladi£s
• ad' h
g Kana Fnswe,
....., laad 21 poials for tlllc pme,
..i
ABiha Browa wilb
20
mu.a sitl or Midway"s 28
td• kJalfleaowt
Blllfleltahr+
,lalbypainl
R.-d Gala NULtis" 22-poinl per·

f _ . C, wtidl;. lwkd

sjnling

five of lliDe aueapts f~• the ·,
duee,pl die~ bact U1ldeT
....... 10 Jc.1 b y - a licllalf
..r Wd affdle IO""kA&amp;Us by a
...,.&amp;waiJic
1!1\* as lie c:mrest.
..,

ld!Jwa.

A • *cfledbt-tllt:doublc-fipe scoria&amp; from Lori
na.iltoB. Steplwlie Gadorf.
Stacey Rilll:£ . . . Tiicia Cellins.

~~s••L~ b,l~::.
..._
._ - - • -...
1R!I d file 1 I
s
&amp;• b::J 10 the
oft'easi..: plu. ftile Jliner luwl
Dille ·•siOboostfledefi
"''wtidsaelwg· · tiOattn·
pi! • •
-a I ~~cw:!•ly
bdieoelllll-dla"llme..,.self- .
JdS.' s Dey..,_ "1'hcy
bar ....., 10 -.lz t111c riPt pm

cadi...-.

·'* ...

•dleri:Miilae..•

c=

MilhtaJ •1wiapd to le-I 0111

r!::.•J:!.:::..
-

~t;; 2···7
puma) 10 RiD

v..--

,._..,.s 48.1 per-

O'DELLS

lions and recovered a fumble in its
49-10 victory Sawrday. ·
"I'm glad to see William King
back on the field on defense. We're
much beuer with him in there,''
Donnan said.
Defensive end Bob Lane, out
several games with an injury, also
might be back for the Eastern Kentucky game, Donnan said.
Marshall has played Eastern
Kentucky several times in past seasons, including last year's playoffs,
but Donnan said he knows litlle
about this year's Colonels, who.
have lost only to Middle Tennessee
State and Samford, both of which
are also in the playoffs.
However, "We know their style
and they know ours," Donnan said
of run-oriented Eastern Kentucky.
"They have lost a couple of key
players from last year, but if 9-2 is
a doivn year, then that isn 'I bad."
The 16-team playoff field was
announced Sunday. Tickets for
Marshall's· game went on sale to
season-ticket holders Sunday and
were to go on sale to the public
today,

WE SELL
HUNTING LICENSE

NOSE TO NOSE- As .Rim V6Ts .... 5 7 7 J (&amp;r .....)
watches liN! play ud M
Cer I..i ~(II) trils .... ill
on it, Marauder Katriu ·
(G,
4 ,· , I ~ _, Rajdrr
center Cindy AnlllteaC (34} p - • - ill b) &amp; Ia «d '&amp;&gt;
ownership or~ ball dllf'illl :5 t a,
n,. 'pt!ffiew a1
MeiJ:$ Hi&amp;• School, ftldl die ,Maw 1 s - rn. ' P ' .. will
. 27•25.
.

&amp;.: will!_.,

...-s'

· DEER SEASON
\ SPECIAL

20 ga. ·&amp; 12 ga. 2%'' Rifled Slugs

PIKEVILtE (lOS) - Rodney
Fuller, 6-3-7-28: Chris Walker, 01-0-3; Jeff Campbell, 1-2..().8; Jody
ThOmpSOI), 2-6-2-24; John
Kitchen, 3-0-6; Chris Plvmmer, 2·
1-5; Paul Robertson, 0-1-0-3; Brian
Johnson, 2-2-0-10; Danny
Poeliaitz, 6-1-13; Jeff Pe~ers, 2-1·
5. TOTALS 24-15-12·105.
McMArSTER .(103) - Andrew
Perus, 1·0.2; Marc Sonlrop, 2-1-29; Jeff Zownir, 1-3-1-12; Derek
'Howard, 4-5-8-31 ; Nathan Aryev,
2·•·4-11; Shawn Fr.ancis, 7·1 · 15;
Cesare Piccini, 3-2-8; Jack Vander
Pol, 5-1-11; Greg Caldwell, 2-0-4.
TOTALS 27-10-19-103.
Halftime score: McMaster 56,
. Pikeville 54.
·

PLAYING HIM CLOSE - Shawnee State's l).arr,t Lda6
(right) plays close to Rio Grande guard LyndtU S.yder •Yt Swyder looks to pass to an open teammate durioc SahmlaJ
Bevo Francis Classic men's title game, whkb the Re' ts - , . ,

,.....s

72.

cent (40-82, 6-21 from the three, 0-2; Merritta Blevins, 1.0·2; Tricia
also for 28.6 percent). However, Collins, 5-0-10; Angie Cress, 1·0·
the Redwomen received 17 opjxlr· 4; Stephanie Gudorf, ·8·0-16; Lori
tunities at the line and connected Hamilton, 7-3-17 . TOTALS 34-6·
on 12 for 70.6 percent to Midway's 12-98•
64.7 (11-17).
MIDWAY (73) - Shannon
Midway (1·2) travels to Centre Morris, 2-0-4; Margaret Woodard,
(Ky.) Tuesday, while the Redwom· 0-2·2-8; Jill Karsner, 2..().4; Vemi·
eft are at home Tuesday at 7 p.m. ta Trapp, 1·1-3; Kristi Buffenmyer,
2·1-5; Karen Frasure, 9-3-21;
against Wilmington.
Earlier Sawrclay, Salem·Teikyo Heather Johnson, 3·2-8; Andrea
won the consolation round by Brown, 9-2-20. TOTALS %8-2,11·
.
handing Spalding (Ky.) a 79-50 73.
Halrtime
score:
Rio
Grande
lass, Regina Marshall hit 17 points
and 12 rebounds to -lead Salem, 47, Midway 40.
wbile Tracy Ewing had 12 for the
SALEM-TEIKYO . (79) Pelicans. Salem (1·1) hosts West
Virginia Wesleyan Tuesday and Shannon Minor, 3-0-6; Debbie
Spalding meets Lindsey Wilson Sanders, I-0-2; Jean Dennison, 2·
I-0-7; Genie Reese, 6-1-13; Shana
(Ky.)Monday.
·
Named most valuable player of Cade, 3·2-8; Jennifer Crimm, 2-2·
the. All, Tournament Team was Rit· 6; Regina Marshall, 8·1·17; Pam
te•, d\c 5-6 freshman guard from Brown, 3-0·6: Stephanie Shine, 7Sidney. Joining her were team· 0-14. TOTALS 35-1-6-79.
SPALDING (50) ~ Tracie
mates Hamilton and Michelle
Crouse, along with Salem's Mar- Thornsberry, 1-0-2; Danielle Bur·
shall, Midway's Brown and Holly den, 2·0-4; Tracy Ewing, 5·2-12;
Holly Riney, 4-1-0-11; LaTonya
Riney from Spalding.
Box scores:
Smith, 2-04; Saundra Brown, 0-1·
RIO GRANDE (98) - Kim 2-5 ; Stephanie Warren, 0-2-2;
Sowers, 2.()..4; Gena Norris, 1-5-5- Tonya Farmer, 1-4-6. TOTALS
22; ~laCey Ritter, 6-2-14; Michelle 16·2·12,50.
Halftime score: Salem-Teikyo
Ctouse, 2-1.()..7; Amy Reynolds,!34, Spalding 22.

--

TO THE HOOP- Rio Grande's Tricia Collillli (lli&amp;M) Iris ,..a
teammate Ginger Smith (40) a~d Mid~ay •Co~~o:et's II • he ~ :
. son (34) ror two or her ·lO pomts dunng Sal•rday a •...~.,s 11ew-~ ·
Francis Classic women's championship game, wllidl
I. 111
won 98· 73.
'!'..~

*•

Warren, Southern, Meigs girls' preview winners

Marshall makes NCAA
:Pivision I-AA playoffs
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Marshall is r~turning to the
NCAA Division I·AA playoffs,
and coach Jim Donnan says the
Herd enters the postseaSon a· better
team than the .1991 squall that finished as the national runn(:l'-up.
Marshall (8·3), ranked No. 6 in
Division I·AA, hosts Easlem Kentucky (9·2) on Saturday in a
rematch of a playoff semifinal lhe
Herd won 14-7 last season in Hunt·
ington.
"We're a better team than we
were last ·yeai. I think we've major
strides in our offense, '' Donnan
.said. "Our offensive game is beuer
because of our offensive line. We
have more running backs than we
did last year. We have more
receivers.
"Our defensive front is strong.
Our defensive secondary is
improved but not as strong as we'd
like them to be," he said. •
Donnan said the defense was
bolstered by the return of lineback·
er William King for the regularseason finale at East Tennessee
SJate. Marshall had three intercep-

4; Lyndell Snyder, 1·0-2; Kyle ·
Schroer, H-3; Jack Morgan. 1-0· .
2; Walru SICphens, 1-2·3-11; Mau
Powell, 5·3-3-22; Jeff Brown, 3-3·
5-20; Tim Christian, 3-2-8; Troy
Donaldson. 7-8-22. TOTALS 22·
9-25·96.
SHAWNEE STATE (72)Travis Merry, 3-3·2·17; Darryl
Lisaih, 3..().6; Mike Helton, 3·2·1·
13; Ryan Hudson, 1·5·0-17; Brian
Dyer, 4-0-8; Craig Miller, 2-0-4;
Darius Winiams, 2-1-5; John Dai·
ley, !.()..2. TOTALS 19-10-4-72.
lfalftlme score: Rio Grande
47, Shawnee State 38.

Redwomen stem Midway tide to win tourney championship

2.29

7'

JUMP SHOT - EaiUnl
S'
oa. (left) 1M8 a
jump IHI ill tile Jut ·ia rn.t riW-IAal's J' z Clift (:34).
Tara J " - (.0) ud Slepll 5' 71 (!I)•
P ; Adk•"·t......_'l 3 ' C 5. 7 ..., L'S's._.
1 ~ ....
erwallolll'""!'paM.--lietbaU preview It Melp Hip Sc? ?, 4lllli&amp; lk Waliws- a3

3

1,.

~

'

The Daily~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--

---

I

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentiael Correspondent
The fU'St Meigs Marauder girls'
basketball preview was held on
Satufday evening before a big
crowd at Lljrry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Warren Local defeated Eastern
20-16 in the first contest. In the
evening's second game, a rebuild·
ing Southern squad defeated the
Meigs reserve team 23·)5. In the
nightcap Meigs defeated River Val·
ley 27-25.
In the evening's first contest,
Don Fichinger's Warriors pulled
away from a six aD tie and went to
post the six point victory ov .:r Scott
Wolfe's Eagles. Charla Wentz led
lhe Warriors with seven points, all
in:lhe second period. Jody McGraw
chipped ilr'with four poin~. .
Stephanie Ouo, Jamte Wilson
and Jessica Karr led Eas1em with
four points each, Penny Aeiker and
Amy Redvoian added two points
each.
ln the evening's second centes~.
Southern outscored the Meigs
junior varsity IC8in 12·5 in the secend period to post the 23-15 win.
Aimee Mills led Southern with II
points; Anderil Moore added six,
l onna Manuel scored three and
Jennifer Cross and Amber Ohlinger
added two each. Melissa Clifford
led d\e Little Marauders with six
points, Anne Brown added four,
Jaclyn Swartz three, and Bobbie
Bull:her two.
In the nightcap, Meigs jumped
out to an· early 12-2 lead, but had to
come fro111 behind to slip past
River Valley 27-25. Meigs held a
16-7 lead afier one period, l!ut the
lady Raiders came storming bacJc
r&amp; take a two point lead with about
three minutes left in the contesL
Joy O'Brien carne up with a big
ttbound with a minute to go and
fed Vema Compston to give the
Marauders the lead for good.
·
Compston led Meigs with 13
points, Lori Kelly and Vanessa
Comps1011 added four points each.
Lee Heilderson and Amber .Black·
wclli lllded two points each and Joy
O'Brien and Chrissy Weaver added
·me point each•
Dull Twylllltl led River Valley
with- seven ·points, Amber Staton
lidded six, Nickie Meade three,
Cindy Armstead, AliCia Ward,
ED£a Mollohan and Michelle Met·
zaer two. Beth Sailsbury added one
ror David Moore's Raiders.
•

Penny Aeiker 1-0.0=2, Amy Redo· Anne Brown 2-0-0=4. TOTALS
vian 1.{).()::2, Jessica Karr 2-0-2=4. -7·0·1=15
TOTALS - 7 .{1-2=16
Southern (23)- Jennifer Cross
Warren Local (20) - Charla 1-0-0=2, Aimee Mills 3-1-2= II ,
Wentz 3·01=7. Tara Johnson 1-0· Amber Ohlinger 1-0-0=2, Andera
0=2, Megan Clark 1·0-0=2, Jody Moore 2·0-2=6, lonna Manuel 1-0McGraw 2-0-0=4, Stephanie Elder 1=3. TOTALS -8·1·5=23
1-0-0=2, Jamie Tabler 1-0-1=3.
Meigs (27) - Vema Compston
TOTALS- 9-0-2=20
6-0-1=13, Lori Kelly 2-0-0=4 ,
Meigs (15) - Bobbie Butcher Melissa Sisson 2-0·0=4, Lee Hen1-0·0=2, Melissa Cliff~d 3·0-0=6. derson 1-0-0=2, Joy O'Brien 0-0-

