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November 27, '1994

Oti4olnt Pleaunt, WV
'

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Vol. 45, NO. 145
Copyright 1994 .

·
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COLUMBUS (AP) - Some to l.be new legislaiUre is that l.bey
env'iroomenlal activists are wonied need to develop and renew envithat Republicans who will control ronmental ethics if l.bey want to
l.be legislature will help out busi- stick around," Skeldlng said. "For
ness and industry ral.bec than watch us, l.be election sends a loud ·and
out for the environment.
clear message that we need to go
But Donald Scbregardus, direc- back where we came from and retor of the Ohio Environmental Pro- energize the grass-roots strategies
tection Agency, said sucb fears are l.bat got us here."
groundless.
·
Some envirpnmentalists are
"I don't see it as dark days for wary of Attorney General-elect
l.be environment," Schregardus Betty Montgomery, whose camtold The (Qeveland) Plain Dealer paign received at leasl $200,000
for a story published Sunday. "The from tbc campaign of Gov. George
agency is funded beuer now than it Voinovich.
has evec been, and we have specific
They don't believe Voinovich
environmental goals and agency has ljved up to earlier pledges·lo be
goals."
the "environmental governor,"
Not all environmentalists are The Plain Dealer said.
downbeat aboUI the prospect of a
"Betty Montgomery is clearly
GOP majority in lhe legislature or commined to supporting lhc ·goverin slalewide elected offices.
nor," said Richard Sahli, eKecutive
Jeff Skelding, program coordi- director of tbc Ohio Environmenlal
nator for lhe Ohio chapter of the Council. "She will operate l.bal
Sierra Club, said the Nov. 8 Repub- office so closely wilh lhe governor
lican sweep was not a rejection of lhat for all iments and purposes,
environmental regulations. And· it lhere will be no separa1ion of powcould generate new challenges for ers.··
tbe' activists.
Montgomery denounCed Sahli's
"The important message to send suggestion that she wouldn't say

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Report: newborn deaths rising

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12 oz.

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Ial mO!Wity in Obio has risen for
lbree straight~ as smallecc:Ommmtity hoilpilals try !0 care fCI' premature babies without the neededequipment or slaff, The Plain Dealtrreponed Sunday.
The newspaper said its threemonth review found !hat Ohio's
system to ensure lhe sickest babies
and most at-rist mothets get the
best medical care isn't working,
especially in norlbem Ohio.
The Plain Dealer used a compurer to analyze more l.ban 250,000
birth and death certificates for
1992, l.be latest complete records
available.
The system is supposed to route
bigb-risk.cases 10 sophisticated,
regional hospitals. The newspaper
said the slate bas found it difficult
ty enforce care limitations because
bave recognized the limils only as
guidelines.
The newspaper, in the first of a
two-part series, said the morlality
rate among newborns in Obio has
risen to nearly siK in 1,000 live
births.· Neonalal is defined as
babic~ younger than 28 days old.
However, Mary Yost, a
spokeswoman for l.be Ohio Hospital Association, said OHA data
from hospital discharge records
show that tbe number of babies
wbo died in Ohio within 28 days of
birl.b actually declined from five
per 1,000 binhs in 199210 4.77 per
1,000 in 1993.
She said Sunday it may be diffi-

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Cbris Hoce, vice president of
Wesiern Reserve Care System, the
parent company of Northside Hospital in Youngstown, said Northside transfers lhe appropriate number of prematurely born babies to
larger bospilals.
In 1992, Nonhside delivered 31
babies who weighed between I . I '
and 3.3 pounds.

''Hospitals will do anything
IIIey can to keep patients," said Dr.
Avroy A. Fanaroff, director of
neonalology at Rainbo'l!' Babies
and Childrens Hospilal. l'he hospital is one of Ohio's 13 designated
neonatal cemer§ for llle highest-risk
A study to be released soon by
patients.
researchers in lhe state of Washington found that as the number of
"Money, lhal's what lhe whole premature binhs at lesser-equipped
llling is about,' ' Fanaroff said.
conununily hospitals grew, so did
More than 158,700 babies were the dealll rate for such cases. The
born in Ohio in 1992, and hospilals Plain Dealer said.
charged more than $769 million for
"II sbowed that when there are
financial pressures not to transfer
their delivery and care.
mothers, the survival of babies bas
The paper said compelilion over declined." said Dr. Sleven G.
newborns has led rival hospitals to Gabbe, head of obstetrics at Ohio
pay for duplicate equipment for State University Medical Center.
treating premature babies, those Gabbe was a judge at a recent medweighing 3.3 pounds or less. Such ical conference where the study
babies represent less than 2 percent was presented.
o( all binhs.
"For a hospital to deliver one
Several hospilal representatives 600- gram ( 1.3 pound) baby and
defended !heir record of treating say, 'Wow, look at what we did.'
premature binhs.
OK, that might make a nice story
for llleir newsletter, but that's not
"We're not keeping babies we what you want for the patient,"
shouldn't," said Dr. Elena Rossi. Gabbe said. ''The patient needs to
director of neonalology at S1. Eliza- · be someplace where tbey deal will!
beth
Medical Cenlcr in lhese problems every day."