1=1, Chrissy Taylor 0..0-I=J;
Amber Blackwell l-0-G=l. V-=ssa Compston 1..0·2=-4, TOI'ALS
-11..0-~=27

River Valley (lSI- M"drlle
Metzger (i)..():2=2, ·Beall~ 0- '
0-1-1, Eric Mollohan 1-0-0=2.
Dana Twyman l-0·1=7, Alicia
Ward 1~2.Cindy At•
• 10-0=2, Niclc-ie Mellde 0..0-3=3.
Amber Staton 1-1-1=6. lOT.U.S
-6·1·9=25

Seles tops Navratilova to win Virginia Slims title

By BOB GREENE
NEW YORK (AP) - It was a
scary sight for other players on the
women's !ennis tour: Monica Seles
at the net, executing perfectly a
diving backhand volley.
Seles pounded out a 7-5, 6-3, 6·
2 victory over Martina Navratilova
Sunday to capture her third consecutive Virginia Slims Championships title .and put a forceful
stamp on her standing as the
world's No. I player.
''I think today is probably as
well as I've played, and I got beat
in straight sets on top of that,'·
Nnvratilova said. "I played pretty
well and she played great."
Navratilova once dominated
women's tennis herself. In 1983,
she lost just three matches in the
entire year, something not even
Sele~ has done. And Navratilova
still is ranked in the lop ftve in the
world.
Even at age 35, Navratilova is a
force on the women's tour, constantly putting l?ressure on her
opponents by ,gotng to the net at
every opPQnuntty. Against Seles, it
was a di(ferent story. She .waited
until the right time to leave the
sanctuary of the baseline.
"You can't just come in on a
prayer" lltlainst Seles, Navratilova
said. "Unless you come in on a
really good shot, you gel burned."
In the opening game, Seles kept
Navratilova pinned to the baseline,
dictating the point. Navratilova was
able to work her way to the net
only once, and she won that point
with a strong forehand volley into
the corner.
On her own serve, Navratilova
was forced to stay back if she
didn 'I get her first serve in, so
heavy were Seles' returns.
But by atlacldng at just the right
moments, Navratilova got the rmt
service brcalc. beating Scles at love
llalterll. (1') - Stephanie OUo .in the ninth game. That meant
2~. Jamie Wilson 2-0•0=4, Navratilova was serving for the seL

Seles, though, wasn't conceding
anything. She raised her power
game to another level, rifling darts
to the far reaches of the blue carpet
at Madison Square Garden.
The 18-year-old left-bander •.
who hits with two hands from both ·
sides, won the next three games,
breaking Navratilova in the I Oth
and 12th games to capture the ftrst
SCI.

•

"In the ftrst set, bolh of us went
out swinging," Sclcs said. ••t don' t
think bmh of us were playing it
safe."

After that, S·elcs P•l oa a
ground-stroking cbniic. thiDiiia&amp; ia
that diving bactihand .s top 11011ey
just for effecL
"It was pretty close r...- •
while," Navratilova said. "Ia
last two sets I .got
by a
Mack truck."
With the victory in lhe
ending, 16-p layer tourUalO
Seles picked up a c•«t few
$750,000 . Two-tllird5 of dtlla,.
$500,000, came from hl:r • • . a
the year-long Kraft Tour poillt
slandings.

Alll- *

-::=r

Becker beats Courier in three
sets to win ATP Championship
BYNESHA STARCEVIC
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)
- Jim Courier will finish 1992 as
No. I. The month of November
belongs to Boris Becker.
After beating Courier in the
ATP Tour World Championship
final on Sunday, Becker said he
plans to make 1993 his year.
" This evening, at least, I feel
like I am' the No. I , but il doesn 't
really show the whole year,"' Becker said after his 6-4, 6-3, 7-5 victo·
ry.
Courier lost his second World
Championship final in a row, but
his No. I ranking was secured

when Becker eliminaled No.2 S.,..
fanEdbefg.
Becker's viciOt)'
past Michael Ol)ang and 3\:lr Kania
to No. 5 on lhc ~Annri•iw flf Tmnis Professionals com.,.a Qltkings.
Sunday was Beclrer's 256..._
day; and bo didn't let Courier 3plil
his cclebratim. .
After pickiJ1g •up up .SIPJO.ODO
in total c~unings for tlae wc:dl:.
Becker received .a birthday aloe ill

will-.._

~~~~~~~a9~r!sa~·~
fun's Fcsthalle.

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •AllEIGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECI s•an
,;;;,;;.;,;e..,Care For Your

Medicare &amp; UMWA Assig:nent
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

••

...

•

�'

•

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

Monday, November 23, 199Z

Mount Union beats Dayton to. earn date vs. Illinois Wesleyan
.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

:
By The Associated Press
• Jim Ballard is IQIJy to JO all the
way in the NCAA Divasion III
when Mount Uniim plays Illinois
Wesleyan this. SatuQ:IJy in Jhe quat·
aerfl1181s. .
. Ballard passed for 332 yards
and scored a touchdown in the Purpie Raiders' 27-10 victory Saturday
over Dayton in the ~gional semifinals.
In NAJA tournament play Satur·
day, Findlay advance\ito the Division II quarterfinals by defeating
Georgetown, Ky .. 32-14 and top·
ranked Central State of Ohio
defeated No. 8 Harding 34-0 in
Division I.
: · In Big .Ten actiOn, sixth-ranked
JV!ichigan' and ·No 17 Ohio State

fought to a !3-13 tie Saturday, with from the start."
Ballard's 21-yard touchdown
both teams playing it close to the
vest near the end and avoiding a pass to Michael Sirianni tied it 10loss rather than playing for the vic- all in the second quarter and started
tory.
.
a 21-point surge. Jim Gresko ran
Ballard said getting past Dayton two yards fot another touchdown
3:30 later, and Greg Huss' threewas ll major hurdle.
.
" We feel we can go agaanst yard run made it 24•10 in the third
.
an ybody now," Ballard. sai.d. quaner.
''Beating Dayton at Dayton as quate
Dayton (10-1) managed just 212
an accomplishmenL The key for us total yards as Mount Union (ll..())
was being able to spread the ball shut down the Flyers' passing
attack.
aroUnd.''
Steve Keller completed 9' of 22
Dayton coach Mike Kelly was
impressed with Mount Union and passes for a season-low 90 yards
and was intercep ~; d once and
Ballard.
·
" Ballard throws the ball very sacked five times. LaSt year, Keller
well. He just kept throwing led Dayton to the Stagg Bowl, the
strikes," Dayton coach Mike Kelly Division III championship game,
said. " Mount Union dom inated where the Flyers lost to Ithaca 34-.

20.
Findlay's Bob Heitkamp feels
the same.
·
" Last year we were satisfied
just to be in the playoffs. This year
we want to win it all, " the
lineba&lt;:ker said.
The Oilers will play at Westminster, Pa., in the quaraerfmals. .
Heitkamp had 10 solo tackles
and one assist. Balewa Walker
rushed for 123 yards in 17 carries,
scoring one touchdown, to lead
Findlay's offense.
Geotgetown (8·3) was down 25,
14 when quarterback Dane Damron
fumbled, at the one-yard line on
second and j!Oal at 3:43 in the third
quarter. Ench Brandstadt recovered, and the defending Division II

champions never threatened again.
''The defense did what it had to
do," Findlay coach Dick Strahm
said. "Offensively we dominated
the number of plays (80-57) and I
think the fact the offense kept the
defense off the field really
helped."
With its victory, Central State
advanced to t~e quarterfinals to
host Cen!ral Arkansas (9-1-1).
Glen Braxton scored two touch·
downs and .Jose Molina kicked two
field goals aS Cenual State (10·1)
took command early against the
Bison (7-4).
· Braxton capped an 84-yard
opening drive will! a shon plunge
with 6:54 remaining in the opening
quaner. Later in the period, Marvin

#

Coleman returned a punt 52 yar:tts._:
for a scate.
. -J
"The punt return was a bilt ·
play," Central State coach Billy•
Joe said. "II 10011: a lot of starch OUL i •
of them." . ·
,~
Qtwterback Henderson Mosley -~
was chosen the game's most valu- :;
able player on offense. He threw -~
for 180 yards and a touchcklwn .:1
Linebacker Williams Stevenson;:
eatned the outstaniling ,playe~
award on defense.
•
In non-conference, non-tourfia- :
ment games Saturday involving l
Ohio teams, Aleron beat Cincinnati . I
24-22, Toledo defeated Northern •
Illinois 25·8, and Youngstown :
State beat Georgia Southern 21-10. I

:
By RICK WARNER
• Thanks to a great sno)Y job,
Washington State is going to sunny
Arizona.
· The No. 21 Cougars upset No.

11 Washington 42-33 in a snow-

storm Saturday w earn a bid to the
Copper Bowl in Tucson. Washington State will play Utah in the Dec.
29 game.

Cougars coach Mike Price has a
·" we are really excited about
special fondness for Tucson, where going back," the coach said. "We
his son Aaron kicked a game-win- have great memories from playing
ning field goal against Arizona on in that stadium."
Sept. 12.
Washington State appeared to -

be out of the bowl picture last
week, 'but the Cougars couldn't be
ignored after beating Rose Bowlbound Washington. Washington
State (8·3) tied Southern Cal for
third in the Pac-10.
"The Cou&amp;llfS are a prime-time
team,'' said Burt Kinerk, the
bowl's selection committee chair·
man.
"They're exciting, they're a
ried recuperative powers, his career
top
20
team, they beat Washington
is closer to the end of the line than
and
Arizona,
and they've got a
the beginning.
great
quarterback
in Drew Bled·
There would be some benefit to
soe.''
the team that gets him - a Ia Jim
Utah was invited to the Copper
McMahon with the Philadelphia
Bowl
despite a 6· 5 record that
Eagles - and given Montana's
includes
to New Mexico and
competitive nature. some benefit to· Texas-El losses
Paso,
the
two worst teams
himself. And there would be con- in the Western Athletic
Confersiderable benefit to the 49ers, not
ence.
only .because of what they can get
But Utah coach Ron McBride
for him, but what they would get
has
a local connection - he ',s a
without him:
former
assistant at Arizona - and
Harmony.
the school pledged to sell 10,000
On Sunday, someone noted how tickets.
''Utah has been on our shon list
Young had developed into the
since
day one," said Larry Brown,
league's top-rated passer, how he
executive
director of the Copper
had managed to smooth over the
Bowl.
"We've
always wanted a
1 few rough spots in San Francisco's
WAC
team;.
and
S~lt Lake City is
game plan against the Rams, and
closer
to
us
than
most
of the other
asked him how it felt, finally, for
WAC
schools.
The
fact
that coach
this 10 be his team.
McBride
used
to
be
at
Arizona
is
"I )Vishi ' Young replied, "that
also
important.
He's
a
wpular
figI could get that in a statement from
ure here, and they've got a good
Mr. DeBartolo." ·
But even as he said it, he knew football team. They're better than a
it would be impossible as long as 6-5 team."
There wiU be another Pac-10 vs.
Montana still prowls the sideline.
WAC
match up Dec. 29 when
We don't know Montana's feel·
Southern
Cal plays Fresoo State in
ings about any of this. He left the
the
Freedom
Bowl.
San Francisco locker room Sunday
f'resno
coach
Jim Sweeney was
before reporters were allowed
inside, probably to do some more elated after his team got an invita·
tion to the Anaheim, Calif., game.
pacing.
"This is a dream come true for
our program," said Sweeney,
whose team joined the WAC this
season after 23 years in the Big
West.
'
Fresno, which leads the nation,
votes and 1,540 points from the
nationwide panel of writers and
broadcasters. Kansas had 18 ftrstplace votes and 1,515 points, in
both cases three more 'than twotime defending national champion
Duke.
•
·
. By RUSTY MILLER
Indiana was No. 1 on sixcballots
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It
and Seton Hall received two ftrstwas a tie on the scoreboard, but
place votes.
Ohio
State University president
Iowa led the Second Ten a~ain
and was followed by Louisville, Gordon Gee nonetheless said the
Georgewwn,.,Georgia Tech, Okla- Buckeyes' 13-13 stalemate with
homa, Connecticut, Syracuse , Michigan Saturday was a victory.
In the end zone near the end of
Michigan Suite; Tulane and Massachusetts. Louisville and George- the game, ·Gee c_alled the tie "one
town switched places from the pre- of our greatest wins ever."
"This is a great vicwry for us
season ranll:ings, while Syracuse
moved up one spot and Michigan today," he said. "A moral victory
State two. Massachusetts was 23rd if nothing else."
Ohio State had lost to its chief
in the presason poll.
rival
in each of the four prev.ious
The final five ranked teams
meetings
with John Cooper as head ·
were UCLA, UNL V, Cincinnati ,
coach.
Iowa State and Nebraska. Cincin·
nati was the only other team to
Rumors have circulated
move from the preseason voting as
throughout
the season that Cooper
the Bearcats dropped two spots.
wo·uld
either
be fired or resign, but
. The regular season will get
Gee
has
steadfastly
-said that the
under way in full force on Dec. 1,
coach's
job
petformance
would be
the new official starting date.
evaluated
at
the
end
of
the
season.
The only exceptions for playing
Ohio
State
will
play
in
the
Florida
before then is the 16-team preseaCitrus
Bowl
on
New
Year's.
Day.
son NIT, the Tipoff Classic "We
always
decide
all
our
Connecticut vs. Purdue at Springissues
at
the
same
time,"
Gee
said.
field, Mass., on Saturday - and
Later, in his postgame comthe Great Alaska Shootout.' which
ments,
Cooper attacked the media.
runs Wednesday through Saturday.
"Guys,
I'm not getting into
There are no ranked teams in the
that,"
Cooper
said to reporters
eight-school field.
when asked if the tie had· strengthened his position. "I will not
answer that question. You're going
to have to ask somebody that
h~elpf~l
makes_those ~~cisions. I don't
malce those deciSions.
"Either lhe board of trustees or
Dr. Gee or (athletic director) Jim
you sharpen your instinctive skills. Jane's,. or maybe the local pres.s
These shootin~ sports literally around. here might be making the
teach you to thmk on your-feet. dccision with what they wrote this
You combine skill with judgment week.''
and suategy."
·
The Columbus Dispatch reportDavis wonders why others are ed Thursday that Cool,ICC would be
not inclined to join liim and the fired if he lost to Micbagan and also
Caspers and the remainder of the lost the Florida Citrus Bowl.
faithful few who gather liere to
On his way out of the interView
shoot, some competitivety and room, Cooper said sarcastically to
some for the fun of it, from April (&gt;ispatch sports editor George
through mid-October. . ·
It is a thought shared by John
Fox, a Milan police sergeant who
owns a gun shop in town and maintains the range.
· "I'm just hoping to keep it
alive," he said; "because I w'!uit to
see shooting sportS continue. Truth
is, though, there are times when I
111
St,.
y
get discouraged.· '
Discouraged, he suggested,
because those who try shooting
sportS usually like them, but there
just aren't enough folks inclined 10
try them.
IIICE 1161

·Montana still on sidelines :after saying he.was ready
By JIM LITKE
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)'- He
fidgeted. He paced. He stuck his
hands deep in his front pockets. He
jiuUed them out and stuffed them in
his back pockets. He paced some
more.
: He shared a laugh with his
favorite receiver, a plan with the
lilte coach, a suggestion with the
third-string quarterback. He
frowned. He yawned. He paced
some more.
.
Tbough the yardage was consid·
erable, there was no total listed
alongside Joe Montana's name in
the official results printed after San
Francisco's 27-10 win Sunday over
the Los Angeles Rams. That was
because all of the ground covered
by the greatest quarterba&lt;:k of his

era - perhaps the greatest QB of
any era- was along the 49ers'
sideline. '
·
Montana looked unusually slender in a graY T·shirt next to everybody els~ m helmet and pads. He
looked like a man who, at turns,
was bored, eager, resigned and
restless. And the people who control his future are telllilg him 10 get
used to U.
After spending roughly two
years rehabbing the elbow on his
throwing arm, Montana decided
several weeks ago that he was
ready to play. Everyone who has
seen him throw since has confmned it.
The last time he' played in a
game that meant anything was the
NFC Championship ip 1990. But

with Steve Young playing like Joe
Montana in front of him, Montana·
is not likely to play again for the
~49ers anytime soon.
·
He has tried to be a good soldier, biding his time on injured
reserve and practicing on his own.
He went so far as to say publicly in
the middle of last week that he was
even willing to rejoin the team as a
backup . But p.eople who know
Montana are hearing something
else in private. The solution should
be obvious.
Trade Joe Montana.
There.... Having read it (or said
it) once, it is much easier to do the
next liple around.
'ffi!I.DEJOEMONTANA.
Heretical, yes; impossible, no.
Granted, Montana is a faxture in the

Philly's 4-4 tie with Buffalo
~~.~ ~~e'~\~ee~~~ ~e~~r~~
•·
got uaded and Gretzky got traded
.Costs
Fly_ers· inJ· ured
Lindros. and
both of them. not to mention
.
.
the1r teams and thetr sports, moved
·

•. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
P~iladelphia Flyers are holding ·
their breath.
The Flyers' 4-4 tie with Buffalo
on Sunday night was overshadowed by an injury to their star
rookie, Eric Lindros, wllo sprained
his left knee 1:40 into the game and
I· di'dn' tretum.
~
~ ... , •
~
He"ll be examini)d toiiay. Until
then, all the Flyersc31) do is wait
-and worry.
"It's preuy devastating for us,
under the circumstances,"
Philadelphia coach Bill Dineen
said.
· Lindros was hurt when he and
ieammate Mark Recchi sandwiched
{luffalo defenseman Petr Svoboda
against the boards. Lindros landed
awkwardly on his left knee.
The 6-foot4 center, who needed
help getting off tli~ .i.ce. had tests
scheduled this moQling t~ ,deterJ!line the exten!:,of the tnju_ry,
according to the I'I)'~rs· physactan,
Or. Arthur Bartolozzi.
• Bartolozzi and Lindros both
refused to speculate about how
lbng the injury would sideline the
Flyers' prize rookie.
"I feel fine ," ,Lindros said .
:"The doctor's know betcer thai! I
llo. Let's just see what happens."
The Flyers .gavc; up six players,
!WO ftrst-round picKs wid $15 million in a trade wult.~ for l.Jn•
dros, who 11as -ii)le!f. up' to !lis
advance bill'in&amp;,witlilltteam·leading
15 goals. Hn· sec-ond" with 28
points.
• .
. Len Barrie, just called up from

.
't~hicago,

the Flyers: AHL farm team in Hershey, scored his first NHL goal
with IS seconds remaining in the
third period to give the Flyers the
tie.
.
Dimitri Yushkevich gave
Philadelphia a 3..2 lead in the third,
but Pat LaFontaine tied it again for
Buffalo. Dave Hannan scored with
2:10 left in the third to give the
Sabres a 4-3 lead before Barrie's

gof~ other NHL action, it was the
New York Islanders 5, Edmonton 5

.

"Chicago is a great team, and
we are not ready to challenge them
yet. By the end o( Jhe year, I think
we have a chance.'-' Westp]lal said.
Michael Jordan. who had 54
points against the Lakers on Friday
night, led the Bulls with 40 points
against the Suns. B.J. Armstrong
hlld 19 and Scottie Pippen 18 as the
Bulls outsCored Phoenix in every
~but the third.
.
• "We need 10 get ba&lt;:k on a wmding ttack,"r said Jordan, who
ICOred 18 points in the ftrSI qll8fter
lnd 28 in the first half, "We need
10 get that ~tu~ .!Jack• And ~m,
ing into th1s building and wmmng
is tough."
'
• Chicago made 18 of its fust 22
ihots and pulled away throughout
111c flfSl half, shoolina 61 percenL
• In other NBA action, it was
Portland !IS, Deuoit 90; Oolden
Slate 114. New Jr:ncy 101; and the

six
CO}}eg·e basketball
f
teams
stay· put in AP poll
.
TOp
.II

and Washingwn 6, Quebec 4.
By JIM O'CONNELL
Islanders S, Oilers S
AP Basketball Writer
Scott Mellanliy's goal midway
The top six teams in the first
through the third period gave
Edmonton a tie with the visiling regu 1ar-season col 1ege basketball
poll held their spots from the preIslanders despite three goals from season voting today, and Florida
New York's Pierre Turgeon.
'
Turgeon completed his hat trick State made the first jump of the
at 1:59 of the third period, and year, moving up two spots to sevdefenseman Scott Lachance put ent~ith J·ust the i\ games of the
New York ahead with his fmt goal
of the season at 5:35. But MeUan- first two rounds of the •preseason
by's tip-in .of Dave Manson's shot NIT having been played, a lot of
gave the Oilers a tie and kept the change wasn't expected. Michigan,
lslan&lt;~_ers winless in Edmonton Kan sas, Dulce, Indiana, Kentucky
since 1983-84.
·
and Setbn Hall stayed Nos, 1-6.
Capitals 6, Nordiques 4
Florida State's jump came at the
Dale Hunter had two goals and expe nse of North Carolina and
·
· h' ld
d Memphis State, which each
two asSISts agamst IS o team an
dropped a spot to eighth and ninth,
Paul MacDermid scored twice as
visiting Washington snapped Que· respectively. Arizona again closed
the Top Ten.
,
bee s seven-game unbeaten strin~.
1ndiana, Seton Hall , Florida
Hunter broke a 3-3 tie early in State and No. 21 UCLA, which
the second period, then stole the improved three spots, will play
puck and fed MacDermid late in Wednesday night in tlie semifmals
the period for a 5· 3 lead.
f th
Andrei Kovalenko scored twice o e preseason NIT at New Yorlc
after winning two games each. The
for Que~.
championship game is Friday

Portland, Golden
State a""'ong,NBA winners

By The AsSociated Press
. The Chicago Buns· gllve the
l.'hoenix Suns a lesson in what it ljlkes to be'a·g.Ut (l:arll. - '
The BullS'·rebQ11nded from an
overtime loss to the Los Angeles
Lakers by routing the Suns in
Phoenix 128·111 on Sunday night.
~ Phoenix coach Paul Westphal,
who inherited a team that has won
more than .50 games for four
s'traight seasons but faded in the
P.layoffs, said the Bulls showed hi!ll
ihe difference between a good team

on.
Granted, the timing of such a
move isn't exactly right - the
NFL trading deadline passed nearly
a month ago. But nobody, not even
an owner as charitable as San Francisco's Eddie DeBartolo, needs a
$3 million backup. Montana will be
37 next season and for all his sto-

Lalcers 119, Denver 107.
Trail Blazers 115, Pistons 90
Portland (7 -0) remained the
NBA's only unbeaten te~ m and
gave Rick Adelman his 200th
coaching victory as Cliff Robinson
came off the bench to score 20
points and reserve Rod Strickland
had II points, 13 assists and 10
rebounds. Clyde Drexler added 19
points and Terry Porter 17 for Penland.
Joe· Dumars had J9 points to
lead the visiting Pistons. · ·
Warriors 114, Nets 101
Chris Mullin scored 34 points
and Tim Hardaway had 27 points
and IS assists as Golden State beat
New Jersey for the lOth straight
time at the Meadowlands Arena.
The Warriors, who had lost six
of their previous seven, led 57-53
early in the third period before
breaking the game open with a 12·
4 spun that included five points by
Billy Owens and· four by Mullin,
giving them a 69·57lead.
Lakers 119, Nuggets 107
Sam Perkins scored 10 of his II
points in the final seven minutes as
Los Angeles beat Denver at_the
Forum for the ninth straight time.
The Lakers got season-high
scoring from Sedale Threatt (32
points), Vlade Divac (27) and Tony
Smith (20).
Chris Jacl\son led Denver with
20 points.
.

nig~~diana and Florida State each
beat a ranked team in the second
~~~n~e~rs~ne. ~:~~~~te~~ s~
Tulane, which dropped from 17th
to 19th, while the Seminoles
cruised past Iowa State, which fell
from 19th to 24th.
Michigan, which lost in last
year's NCAA championship game,
received 24 of the 65 first-place

'
MILAN,
Ohio (AP) - Marie
Casper laughs when she recalls getting to know the director of security at the nearby NASA Plum Brook
center.
" What a fun guy," Ms. Casper
said. "He'd ask me for a date and
then he'd lalce me to a flU" shop."
But her relationship with Neil
Casper led to marriage and
changed her attitude toward guns
as well.
"_No question, I was anti-gun
before meeting Neil," she said, "I
thought guns we~ for killing people and that's all.'
,
As she spoke, her husband and a
handful of other men were spend·
ing a pleasant Sunday ·afternoon
outdoors shooting at bowling pins
and testing themselves on a combat
course at the Firearms Unlimited
Inc. Pistol and Rifle Range.
"You do this sort of shooting,
first of all, for fun," Neal 'Davis of
Medina explained. "but there's
more to it than fun. For example,

DOWNIII CIILDS
·auLUNMUSSEI

IISUUICE

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

Sec••
,,

r...

. • IDRIVIII
•IIICOUIIY

Eaay work from

ouL"

}~~

.

Strode responded, "Thanks,"
coach.''

1

·

Two years ago, Ohio State .~
failed on a fourth·:ind-one call at its\
own 29 with 1:38 remaining. Coop-'''
er was widely criticized fqr the ca111:
after quarterback Greg Frey' wasiC
thrown for a loss on option play. :~
Asked if he considered goiQ~ on
fourth-and-four from the Mil;higan-!!
49 with 1:1~ ~eft Saturday, Cooper
said, "You want to gamble. guys,
but you want to gamble with my'"
chips. Alright? We went for it-down here a couple years ago and
lost the game. And all I see is we-lost the game. .
. •
"You guys have never mentioned that, right? You love thu '
kind of stuff. 'Gamble, coach, gam-!;;
ble!' Thep you I~ and all I hear i~ ':
how many times we lost. We gave·;;
ourself a chance to win the footbalf ·

an

~· ~

game."

Cooper is in the frrst year of ao ,
'.~
new four-year contract he sigl)cd
in"&lt;'
c
July. In his fifth year at Ohio Statc;n
Cooper is 35·20·3. Th~ Buckeyes •
closed their 1992 regular seasom•
with an 8·2·1 record and finished·•
second in the Big Ten to Michlgan""l
.their highest fmish under ,Coeper. '

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

.

• Piioo oi..J I• ol capital.._. lo olool&gt;lo prioo of ad • 7 polat ... . , . ••., -

• S..llooollo _

r,...,

_,._... , ........ .r... ~oloy(o.....
day ..J .._. 1a papor). c.u ..,.,. 2:110 , •••

1"' ......
day after ,..Wieolioa to _ . . -Jio•

• Ado ..... · - · ... paid Ia ad·- ....
Cud al n.alr.
Happy ~..
lo M-rlo•
Yard SU.
• A cl.oif'oaol o c l . - t plooool Ia U.. Callipolio Doily
Trllooo.o (ucept C'lo•"lod Dioploj, B..- Canlor ~
Nolloeo) wlllaloo oppou io lloo Polol Plouoat .....,,_ aad
.... Doily S..liaol, ....... · - 11,000 ... _

1

.I

r

RATES
Days

Words
15

1

15

3

Over 15 Words
$ .20

Rate
$4.()().
$6.00

$.30

Public N~ice
RESOWTION ·

1117.12
BE IT RESOLVED, by
Council ol IIJo Vlllag• ol
Pomeroy, ol
• That th• Vlllog• or
Pomeroy hereby o~pportto
tho eatlon ol Ill• Extondecl
Anot
hrvloolor
loll lr•• local phon•
oxchona• b•tw..,. 112,
Potneroyolllcklklport, n:s,
llltoon, WV,182, Now Hotven

m_.._.,

T...,._

IIIII Hartford, WV. Thlo 100111

,..._ uoh..,.. would 1M
bon•ftclel to •II com·
munllleo lnYolved.

PASSED: Nov. 11, 11102

an-

Public ~Ice

Corner Guards :

Unfinished, Stained
or Varnished ·
~

In Rich Oak or
Economical Beech

~I

l

Prices _ $1!99

J

Public Notice
AESOLU110N
1116.12
BE IT RESOLVED by lh•
Council ol IIJo Vlllag• ol
PomwOJ, ell m•mb•r•

I

=

:

WALLPAPER AND ~
BLIND SHOP · ~
MEMORiAL BRIDGE APPROACH :
OH GARFELD AVE., "'RKERSBURG '
Mon.-Fri. U; Sat. 9-5:30
•

:

•

.

i

576-Apple Cro••
778-M-•
882-N.,... Bana
895-Lolarl

84S-Ponlaad
247-t.uot FoDo
949-Raeioo
142-R•daad

MICROWAVE OVEN
a11d VCR REPAIR

937-B..n'alo

I

~JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.

llliWlES
lrln1 It In Or Wo
Pkk U(!o

15
15
15

$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

Call

985·3561
AcrHI

3123/92/lfn

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

AHANDFUL

SECTION II: Thlo Ordln·
anc• .... u toll• .rt.ot end

1M In tore. on Nov11111Mr 11,

1112.

ATTEST:

E110torn Loo•l 8ahool
Dlolrlot dltolr• to rea..v.
••iol•d .bide lor 11 . .1
lno..anc• ooftrlng col•n·
.
cMry-1183.
lnorclortoiMcoM....,...,

Ill

•••kid

Tr---··

blch •hall be

rllltncllty 11M

oftlo• bJ 12:00 noon on
Dticomber 11, 11112, ond wUI
1M ofiOIIed Itt llol 111M.
Tho &amp;o.d ol Eduoltllon
11o right to ocoopt
ttn,dlor rot-ct ony ond ell
pent oiMy end all bldlt.
a-dol Eduoollon

,..•rv•

Corltroot..... '
J.oaal CoP¥ No. t2,1120
UNIT PAle! CONTRACT
loollld prop aoole wll 1M
nnlvlld Ill tho ollloot olllle
dlreotor ol tho Ohio
O.portmont ol Treupor·
lotion, Columbu•. Ohio,
unlit 10:00 a.m., T· odiJI',
Doco•b•r I, 1112 lor
lmprov.,...ta In: llolgo
County, Ohio lllr Improving
ltolo Route 111, s.atlon

E•18m Looli ....ool 1

card of Thanks

PEOPLE
Do you nHd a atart
In 11111
18 yre and up. Earn ae
much ao you want, lull
or pert time from your
home. Nocah
lnveatment, be your
own booa, even 'H
you're etllla otudent.
Thlo Ia Income that
keep• goln9:ven
when you n'1.
(614) 378·6153
11-12 and 6·10

DELIVERY SERVICE
Small Dozer Work
$25.00 Per Hour
IEASOHIILE IllES

992·7553
11-13·'92-1 mo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

992·7013 or
99.2·5553

or TOll FREE

1·800·848·0070

Thanks to
everyone who
helped me win
Rutland'l Fall
Fe~tlval Prlnces1.
Special thank• to
my family, Erin
Harrl1 1nd
Shannon Enright.
Brittany Wllll.am1

2112192/tf

GRAY'S TAXIDERMY~
Deer Heads ....................'19000
Turkeys ...........................'175oq
· F.IS h •..........................'400 per .1nch
Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.
4

&gt;

noo·BOOFING
AND EVERnHING UNDERNEATH
GARAGES e ADDITIONS • SIDING

TR

·BUILDERS

A Quality Assured Co11trador"
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614·742·2328
11

CEllULAR

AulhorlaciAgent
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

................................ ...
Been wailing for o

lo:_-;::,rc.
orea.
Service ratea
from $19.95

to oorchose acellular (ilone ~ ·
liMITED
TIME ONLY

$6995

fMr month
985-4391 or

992·3838
9128/'

GU

608 EAST MAIN

SPORTSMAN

'
Nlcholao Rd.- Modem ranch
style home with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, decl&lt;ing, above ground
pool, fencing, 2 out buildings, modem kitchen. 1.053

gauge only

Middleport- 2 unit apt building with both units currenUy
rented. Agood chance to !11&amp;ke so!lle extra monthly
lncomel You be the landlord.
$13,000
Make en oferl
MORNING STA,R RD.- Racine: I 1/2 story log home with
4 bedrooms, heat pump, 5 acres, large front porch, f\111
bltooment, 2 cat garage on paved street. A GOOD
VALUEI ReQlced to$ 89,900 .

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

MIDDLEPORT - •Commercial buildiniJ. Includes ·2
buaine1181111nting downstairs and 2 apartments upstairs
that hove recantly been remodeled! Great monthly

24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE
BOTTLE OF LOTION

STARTS
OCT.1

$32.00
Many more specials.

lllnoravUilo- Vacant lot great mobile home sitel 80x100
with utilities available! Great view ollhe Ohio riverl
•

Make on Offer!

1011e.... II.,MW41eperl

CLUB
SUNDAYS
.12:00 Noon
Fa~tory choke 12

acres. Country setting, yet not too lar from town .

1

TROllEY STATIOI
CRAFTS

SHOOT

FORKED RUN

POMEROY, OHIO

in&lt;:orMI $53,000.

claath.

FREE ESTIMATES

OHIO

$42,000

:
The Family ol
• EIILY I. PICkENS
i would llka to lh1nk
:overtone for their love
ancleuPfX)n during her
1 r.cent llln- 1rid

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
· TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

Specializing In Custom
Frame ReGir
NEW &amp; USED P RTS
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992-2259

· NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

18,500

Ponlondo OI&lt;Mr 1 ftoor frame home with 2.81acres.
·
$7,500
......., Nfl'a ...malce on ollatl

.,_heat, lftlltllohed.

FOREVER
BRONZE

TAKE TillE DURING THIS THANKSGIVING SEASON
TO LOOK AAOUND, APPRECIATE, AND BE
THANKFULL FOR THOSE BLESSING AROUND YOUI

lashan Rd., Racine

939·2826

Henly E. Clellnd .......... 992~191
' T..ey Brinltger...............949·2439
Jean TruoooL .............. 949-2259
Olb ............................. 992-2259

ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR 6 MONTHS •
11-23-'82-lmo.

·

12-5-lfn

POMEROY, OIL

HIOOSA 7

:
Rudovllt., Ohio 45772
• EloiH Booton, ,._,.,
:
Phone 114-811 UU
(11) ... 23, 10; (12)7, 4ta

Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERClAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
(No Sundar Calls)

LICENSED 'nd BONDED
PH. 614·992-5591

WORK
DRIVEWAY WORK
alfd LIMESTONE

Columblio, Ohio
Nonntber 11,11112

Naw Homes • VInyl Sidinp
New Garages • Replacement Wmdows:

Factory 12

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

SMAll DOZER

TRANIPORTATION

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

1:00 P.M.

BULLDOZING

WHALEY'S
·(11)Lp~::W~"':
--P-ub-lic-Not--ia.-- !ir====R:e~al=E~sita't~e=G=e·:"e:r:alij!!~!j=;
PARTS
23, 30, 2tc
i NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho lloord o1 Eduolllon o1

Vouchers

614:949·2801 • 949-2860
·'
or 985·3839

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

Klt1hy ..,... ~ CleriiiT.....

PubUc Notice

We

10129(92/1

CHARLIE'S

N011CE TO
CONTRACTORS
ITATE OF OHIO
DEPAimiENT OF

1·800·598·5654
or 614·446·1157

Gauge Choke

614-742·2138

OF CASH
BETTER
THANA
GARAGE-FUL
-OF STUFF

($150.00~

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

614·992~

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN
SHOOTS
SUNDAYS

949·2398 or
1·800·837·1460

Public Notice

HOME HEATING OILS
DIESEL FUELS • GASOLIN

1121tfn

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

.

6637
St. Rt. 7
Choshiro, OH.

Fro• Pelt Oflco

217 L locoHII.
POMIIOY, OHIO

Rates are lor consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged lor each day as separate ads.

Public Notice

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

KEN'S APPLIANCE
. SERVICE
992·5335 or

'

'

2-7-92-tl~

458-IAoo

••r

Door Plus Opo•or
Seal Trl•

BP OIL CO.

985·4473
667·6179

USED RAILROAD TIES

667~ooi.We

6
10
Monthly

Wit• Pur4•••• of
Roc••iwo FREE

FIIEE EST!Mti'ES

.992-2269
.

•Xf*l8•·

' oh. . . . .111\dohildron
• .IIIII gret1111r•Jdchlldron

,;:

24$-Rio Cnaole
256-C.yu Dlol.
64s-.\nlolo Dlol.
"379-Wal..t

I&lt;IIIIJy ltylioll, a.rtclf....
Vlllogo ol Pomeroy, Ohio
IIMreto oonc:urrlng:
lhlgo County, Ohio
Thai Ill• Clork/Tr).any Wohrung, Proal-..
ol lh• VIII..,. ol Pomeroy,
a.tty konlck
. tr-lw tho eum MO.OOO.OO
John~
Forty Thouoand Dollaro)
8cotl Dillon
from IIJo Gon•l'ltl Fund to
Thom•Wwry
tho Str••t Fund lor tile
Wllllani Young
operation ol current
lhm!Mro ol Pomeroy
YI.... CounaH
PASSED: Nov. 11, 1112 ·
(11)23, 30, 21c
Bruce J. Rud,llayor

428·1065 . •

.

Available At:

~-:

BILL SLACK

675-J'I. l'leuaal

Pomei'OJ

985 °

Hundr.,. Fifty Dollar•

•

Start At

992-Mlddlopo.V

J. Rud, llayor
l&lt;lllhy ..,_.. ~ CleriiiTruo.
Lorry w......na. Pnoldont
Pomoroy Vlllop Counall .... p~oy-.lrlllOIIw ,.,..._
..,.ploymonttho- ol On•
(11)23, 30, 2tta

1 Titonka for yo~r
' pawyara, flower•.
~- cllido; f~ ancl~~eto
I ot ldndn-. lpeclel
1 thana to Mlnletor
beNk ltllml!, Bradford
: Church ol Chrlet,
' 8etwna Mlnehllll,
' O.Wieft lpell'l,
Peaav'Hutton, W1neda
i T,Y.nt, and Amy
Bakar.
lllnM»C,..IIIIvy,
thwt Ml ... Plobna,

S
=

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Gallla County Melp Coanty M!IIDD Co. , WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code ~04

. 1188-V-.

With 2 Transmittel'll

•New Homos
•Garages
.
•Complete
Romod1llng
Stop &amp; Compare

HAULING

1. card of Tha_nks

•:

Clau(fied ptJBe• c011er rhe
folknlJing·relephOne eschai&amp;(Ies, ,

.446-G.Wpollo
367-Cheohlre

IISTALLED PRICES
b7-$275.00 16x7-$450.00
OPEIERS IISTALLED-~ HP-$200.00

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Realdentle11 Commercial
OFIDIHANCE 113
0.00; by guardrail, r.con· 01 tho Ohio Revlaiod Codo.
Free Eatlmalaa
An Onllnonc• to provide etruotloll.
Tho dote oat lor
AREWOOD
FOR SALE
additional oomponullan lor
Blddl~g f3: Bidding on compi•Uon ol lhlo work
Vlllogo Emp~ lor 1112. lllo proj..t ill r•lrlclod to ahall 1M u nt forth In the
BE IT ORDAINED by tho Minor!"' BuoiMoo Ent•r· bldclng pr~--•
Council
ol tho Vlllogo ol
•r
..,..._..
Pom-, two-"'l-~ 01 all prl- (IIBEo) c., tift.,. •
Plano and Sp•clncaUono
--"
uooIlSEe In aooor... nc• with •• on Ill• In lld)oparlmont
:::::~r• concurring s.aaon 123.111 1Bll2) ol ol Tranoporlltllon ond 111•
SECTION 1: That lor tho tho Ohio Rnlo.,. coer. by ollie• of Ill• Dlotrlcl Deputy
tho 1111• E.,..r Employmont Dlreclar
LIMESTONE;
Y- 11102, tho Wlop oholl Op:J'orlunlty Coordinator
.
JERRY WR•v
-""·• on quallll... to ~·~ with
P...
·r DitCh ..,.-'-•In
..-r
_,..
DIRECTOR "'•
OF
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
•mploy••nt •• ol ODOY uncMr Chopt.,
""' 5525
TRANSPORT••~N
Novemb., 2, 1112, 11110h
~
employM In department 1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:,'_"_l_23,_30_·_2tc
__...,..,_-l Reasonable rates
monaa•mont Ill• •um ol 1•
JOE N. SAYRE
Thr• Hundred Dolloro
(11300.00), -h -ploy• In
ocu.,. fuii.Ume ...ploymont
SAYRE TRUCKING
the oum of Two Hun*.,.
Dolloro l$200.00), ••ch

•

Solid Wood

SHRUB &amp;
TRIM and
REMOVAL

•The Area's
Number I
.
Marketplace

Dlotrlot

A Beautiful Way To
· Protect WaD Corners...

I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thunclay
I :00 p.m. Friday

Sunday l'lpol'

• Ado ...... ~ . . ..,,.......... _ , ... ,..,...
• · -......... ,. . . . poicl Ia ..J-.
• r,.. Ado: Cl-way uo1 Foud _....lor 15 ...... willloo

TRY OUR lEW
STEEL INSULATED
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOR

1:00 p.m. Soturclay

Tueoclay Papa'

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

,Wedneoday Paper
'Ilnlnday Paper
Friday Paper

MoN. thru F1u. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12

'

NOW,;,

COPY DEADLINE
. Monday l'lpol'

Call992-2156

i

Suode: "I appreciat:e your timing,
George . Th-anks for helping us.::.

POmlroy, OhiD

To place an ad

'•
t
'

in scoring with a 40-point average, :
beat San Diego State 45-41 Stitur' 1
day. If the Bulldogs (7·4) beat :
Tex&amp;S·El Paso next week, they will :
share the WAC Iitle with H~waii ;
andBYU.
.
.
:
The Bulldogs have won their ,
lasl four bowl appearances, all in I
the California Bowl at Fresno.
I
No. 19 Southern Cal (6·3·1), ;
which lost to UCLA 38-37 Satur- •
day" won't officially be invited to :
the Freedom until the bowl coali-lion makes its picks on Dec. 6.
The four biggest bowls in the
coljlition - Sugar, Cotton, Orange
and Fiesta - probably won't know
their matchups until Dec. 5, wl!en
No. 2 Alabama plays No. 6 Florida
at Birmingh11m, Ala., in the first
Southeastern Conference champi- .
onship game.
If the season ended today, No. 1
Miami would play Alabama in the
Sugar Bowl, No. 4 Texas A&amp;M
would face No. 3 Florida State ori
No. 5 Notre Dame in the Cotton,
No. 12 Nebraska would meet Florida State or Notre Dame in the
Orange, and No. 8 Syracuse would
play No. 10 Colorado in the Fiesta.
Other likely matchups are Penn
State vs. Stanford in the Block-··
buster; BYU vs. Kansas or Oklahoma in the Aloha; Arizona vs.
Texas, Rice or Baylor in the Han- ~·
cock; Wake Forest vs. Oregon, '&gt;
Kansas, Rice or Southern MissiS·
sippi in the Independence; Ohio'~
State vs. the SEC championship:~
game loser in the Citrus; North, ;
Carolina State' vs. Georgia in the ,~
Gator; and Boston College. Ten -·'i
nessee in the Hall of Fame.
~·
Bowls with two confirmed;"
teams arc the Rose (Wash!ngiOn-J
Michigan), Libcny 1.(r,fi~sissippj •·•
Air Force), Peach (North Catalina-·,-.
Mississip!li State) and Holiday
(Hawaii-llhnols).
.
.. .;:;

home. No cull at.rt
up. Stert II once lind
you'll never hllve to
worry Mlout
Chrlatmas money
ag"lnl Income thlll:
kellps going wl\tn
you can1.
(614) 378-6153
11 am ·12 pm and
6pm-10pm

C. YOUNG
. 992-6215

;
i

OSU's Cooper blasts media following Michigan game ·

Rifle-range shooting
for eye-hand coordination

MOTHERS AT HOME
Civlltmu Income!

i

~ash~ng,ton State tops Washington to cor~al chance at Copper Bowl -

8nd a great one.

~

Monday, November 23, 1982

-

In NCAA Division Ill playoffs,

..

I

614-092-2549
CRAFT CLASSES
30 "Will Boaket" by
P.om-8:30 p.m. $14.00
21 • 21: "Happy
Holklly OfMn Houo•"
HOURS:
Mon.·SoL 10.S pm
Sundlll': 1-li p.m.
tho Trolloy Stillion for
morelnlo.
lct/26/9211 mo.

RAVENSWOOD
NYA HALL
New Clau••

POM·POM,
.
TUMBLING,
BATON TWIRliNG
All Agea Welcome
Special CIIU :HI
. YNrOldl
For More Information
Call 304-273-3721

WANT ADS

ARE-Pill
11TH BAIIJliNS

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING
n~~~~ng

~!
38904 Loading

Crook Road
Midclloportr Ollio

614·992·7144
I0/1/92tftt

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Fresh Cut Daily
5'- 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.

742·3051
SR 124
Ready Nov. 26
11·17·92-1 mo pel •

�·-

•

Pometoy llddlaport, Ohio

·'lionct.y,
KIT 'N' CARLYI.EGD 117 ~ Wrtpt

"-.;:..,...,.........
wv.

23,1992

BORN LOSER

•

Television
Viewing

-. ·-

............. I

1• .,

... - . . . 1 1 I ''lol
. . 01'1111: ...........
~l
I ,!d '

::r:-;..p

I

•

.

'0 Rearra
nge le"trl of the
four scra mbled words be-

I

8 .

MON., NOV. 23

•

low to form four simplt wora1.11""'f-

MABONE
"' '

EVENING

e

1:110 C2l

1121•

·"

W. ai!D

CiJ •

ONewe
(I) laved by the BeH
~ lquarw One TV Stereo.

: t__,s~c_A:..:.,:E:....:;;
E r-1.,

®~9Q .

8a w...,., Ctly

.

Chronlcloe

WOIId Today

-.. -..

-~

,10 Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop Q
1:05 (]) Tilree'o Company

.17 IU

e

••

11J NBC Ne- C
1:30 (2)
(I) Ed McMahon'o 8laf

........

(J) • ABC Nawe Q
(l) Where In the WOIId lo
e-n Sandlego? Stereo.

CiJ 0

54 MIICellaneous

fi eD

7!

-r

Yard Sale

.........

PICKENS FURN!TURI

P'r ctcd. 100 People To LOie
A~L Yll'd Bolio lluot h Palclln
· No New,
Wll 100%
t1 td. -Brand
. ~-· DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m. W::Jhl
dlr boiOoi 1111 ltC5 5o 10 Nn. Motura~ 100% Qaurantood. Coli

t,.

,..,., ltC!ItiOW' • 2:00 p.m. 303 •• 1213.
Frldlr. lloncior ltC!IIIon • 2:00

7:110 13jG

ONo. t .....

!lou • - iumioh!o •• 112 toL
Rd. Pt. Plaiunl,
CIII10M711--.

wv,

cootoo full 11mt aucuoo-,

........ l ....,_ -

bod,_ unluml- opt,
wilotowe a ,.., n1oo noltJhbor1

or

011io l WIOI

'llrglnlo, :!04-IID2211 .r 131'2121.

31 Homes for Sale

9 : Wanted to Buy

1111 Sq. Ft., ll - - lol. ht
...... ~ oornploto bothl,

-

•nl"'

................ 3bdrm., ...~.

hood,

-euo.

Ooto

a

,_

3C)4.47I.;

1 loc!oooo11, eo. ....To Hoi•• tt.p~til, EarnomkiiiL~

Y01J'~t

GOING TO
NffP SOME FANCY
fOOTwOPI: - - :t'M YOU~ COIJ,TAPPOINTfl&gt;

Up. AI

Solc5 Wllh Woiranly Coli A Dr,., 8hoppll M ... 2144. .

Autos for Sale

71
Utility -..._J!I!h Eloclrlc CUt

Olllas, ......,.nso.e14-S78-

- . ~ , ... Utlll1110 •

MM.

Depo81t.l14 Ul 1157.

In .. llllly ............ 2 ... - · N; .._
rwfrkler8tor, 111. . . ulr::d, Hotnli
Notfhnli, Aaolno, Oil. 114-1148-

.

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS

2210.
Or Almoo1 Woodbu..
1111' 1 - Prator Iucio. 114-441- ~· oorrn~andenl to·•hnd
·1142.
l Wltlo Hannon H!gh -tbotl
- Pilti
..,,....
......·
mQoop.
lluot
..
To Bur: ~unk Auloo -.o,
With Or WllhN Coli . . - '"-ocigo ill -llbol.
LaJrr Uvoly. '" •• 1101.
Con4o01 llllnc5Y ..-.
P - lloalolor, 2GO
'!"'' ·PrJo. Paid: All Old U.S. Polnl
lloln8toroal-..1a-1333.
.
~Gold RI!'P, lin Colno,
~ II.T... ~. ,...., 8111 Tiono To 11• Chriol1111-A-Qal
~1 R~ 1 To llgn Up To
Sol A- Wll AlcOivo til
FREE Producta.l11 t11 1221 Or
Employment Serv1ces - . . o l .

wo-

11

''· .

. .•

}

'

. '•

C.l'fOilEOGPAPH~~.

...... _

•·

x - t - : ... rowown•wo
OUI, MI......., or whllo pi'!!!

Arao-

112:00. onlr,l14- .....

HIIIOfiCII
Lal • till
11o1n 11. Pl. Plu ,..•, W. Yo.
c..np114e1r Ronovo100: 2 Full
lotho, 3 .........._.., HVAC, Con&gt;OI. Avalin'NMdimly. tit tfe.Z201

11127,21.n

Miscellaneous

Marchand Ill

.-1100-KLY
• t till pr 1 ... • Mme.
Eoorl No. iolllng. You',. poki
dlrecl. F~ ~mTud . FREE.
......holllnL
~ .
CopyrleJII

56

onci oldlng, -

Peta for Sale

.-

--loo-.IOIV.._
=~ ".!'-•t::' ..r.-, ....
-Mil.

EEKANDMEEK

-

..

'

__ ...,..__

Fumlolted, s a Bath.
Cloon, No ~ ilolll11ooo I

0111- Cloo5n
a22 PEOPLE
, ...........
''elf.....

........ o,

Do9QOit illqUI

d'll,l ...

Droolouo llwtng. 1 onc5 2 bocJ.
room oporl- •
llonor
ond
1Uw11
Altorlmonto In 11-11011. F"""

11,200 ,..,
Mo. To II You OUollv.
, . lltlorollw lloncioy •

T....,•lolaco 1 10

11e u~ •.-•

a 4 P.M.

till. Colll--7711 1011.

. . . . ..,. , -

-

1121311.

-·

Fl:••"""

Dollw-

)

131 PJolo.Up .........

114-211-131L

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

For-·-,_~

lab1IIM

1t" ,.-., -

In lly Home.
For Chldran 1 l 10

_
......
,..., .....
•..... lorEvoillliao

TV, lift!.._- . _., 114-

-o2tll,aolllar-.

1re E!E:TTINEi' AWFUU...Y

IM-Mf'lllllllalaro Noon.
Cora Hivon of Polnl P l -

':U!"" -

~

.

hoi_,.,.,

Will •
:1111 "' ta-20ll.

304-1112.

PIN down EXTRA

CA~H?!!
1Urn your.clutter into ctUh,
Sill it the eqn ICICiy.. ~by phone,
no need to leave your home.
flqce your cfqujtied qd toda.JI
15 tiHJnU or Lt.., 3 dau,
3 qqqea, 15.4Q paid in advance.

1--------------------------------

2 •. ~----------------3 ..:...
: ------------

4·---------------------------5 ..:.:.
,·- - - - - - - 6------------------------8., __________________________

$111 por _,.h Including I
ITMIDt rant! Now ~•70,
dlllwnltC! l oot up, iildrtlna,
~;:"' mo ... n. 1-aol:

1173 -

II_, 12weo, $4,000.

18lll Shu"• 1t•lV Tip Out, Toto!
Eloctrtcl Aol, StY., W.O, CA, Un·
~nn ng, h,500. 614-378-

2414.

.......

--... --.
=.&amp;1,......

bod-,.;:-

Two
Mulbwry A.,....., -.uy;

~

.

.

45

lloraga

IU new,

:"7ia':''Z:

·· co~~~~~ AN'

IIN110.

Pass

zt

Pass

Nor lll
2+
3 NT

East
Pass
r\11 pass

a

.

.' '

Opening lead: • 4

L___ _ _ __ _ _ ____. ..

:~,:

nine ::

,. ,

Amerlaon

ACROSS
1 From4 Cook'•

- z

mea1ure

a Ac!r•ll

Ariene-

12Cone-bea~ng

tr..
13 Central
American oil

.

tr..

14 Phone pert
15 Non·
, proleailonalo
11 Group ol
three
18 Cereal grain
18 Aaalgnment
2t Actor Ron22 S.nd h\111
24 Ancient
chariot
26 Floor
COY8rlng
27 YanaUan .
omclal
29 Flee In panic,
11 ea!Ua
3t Lhll8 -

Brow~

@Ill Murphy
The staff baHies over who IS
responsible tor F. V.I. winning
an award. Stareo. ~

... ,--.

(dOV breed)
35 8roilla horolna Jano36 Florida city
38 lnqulalti•e
40 Bodleaol
tradition
4t Currencr
unlll
44 Barbre Stre~
aand movie
45 Consumed
food
46 Grafted, In
heraldry
49 AddiUona to
hOUIII
51 Sunrl11
53 Volcanic
01111
55 Smell oword

l.il LJ t.!l
[j[jl.il

'

57 WWIIarea
58 To! TV
59 ApJKOllmllely (2 wda.)
60 Confederate
soldier

1 At a dlsqnce
2 Shrnell

3 ProplieUc

.4 Aclrtll' Ruby

5 11 nut to
6 Bird
1 Dama Myro

DOWN

0 - F SUrvivor &amp;eriH

----LX
.....
n:===.a.
m=.-:--.-· --,,

I

,'1

n ~ ,JfJplr, ,

•, ! . ' '1 f). h

..... Col.
1111.

.
reveals

·:~-·

T..,....

ti,IIIO,
llr•
a.c.ll
.......

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

r•"•a••••u.•

-~-=-~
ioooiliiioniii.,
~
1

-

KlniJ

Aerour

I:GOPII.

~'Birthday

11.....____,__________

12--------------13~-------------------

In the year ahead !hare are Indication•
you may get InvOlved In a promloting ·
lllda venture. II could alart out quite
iiltall, but H'l daeflned 10 bel: IIW ra1h• 1\gn\fiUnt.
,
IAIITTMIUI (Notr. 2Hieo. 21) 0.
Velopmenta ol an unuiUII nature might '
tr111ep1ra today
give you to :
10111ethlng you'
been hoping lor. '
Vou'lllnltlnetlvely now how to eapital'!ze on your opportun~lel. Know where
to '"'* tor romanc:e end you'll lind II.
The Allro-Graph MaWt~maker 1118tantly

.14.:..
· ______.:__________
15...__---::-:-:::-:;.......-~---:---

10 lliiMo Jolellll· ... ol I I

?:

a ..,..., -.;:1
_h...__

1 -hoio 11o5

.

'
are

which .algns
romantically GEMINI (IIIIJ 21-.Junt 20) Ueually It's
perteot lor you. Mill $2 plua along, sell· unsound 10 take gambleS In areas over
addrltll88d, stamped 111vt11ope to wttlch you exert lllllio control, but tOday
Matchmaker, c/o this .-.paper, P.O . .YOU might be lucky wt1h oomethlng that
Box 91428, Claveland, OH 44!0t-3428. Is governad·by another.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.len. 11) You are CANCER (fliiiii21..!UIJ 22) Be alert tonow In a cycle - e you could be ex- day tor a a11ua11on wtwe you might be
lremely lucky In an area - e things able to gat ln1o an ongotng anangehave nol -'&lt;ed out too .,.ell tor you. ment thaf could provide you wttl! ex1ra
Oblectl- and goals look like they wtll Income: .It plortalns lo oomethlng that
be achiewld llnally.
'YOU're already aware ol.
,
AOUAIIIUI (.len. 20-Feb; 11) Two LEO (.JuiJD-Aut. 22) You're not opt1o
lrlendahlpa thai you're pr_,tly In- be as lucky today In dealing wtth undervotved In could taka on graeler llignlll- lingo u you wtll be In -lng wtth declcanca ~ lhe coming - ·· Each one alon-makars. FOOUI on the guye/gala
wtll play a constructive role In the oth- who can give you a definite y.a or no.
ar'a affalra.
· VIRGO (Aua. II lapl II) Vour'ftnan·
PIICII (Peb. .......h 20) Be open- clal proopecta I"'* enc:our-alng both
minded today, bac:lluoo you might r&amp;- today and 1omorrow. Try to concentrate
celve a vaiUII*! lip !rom a leaalaxpec:t- YfNf ellorle on thlngo that COUld mike
ad oourca. It may come !rom aJ*oon · oraaveyou money. Your galnlcould be
who h• prevlouely,nevar helped you.
llltlm~nllal.
ARIII (March 21·AprJI 11) Thle Ia a. ~ (lo!pt. ~ II) Vou have a
good d-filr Otalul 'm ietlng reglli'dlng' unique !-Ioder lor liking up Calli II
111111c!M¥oryou'rellwolved IA·wllll-- th•t . , - . can:t quite get off the
era\ othera. Each could make conllrue·; ground and mlklilg them work. You
.mlghi gel Involved In oomethlng quite
tlve ~rlbutlona to tht
TAUilU.(Aprll.....,lll) ou'reWell- exc\Ung.
equipped today 10 handle llltuatlono ICOIIfiiO (Oct. :IM-fiOV. 221 Al1hough ,
..._ you C111tran1form the unprodueoo1 you may pretw to. ltay In tht bckttve Into eomelliltl(l prodUctive end ground today,_._.,,, MJCC,III might
more ulllul. U1111D lhle gill In u many· be due to your guldanc:e. You II partake
·
~Hhe work, but not the applauM.
.
weye • pouible.

to - Salaaale
ttSen.lleniMn
t6 Slum
dwolllng
20 Small barrel
23 Slltlto-

pro-t:!.

c...

--

lwmlep\lare

'.

"'

42 Waret.ouee
43 Pillar Of a

•la!rc-

47 !lol func:tlon-

::f.,~

E1poeura Cleely celabratas
Thanksgiving; Joel Is ordered

48 Coiletructlon
beam
50 Haughty """

to serve another year .

Stareo. C

u

" the 111111
aa JainliOfee
Mk*ay Thompaan'• Off

Br

lilrtii

54 Wofkart'
111n.

Road Champlonahlp Gnnci
Prll
iBWOIIdNawa ··
0 TOO Ciullo With Pat
RObertlon
10:30(1) Ten Tlloueand Eyea A
look at the work ol
·
proleaeional photographers
on a variety of aallignmento
all around the WOrld. (0:40)

-·'

'
•
•
•

•

''
•

'

•

'•

'

••

LUBHB

KHB

IIJ

NZHIJZE
Z H X Z Q

l

ZOAW

LFZ

.'
I

IEZLVZ. OX

~ ;,llf:'=a~tereo. Q
'

'I

37 Bar II3D Gravai ridge
41 Mlltarr
otudant

44 Afflrmallolll

Tonight
• . .
QJI Scorecrow and Mre. King

.''

34Weatam

c

O=t:!
: til oita

•

32 Stotrtar
33 Star-tllaped

1118 1121• Nor1hem

......

....

26~tung

LJvel,i

~·:~ight ~~~ Q"·
11:110 C2l e (l) 1111• ID e

.

8 lniiCtlclda

.....'l'll"'"'l'lll""''ft"1 - 27 1044 In••
alon dale
28 Ovtr (poet.)
30 Hlgh••r

Murphy organizes a
Thanksgiving dinner for the
homeless. (R) Slereo. Q
11:50 (JJ MOVIE: lUnd Fury (RJ
tO:IIO (I) N -

.

25~! .

11:30 IIIJIID 1121111 Murphy Brown

(2 :00)

· ~.

•

aaue--

Falhat Dowllngale~ea

_ _ ......o!Ta... _

9 •. _______________
10 _________________

B

a Lany

~ lUJ W

58 Scot

a

,:'1'•z•~.

'

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ShoWdown Shewn Michaels
vs. British Bulldog;
Earthquake vs. I.R.S.; an
Interview with Ric Flair,
Razor Ramon and Ultimate
Maniacs (R)
Nashville Now
tl2 Amencan Double Dtrleh
League WOIId Invitational
Championship !rom
COlumbus, Ohio (T)

SPEND TH' .NIGHT
·'AG'IN SOMETIME

1.~
· ------------~--

446-2342
992.:.2156'
675-1333

THAR'S A
CLUE II ·

. BYE-BYE{

khe,.n leland,
unclorponnlng,

Looking For A Dool? Conoldor A
Pre-OWned Mobllt Home, Llrg•
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Frao Sol...,p And Dollvory. 1-aoo.

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Bridge hands are like this, the play. ,
er with the hammer winning either the critical to the play of this suit. ·It will .
contract-fulfilling or the setting trick. never affect the number of lricks won .
Usually it is the declarer, but this by either side. (Normally, only a
week we will see how the defense or higher will be criticaL) And when •
might be able to wield the big stick.
you cannot play a critical card, you-~
The most important element of de- should give count. Here East should:': .
fense is signaling. The defenders must play the heart three at trick 011e, show-· pass information to each other by the ing an odd number of hearts.
relative ranks of the cards played. ToDeclarer wins with the jack, enters
day's deal features an important de- dummy .with a spade and takes a los- ·
fensive principle.
mg d1amond lp~esse. Knowmg from .
Against three no-trump, West leads the response to the Stayman Inquiry • ·
the heart four. After dummy coven . that South cannot have fo~r bearu, ;··;
with the five most defenders sitting · West cashes the heart ace, confident ..:..
East put on ihe seven .- .but this is · South's king will drop. Three more :
wrong. The seven is never going to be · heart tricks defeat the rontract.

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The following routine was done by
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talking first .
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tongs.'
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•

Aspect - Jerky - Nobly - Morass - ONE to CROSS
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burn and which ONE to CROSS. ~

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People should remember
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F' 8 A A I X •

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " People so.,;eflmos wrlia what they believe the
public wants to hear, whethar It's true or not." - Frank Sinatra.

•
•'

�By The Bend

•

The D·aily SentineJ
Monday, N~vember 23, 1._
'
Page &gt;10'

Community calendar
,

Community Calendar itenu
appear two days before aa event
and the day ol that event. .Items
must be received weU in advance
• to assure publication In the cal·
endar.
MONDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will have a &amp;pe~:ial meet·
ing Monday at 7:30p.m. All members urged to attend. Plans will be
made for the Christmas diriner.
RACINE · "Talking About
Health and Nulrition" will be pre·
sented at the Racine American
Legion Hall on Monday at 7 p.m.
There will be free refreshments.·

imponartt meeting.
POMEROY • A community
Thanksgiving service, sponsored
by the Meigs County Ministerial
Association, will be held at Trinity
Congregational Church at 7:30
p.m. on Tuesday. Rev, Deroo Newman, pastor of Syracuse United
Methodist Charge, will speak. Pub·
lie invited.

•

WEDNESDAY
LONG BO'ITOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will have a candlelight commlulion
service Wednesday at 7 p.m . PasiOr
Steve Reed invites the public.

RUTLAND · Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 7:30p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy Woodard:
"Making Herbal Gifts" will be the
program.

MIDDLEPORT • Jim Oliphant
will conduct a bible study course, '
Wednesday, 7 p.m., Middleport
First Baptist Church.
.
·
POMEROY • Thanksgiving service, St. Paul Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy, We!(nesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sermon, "Tl!anksgiving: A
Response.t Rev, George WeiJ:ick
inviteS the public.

RACINE • Regular. meeting,
Southern Local Board of Education
will be held Monday at 8 p.m. at
the high school.

RACINE.· Rev. Charles Norris
will hold a special Thanksgiving
service Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Racine Baptist Church.

TUESDAY
RACINE • Racine Lodge No.
461 F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday,
7:30 p.m., for election of officers.
· All members encouraged 10 attend.
Refreshments served.

· In both civil and criminal law, the
Supreme Court is the final court of
appeal.
,

SALISBURY • Meigs Local
Annual Chapter I Parent/Teacher
meeting, Monday, 6:30p.m.

RACINE • Southern Local
School Dislrict, parenl/teaeher con·
ference (district wide) Tuesday, 6-9
p.m. and Wednesday 8:30 a.m. 10
'noon . There will be no school
Wednesday.
MIDDLEPORT • Jean Trussell
will present plans for the Middlepan's down10wn revitalization on
Tuesdar at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
counci chambers. All downtown '
·merchants are urged 10 attend this ,

1912

MIDDLEPORT 'DEPARTMENT ,
STORE
will be open on
THANKSGIVING DAY
From 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
For 3 II Hours of Savin II

•.

a1

e

•

Vol. 43, No. 150

Copyrlght.d 1SIJ2

A

llultlmedla

Inc. Newapapej'

Council freezes wages, benefits one year
Will consider having financial
analysis done to help control costs
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Sentinel News Starr
PREPARING PUMPKIN PiES • Students
at Middleport Elementary prepared their annu·
al Thanksgiving Dinner Thursday momlag. Pictured as they make ·pumpkin pies are Jessica
Howell, Ashley Payne, Kasl Smith, Kenny

Carsey, Candace Casey and Page Bradbury. ~
They are assisted by Mrs. Emma Ashley and '"'"'
Mrs. Judy Eblin. This is the seventh year the "
dinner bas taken place.
•
,",·\

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271 reorganized
partf

Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
recently reorganized in October
with 19 girls registering.
Badges and activities worked on

A birthday
celebrating the
132nd birthday o the Girl Scout
founder, Juliette Gordon Low. A
collection was taken ror the Julictte
during the month were: "Girl Scout Low Friendship Fund. This fund is
Ways"· Girl Scout hand signs, Girl used to help Girl Scouts and Girl
Scout sayings and Girl 'Scout birth- Guides around the world. A decoday; "Science Magic" • chemistry rated cake was made by Terrie
magic, static eleclricity and magnet Houser. Others attending were
Blackwell, co-leader; Vicki
hu~ia"ns . were made to: attend th~ Shari
Michael and Sharon Burdcue.
county-wide junior brownie Indian
A Halloween pany Wl!S planned
I '· ·
M ·
H' h
and enjoyed. Games were played
oc .. -tn event at etgs tg
School. Girls learned to pack and including bobbi!lg for apples, fishroll a sleeping bag and how to roll ing pond, big bubble blowing cona blanket bedroll. Twelve girls test and eat's eye race. A costume
attended and learned Indian games, contest was held wilh winners:
tasted Indian food, looked at artiprettiest, Chelsea Moss; u~liest,
·
facts, learned how this area's .lri_bcs Maggie Roseberry; most onginal,
and made. a bead bracelet. G~rls Aja Blackwell; funniest,"Jennifer
then recetved. the Nattve Jndtan Roberts; wildest, Rebecca Houser;
traditional, Kimberly Lemley.
Try-tt Badge.

Judges were Brenda Ncutzling and
Denise Holman.
Girls enjoyed face painting by
"Sparky the Clown."
Building supplies were donated
by O'Dell Lumber and Valley
Lumber. Prizes were donated by
McDonald's.
Other ad.ults helping were coleader Vicki Michael, Shari Black·
well, Sh:lron Burdetie, Carolyn
Buck and Sharon Roseberry.
. ··
Plans were made for an investiture and rbdedication on T,uesday.

•

Monday by the employees ollmperial Electric,
Middleport, Local 1!87,..1BEW, for the Bikers'
JUtnual project or providlag toys ror underprivi·
.leged children. Sherry Swisher accepted the

Based on the Peterson's Guides An·
nual Survey of Undergraduate Insti·
lutions, the average cost of tuitiOD,
mandatory fees, and college room and
board at lour-year private collegeS is
$12,656.

TOY RUN 'CONTRIBVTION • A check for
$500 was given to tbe Meigs County Bikers

•

Li~deman

check from Lonnie Herdman, union president,
as left to rig41t, Becky Fisher, union treasurer,
and Toni GiviDS, nnancial -retary, lind bikers,
Patsy Price, Jane Slater, Brenda Davis, Nancy
Woolard, and Kathy Meadows and son,
Matthew, look on.

trial still. set for Dec. 2

Plans are moving ahead in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court· far tile murder bia1 of Donald 'Lindeman of Racine, (allowing
a .pre..Ujal bearin~ on motions held
on Monday murrung.
.
Lindeman is charged with the
June murder ·of Long Bottom
Storekeeper Howard Lawrence.
Lawrence, who also served as Long
Bottom posbllaster, was shot in the
head in his DeWitt's Run s10re on
June 25, and died in a Columbus
hospital several days later. Authorities believe that he was also robbed
prior 10 his death.
Lindeyrian, 28, was ipdicted on
June 30 by the Meigs County
Grand Jury, charged with aggravat·

ed robbery and aggravated murder. evidence in10 the holidays.
If convicted, he could be sentenced : A mption 10 continue .the lrial,
to the~electric chair. He has been · filed earlier .tly Westfall ,. was
incarcerated ill the Meigs County denied last week by Crow for sev·
Jail since the time of his indict· era! reasons, one of which was that
ment
continuing the case at this time
The names· of !50 potential woul.d place the trial ·into 1993,
jurors were selected in a special delaying proceedings and .placing
jury drawing in August, and they the responsibility of prosec11ting
have been ordered to appear for the case in the hands of Meigs
jury selection 'on December 2, the County Prosecutor-elect John
ftrst day of Lindeman's irial.
Lentes.
..
It has been speculated that jury
Lentes would not comment yes·
selection could take up to two terday- as to whether he would
·weeks, and Common Pleas Court request the appointment of current
Judge Fred W. Crow III ·said that Prosecutor. Steven L.. Story if evithe trial could be continued, but dence is not presented until after
only if jury selection takes long the new year. when LenteS assumes
enough ,to place presentation of the prosecutor's office.

Steps to control costs and provide operating funds for the fmansially-sttapped village were taken
by Middlepon Village Council at a
meeting Monday night at village
hall.
.
After a lengthy discussion of
finances and personnel, ~ouncil
.agreed to freeze ·an employee
wages and benefits for a period of
one year, to consider having a
financial analysis done by an inde· ·
pendent CPA 10'give recommenda·
lions on other cost-savings meth·
ods, and 10 authorize the issuance
of up 10 $200,000 in general obli·
galion notes to repay shan-term
notes and obligations of the village.
Those actions were taken after
Council went back into session last
night following adjournment of the
.regillar meeting.
· At the regular meeting Council·
man Paul Gerard brou'ght u~ vii·
!age finances and proposed a ~ complete analysis of everything to see
where we can cqt corners and
where we can save money."
It was noted by another council
member at that time that some

Vy ARLENE LEVINSON
Associated Press Writer
Hunger is pushed iniO the limelight as soup kitchens and panlries
scramble to meet a growing
Thanksgiving demand, but it's an
everyday, dull ache for the millions
of women, men and children poor
and out of luck in America.
An estimated 30 million Aroeri·
cans are hungry , and more than
ever, feeding them requires not
only generosity, but ingenuity.
The Chicago Christian lnduslrial League, a homeless shelter .
expects 10 serve at least 1,000 din·
ners Thursday. up from 700 last
year, at its " Plymouth Rock

Cafe."

"What we.re trying to do is be
hip for the homeless," executive
directot' Rick Roberts said·Monday.
"What we are trying to do is create
an ambience, like that of the yuppie
Hard Rock Cafe, where homeless
folks can have a fun experieni:e."
Striving for an intimate and dig·

rEns of tfiousands
of people will need blood
during tfie fiolidays.

nified fe.el, there will be table·
cloths, no more than six people per
-table, a pastry can and live music.
It's that kind of reaching out
that prompted the Kansas City
Chiefs football team to donate
money for the makings of Thanks·
giving dinner for about 120 faritilies.
On Monday, 12-~ear-old Seneca
Thomas siOOd grinning when foot·
ball players Neil Smith and Derrick
Thomas, no relation to the boy,
delivered two bogs of groceries for
.his family. The boy kept smiling
and mumbling answers as the giant
men delivered their gifts and asked
polite ques!ions about his school·
work.
As the car pulled away, Smith, a
. defensive end, said, "That makes it
all worthwhile."
II inspired the Black River Area
·Development Corp. in northern
Arkansas 10 help about 30 families
with an adopt-a-family program
that enlists aid from community

A Reedsville youth was cited for failure 10 control after a oiJe.
vehicle wreck on Ohlo 681 in Olive Township Saturday at approximately !:iS a.m.
·.
·
·
. Matthew P. Martin, 16, was westhound on Obio 681 when lhe
pickup truek be was driving slid off the right side of the road, the
Gallia-Mei~s Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
The vehicle then slid back across the road and went off the left
side of the road before slrilring a fence.
·
No injUries were reported.
·
·
Damage 10 the 1987 Dodge Dakota, o)Vlled by Ernest H. Martin
Jr. of Reedsville, was listed as heavy and disabling.

+

9'llf /Jood a!J!in Qncr morr . MIII~·,!CIIjor af~climt'.

Southern board hires substitutes
Personnel action was·taken by the Southern Local Board of Education when it met in regillar session on Monday night. .
.
The board hired the following as substitute teachers: Sandra 1
Coj&gt;b, D. Michael Mullen, Sandra Ash, .Michelle Frazier, Lisa·
Miller and Virgil Philli!l!l. :
·
,
'The board accepted the resil!ltarion of Suzanne Wolfe as volleyContinued o• page 3
· '
·

!

_..
,

.

•

••

people's tax money", there needs 10
be review of the bills, but not as a
pail of a regular council meeting.
Gerard also brought up the mat·
ter of approving minutes of previous meetings without ever having
seen them. It was voted that from
now on minutes of the previous
meeting would be prepare(j and
given to council members so that
they would have time to read the ·
minutes ·prior 10 voting to approve
them.
Trash Collection
Roger Manley of Manley ' s
Trash Service met with Middlepon
Village Council to discuss provisions of the village contract as it
pertains to what is to be picked up
for . the regular charge which
appeal'S on lhe village bill and what
will' carry an additional charge for
pickup. .
The questions revolved mostly
around leaves and yard ref~. The
contract, it was pointed out, calls
for Manley to pick up bagged
materials up 10 a maximum of six
bags. Not included in the regular
pickup charge arc,constructi!)n an4
remodeling materials, rocks;
cement, trees, or large 'pieces 'of
Continued on page 3
-

firm agrees to pay
$400 million in .S &amp;L scandal

WASHINGTON (AP) - Top S&amp;L failure in history, costing the
banlcing reguiaiOrs say a landmark government ~2.6 billion 10 co~er
insured depostts, and the total pnce
s~ttlement they reached with a
leading accounting firm will help tag for the four failures has been
end the abuses that led 10 the mas- put at $4.5 billion. The Silverado
si¥C government bailout of the sav· case became well-known because
one of the institution's directors
ings and loan industry.
But key members of Congress was President Blish's son, Neil.
In reaching the settlement, Ernst
are not so sure. While praising the
record $400 million settlement with &amp; Young neither admiued nor.
Ernst &amp; Young, they said a law denied wrongdoing. Chairman Ray
was n~eded to toughen auditing J. Groves said the firm saw the settlement as ' 'the only' realistic solu·
standards.
tion
10 an endless stream of law·
The Fed~ral Deposit Insurance
Corp., the Office or Thrift Supervi· suits that would have been ·even
sion and the Resolution Trust Corp. more expensive 10 defend.'·
OTS Chief Counsel Harris
announced Monday they had
Weinstein
said a major accomplish·
resolved a 135-page complaint
· against Ernst &amp; Young for viola· ment of the settlement was that it
iions of professional accounting spells out clear standards that·
groups, busineSSes· and individuals standards in its audits of savings accounting firms will have to
to provide Thanksgiving meals.
institutions over a seven-year peri- uphold in the future. ·
But Rep. Ed Markey, D' Mass.,
In Maryville, Tenn., a town of od.
18 000 peoJ?le about IS miles south
The complaint specifically cited ·said the settlement with Ernst &amp;
or' Knoxvtlle members of the violations concerning four of the Youn~ was "an expensive and
Maryville Cburch of Christ costl!est S&amp;Ls, failures in history graphtc reminder of the need for
making accountants truly accountJICSPOilded to minister Mike Brum' · -Lincoln _Savmgs &amp; Loan Co. of able
so that these mistakes aren 't
ley's "Sack. the Pulpit" plea by lrvt~e, Caltf.; Stlverado Banking,
repeated
in the future."
conlributing 200 bags of groceri¢s Savmgs and Loan of Denver; Ver·
He
said
the case showed the
on Sunday.
non Savings and Loan of Vernon, need for legislation
he and House
Brumley challenged members 10 t:ex.as, and Wes!trn Savings Asso- Commerce Committee
Chairman
donate food for needy families of ctabon ofPhoemx, Ariz.
John
Dingell,
D-Mich.,
are .spanfour. .
.
L·Lincoln Savings was the largest
Glona Abernathy ts a 34-year·
old clerical worker in Sacramen10,
Calif., and one-woman Thanlcsgiv·
ing Day Samaritan.
SUBIC BAY NAVAL BASE, tury of U.S. military prescn c ~ in
Last year she fed more than 900
Philippines
(AP) -U.S. sailors this former colony and leaves Ute
people with help from other volun·
and
Marines
joined
by thousands of Philippines free of foreign troops
teers.
'
Filipinos
wept
today
as the Stars for the f~rs1 time since the 16th cen"It's not organized," Ms. Aber·
and
Stripes
were
lowered
for the tury.
nathy said. "There's no commit·
''I was thanking the Ameri·
last
time
over
the
largest
U.S
. mili·
tees, It just all comes together. It's
cans,"
said laundry concessionaire
tary
base
in
Asia.
incredible."
The departure ends nearly a cen- Cesar Mascardo, 51 , as he cried
and placed his hand over his heart.
"My family has benefited much
from them and this is my way of
thanking them ."
A few hours later, more than
1,400 sailors and Marines boarded
the USS Belleau Wood, a heli·
copter carrier, and began a 1,000WASHINGTON (AP) - strengthen.
Although most of the gain carne mile journey to . Okinawa, the
Orders to U.S. factories for longlasting durable goods shot up 3.9 from a 20 percent surge in trans· .Japanese island that houses 40 U.S.
bases.
percen~ in October, pulled ~P by a partation equipment orders, other
areas
showed
strength
as
well,
, The public-address system
surge 1n transponauon equ•pment
such as aircraft and automobiles, including pri111Jll'Y metals such as played "I'm Proud to Be an Amer·
steel and alwninum, up 5.1 percent, tcan" as the ship set off. Di~ni ­
the government said IOday.
and
electrical equipment, up 1.5 taries, Filipino women and retired
The rise wu much larger than
looked fot by economists and was percenl
U.S. servicemembers stood on the
However, orders 'for industrial docks ·as the ship departed after
the biggest in 1S months.
In ·september, orders rose 0.3 machinery were down 4.5 percent.
final embraces.
percent, a substanlially better per·
Excluding transportation, orders
Earlier, Adm. Robert Kelly,
fo111!ance than the 0.4 percent feU 0.7 percent •
U.S. naval commander in the Pacif·
declil'le eitimitted by the Commerce
The ·highly volatile military ic, boarded a p.3 Orion plane as the
DtJ18ibilellt in Ut advance report.
goods sector, which overlaps the "symbolic last man" 10 leave. The
Today's report, which showed· aircraft category, shot up 42 per- plane flew low over Subic's flank·
new orders at a
•tally lllljllllCd cent following a 20 percent d~op mg hills and dipped its wings in
$124.4 billion in OciOber, a11o the the 'month before. Excludtng farewell.
best in 15 l)lOnths, fit with · defense, orders still rose 2.2. per·
"I'm depressed and sad," said
economists' contention that ,the cenL
one sailor, Dave Headly of Long
economy is gradually beginning :o
Beach, Calif. "We had .a lot of fun

soring to require accountants to
watch more closely and repon any
examples of questionable business
deitlings.
·
The legislation passed the
House last year but not the Senate.
House Banking Committee
Chairman Henry B. Gonzalez said
too inany accounting firms have
been unwilling to tell the truth
about banlcs and S&amp;Ls for fear of
losing business.
'
"The t;!Xpayer ended up holding
the bag when the fmancial institu·
lion failed because its auditor had
given it ·a clean bill of health which
was then accepted at face value,"
said Gonzalez, D-Texas.
·
Federal regulators said that if
they had pressed a case against
Ernst &amp; Young, they probably
would have sought $1 billion in
damages. However, FDIC General
Counsel Alfred Byrne said pursu·
ing such a case would have cost the
government at least $150 million
and taken up to a decade in court.
The FDIC, which pays off
depositors in failed institutions,
will receive $271.8 million of the
settlement amount while the- RTC,
created by Congress 10 clean up the
S&amp;L mess, will ger $128.2 million,
officials said.

U.S. troops leave Subic Bay after 94 years

Orders for durable goods
Local briefs---- up 3.9 percent in October ..
Youth cited in accident

Still wondering
. wfiat to give?

'steps have already been taken that overtime has been stopped and
that no Christmas bonuses will be
given to employees th is year. Gerard said that Council needs to be
"up front" with employees about
the village's finances and proposed
that salaries and benefits be frozen
until the village gets a handle on
expenses.
As for bills which Council routinely approves, Gerard made a
motion that all bills be presented to
Council for review before any vote
is taken on payment. While the
motion died for lack or a second,
there was a lengthy discussion with
Dewey Horton, Council president,
who approves the bills for payment
admitting that he silllls a lot of bills
he's "worried aboutY'.
While he agreed that the bills
need to be checked closer for dupli·
cation of purchases and decidmg
what's necessary and what's nqt in
the way of purchases, he was
emphatic in not wanting 10 review
bills at regular council meetings
because of the time involved. There
are about 400 bills to be approved
every inonth and it takes about four
hours, .said Hor10n. He conceded,
however, that as "guardian of the

A~counting

Rise in hunger illuminated in
glare .of!hanksgiving Day ne.e d

.American Red Cross

I

1 S.C.ton, 10 P-• 25 centa ·

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, November 24, 1992

Middl~port

Club elects officers
Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Country
Clovers 4-H Club held at the home
nf Brian and Jackie 1ustice.
Officers are Mau Juslice, president; Jackie Buck, vice-president;
· Jessica Janey, secretary; Adam
Si¥:cts, treasurer; Erin Harris, news
reporter.
.
.
Matt Justtce prestded at !he
meeung ~tth Jerod Cook leadmg
the Amencan pledge ani!. James ·
Chapman the 4-H Pledge.
Eleven members answered roll
· call.
Two new members welcomed
were Whitney Ashley and Jessica
Justice.
·
A show and sales committee
meeting will be held Nov. 30.
The group project was discussed
with members to be thinking of
ideas.
A video on "4-H for You" was·
shown by Jim Sbeets, advisor.
Refreshments were served by
the Justice family and the next
meeting was announced for Jan. 12
at the home of Jessica Janey.

Low tonight In mid 40s.
high ntar 60.
• Clumce of rain 60 pe~ent
~dnesday,

, .

the Christmas meeting. The group
will give presents for community
shut-ins. Charlotte VanMeter will
be in charge of decorations. · •
Sarah Caldwell reported on the
recent charge meeting. The group
voted 10 pay $25 for the Christian
Copyright license.
Nellie Parker presided and pre·
sented the annual report. The group
voted 10 raise its pledge.
Mrs. Van Meter had the prayer
calendar and chose G. Lanee
Sharnlon, education missionary, in
Baton Rouge, La. The group signed
a birthday c8rd for him.
Rev. Sharon Hausman asked·the
grace before the Thanksgiving
meal.
The next meeting will be Dec. 8
at the church with a Christmas
meal and gift exchange for members and guests. Secret pals, program and serving assignments will
be chosen.

1

(

184

Page4

"How Lovely Are th&lt;: Senti·
In the )unior horticulture classes
menu", includin~ a madonna, Josh Bolin, took ftrst and second,
Pauline Atkins, Alice Thompson Niki Lewis, third, and Brooke
Donia Crane, and Peggy Crane. ' Bolin, and Derrick Bolin, fourth.
"De~ Heanwatming Scenes". 1 Nilt.i Lewis tOf?k first _and Josh
all wbne: Melanie Stethem ..~ Bobn, second, m terranums, and
Addalou Lewis, Evelyn Hollon: Nild Lew~. ftrst on uee '?f'l~ts.
and Pearle Canaday.
Josh Bobn also took first m the
"They Never Change So Very potted plant.category._ .
,
Much", creative mass design:
In the gtft wrappmg mcludmg
Sheila Curtis, Donia Crane, Brenda plant material classes. the awards
Bolin, and Pat Holter.
went 10 Evelyn Hollon, a blue for a
"Christmas Seems to Alwavs gift wrap for a child, and Addalou
Belong 10 Cedar Trees and Snow: Lewis, .blue, and Evelyn Hollon.
, .
including evergreens and snow: red,a gtft wrap for an.adult
Sheila Curtis Donia Crane Karen
In the semor horuculture divt·
Werry, and E:..Ctyn HoUon. '
sion, ~ribbon winners w'Cf!: Jean
"Greetings on a Christmas Card Moore, ftrst, '!"d Alice ptompson,
are Precious as a .Gem", including second and thi.nl for Christmas cac·
cilndles: Sheila Curtis, Evelyn Hoi· tus; ,Kathryn Miller, ~t, and. Janet
lon Karen Werry and Allegra Thetss, second, for African vtolets;
will
'
Jean Moore, ftrst, blooming house"Old Neighbors and Old Friends plants; Kathryn Miller, frrst, Jean
Send Their Love", dried designs: M~ore ,second and fourth, for
first class Donia Crane Sheila foliage houseplants.
Cunis, Gladys Cumings, ·and Jean
Placing first through fourth, in
Moore; and second class, Mildred other classes were the followm~
Jeffers, Evelyn Hollon, Mae Mora, exhibitors:
and Neva NiCholson.
Berried branch: Jean Moore,
"Warmin¥ Our Hearts with Lov· Evelyn Hollon, Mae Mora, and
ing Words' , miniature designs: Addalou Le.,..is.
Karen Werry, Janet Theiss, Pauline
Broad leaf evergreen: Alice
Atkins, and Karlita Stump.
Thompson, Neva Nicholson ,
. Thinking of Our Bygone Addalou Lewis, and Evelyn HoiTimes", including, treasured wood: Ion,
Krista! Bolin, Beuy Lou Dean.
Nauow leaf evergreen: Maye
Dorothy Karr, and Alice Thomp· . More apd Addalou Lewis , first,
son.
Alice Thompson and Evelyn Hoi" A Holly Wreath, A Little ton, seconds; Maida Mora and EveChurch, A Lovely Door": Indoor lyn Hollon, thirds, and Maye Mora
wreath, Sheila Curtis, Evel)'n Hoi- and Jean Moore, fourth places; nat·
ion, and Karen Werry, no fourth; urally dried, Janet Theiss, frrst and
outdoor wreath, Jean Moore, Karen fourth, Maye Mora, second and
Werry, and Gladys Cummings; third; treated plant material, Evelyn
swag, Sheila Curtis, Kathryn Hollon and Alice 1bompson; cacti
Miller, Evelyn Hollon, and Maida and succulents, two classes, with
Mora.
Jean Moore taking all four places
"Some Carol Singers in the in one class, and Gladys Cumings,
Street", a still life: Twila Bucldey, all four places in the second class.
Crystal Bolin, Gladys Cummings,
For contrived flowers, Janet
and Pauline Atkins.
Bolin lOok ftrst, Pe~y Craqe, sec"All a Pan of Christmas Time", ond, Addalou Lewts, thir~. and
a kissing ball, Peggy Crane, no Alice Thompson, fourth. In corn·
other awards.
husk flowers, the ribbon winners
In the artistic classes for 1·uniors were Janet Bolin, Alice Thompson,
'
Addal Le ·
dp
c
the wmners were Derrick Bolin,
ou wts, an eggy ranc,
Tracy Card, Niki Lewis,. and ftrst thrOugh fourth respeCtively.
Brooke Bolin, in the class, "It's
First place for small tabletop
Time for Gifts and Treasured trees went to Karen Werry, with
Cards" and Nild Lewis, Josh Bolin, Kathryn Miller taking second, ,
Mandy Miller, and Christin Miller, Addalou Lewis, third, and Sheila
"A Star So Bright AIOp the Tree".
Curtis, fourth.

read "Be ThaJ!kful," Nellie Parker
read "! Thank Thee, Lord" and
"Thanksgiving Prayer," and Martha
Elliott read "A Prayer for Tltartksgiving." Florence Ann Spencer
sang "Thank Ypu, Lord, For
Basics" 10 close the program.
During the busmess meeting
II 0 sick caiJs were reported.
Arrangements were made for

Pick 3:
Pick 4:

Alfred U.M.C. Women hold program
The Alfred United Methodist
Women enjoyed a Thanksgiving
program and potluck meal when
they mer recently at the church.
Sarah Caldwell read "Wealth,"
Martha Poole read "Tale of the
Turkey" and "Thanksgiving," Osie
Mae Follrod read "Hold On,"
Gertrude Robinson read "Thank
You, Jesus," Charlotte VanMeter

Ohio Lottery

Saints
defeat
Redskins

Annual flower show features
'Christmas Cards' theme
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
G.littered accessories and glistening snow, bciwtiful baubles and
tinldin~ bells, colorful C811dles and
cerarmc madonnas, all creatively
combined with flowers and Christ' mas plant materials made the annual holiday show of the' Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association
a delighiiO view.
Held over the weekend at Carleton Sc!lool, the show carried out
the theme, "Christmas Cards".
It featured not only elegant
flower arrangements, but holiday
wreathes and swags, specimen
exhibits including Christmas cactuS, berried branches, and tree
ornaments of nafural materials.
Janet Bolin, a inember of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners and a
past president of the Ohio. Associa·
tion of Garden Clubs, was chair·
man for the show judged by Faye
Collins of Minford, an accredited
judge.
The best of show award for an
arrangement went to Melanie
Stethem of the Shade Valley Club,
who consistently plucks 10p awards
wherever she exhibits. Her creative
design was in the class "Heart·
warming Scenes of Snowy Trees
and Yards" fearuring all white. In a
tall container, it featuted iwisted
vine and glittered holly with carna·
lions.
Crystal Bolin lOOk the reserve
best of show "Thinking of Bygone
Times", an arrangement using lrea·
sured wood with pine, eucalyptus,
and hot pint carnations.
The creative award went to
Karen Werry for her tabletop
grapevine wreath tree decorated
with plant materials including
. cockscomb, goldenrod, wheat, and
sttaw flowers.
In the junior division, the top
awards went 10 Derrick Bolin, best
of show, and Nild Lewis, reserve
best of show, with Josh Bolin talc·
ing tile junior horticulture sweepstakes award. In the adult division,
Jean Moore of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners Club was the
horticulture sweepstakes award
winner.
The winners in the 14 artistic
arrangement 'classes, listed first
through fourlh were as follows:

•

"

=

here.'~

.

On the eve of the closing, the
tawdry bars along Magsaysay
Avenue in adjacent Olongapo were
largely deserted. The street had
long been the scene of some of the
Pacific's most raucous nightlife
when carrier groups came 10 call.
Now. about half the bars have
closed and many of the dancers,
bartenders and others say they plan
to leave.
Five other U.S. installations,
including Clark Air Base, were
turned over 10 the Philippines last
year . In September 1991, tjle
Philippine Senate rejected a neV(,
10-year lease for Subic ·and the
government gave the Americans
until the end of this year 10 leave. ,
The Philippine bases served as
the linchpin of the U.S. security
umbrella in the Far East d\)ring the
Cold War.
"As we bid bon voyage to the
American serviceman. we ask lhe
U.S. government and the AmeriCBII
people for the sttengthening of our
partnership on lhe basis of economIc cooreration, social conceri\,
mutua support and democratic
commitment," President Fidel
Rarrios. a West Point graduate, sar'd
during the 90-minute departure ooremony.

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