White House finds fight to stop
Serb advance exercise in futility

r------

9 LIVES
cAT FOOD

ered 63 babies during 1992 wbo
weighed between I. I and 3.3

-

• • • • • • • • • • ~.... I! ,!1_11! .!II • • • • • • • .• • • • ~ !1 ..11! !I1 ·~I! .•... II! ~-'! .• • • • !I... I! ..• .. I! .!II •-II! !1..11! .!1..1! ,!1_11! !1_11! .!1_1! !1...1!. !II
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sions about premaiUre births based
on binh and death records.
AI issue is whet! ~r hospitals
_with limited facilities for treating
premature babies should transf~r
l.bem to medical c~nters willll.be
highest level of care available.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The 70 percent of the country held by,
Clinton administration believes Serbian forces. ·
Serbian military superiority in
Senate Republican leader Bob
Bosnia may be irreversible; with Dole, R· Kan., also said on NBC
the Serbs blataolly ignoring lhe thai the international effon to end
Uniled Nations and NATO in lheir l.be strife in Bosnia had failed, and
lalest attact on oulgunned Muslim said it was time the 24,000-member
defenders.
U.N. peacekeeping force and its
Defense Secrelary William leaders withdraw.
Perry said Sunday the Muslim
"It may be time to getlhe U.N.
enclave of Bibac, a U.N. "safe protection forces out of 1here,"
area" in northwest Bosnia, Dole said, adding that Yasushi
appeared doomed even if NATO Akasbi, the top U.N. offiCial in tbc
reoews air strikes. ''They can pun- former Yugoslavia, and Lt. Gen.
ish tbe Serbs, but they cannot Michael Rose, l.be commander of
determine the outcome of the l.be U.N. forces l.bere, should be
pound allllbat. ••
replaced.
. Perry, speaking on NBC' s Meet
Dole, a barsb aitic of the U.N.
till Press, gave one of the adminis- role in Bosnia and the administra·
tration's most pessimistic assess- lion's support of l.bal role, said the
ments y.e t of the situation in new Repuj)lican majority in
Bosnia.
Congress will take a "hard look"
''II seems !bat the Serbs have at cutting U.S. fmancial support for
deimonstrated mililary superiority tbc inlernational body.
on lhe puuod,'' Perry said. He 'saw
The Penlagon bas moved 2,000
"oo JmSpeCt'' of the Bosnian gov- Marines aboard three U.S. warsbips
. enluient winning back any of the into the seas off Bosnia, but Peny
I .

Ringing in the holidays,.,

'

"no" 10 llle governor.
"I say 'phooey.' You can judge
me by my words or my ·actions,"
she said. ''I fully inlend to advise
all clients to the best of my ability.
. And when I have to say 'no,' I will
- if il is lhe governor, lhe secretary of state or an individual tax- ·
payer.''
The primary environmental
. issue next year likely will be proposed legislation eslablishing
guidelines to select a site for and a contractor to build - a lowlevel radioaclive waste storage site,
GOP leaders and environmentalists
said.
As bosl to a compact of six
Midwestern stales, Ohio will build
the first low-level waste storage
site and accept up to 2.25 million .
cubic feet of toxic waste during its
20-year operation.
It could take seven to nine years
kom the 1lli1e legislation is passed
until a storage site is ready, said
state Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, RStrongsville, chairman of lhe Senare Enecgy, Natural Resources and ,
Environment Committee.

1·

Roasts ••••••••••••••••••••~·

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newopopor :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 28, 1994

GOP control worries
environmentalists
U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

50..

•

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW -ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

Low tonlpt 1D 301, raiD.
Tuesday, pll'lly cloudy. Hlp Ia

emphasized l.bat no U.S. ground
troops wiU be senl into combat siluations in Bosnia.
He said the Marines were there
to help in rescues of downed
NATO pilots and other "contingency" events. He did 1101 address
llle possibility of participation in an ·
evacuation of U.N. peacekeepers if
llleir continued presence in Bosnia
becomes untenable.
Perry repealed lhe administra·
tion position that it would "consider more ·substantial actions"
against the Serbs, including use of
ground troops, if the war spreads
beyond Bosnian borders. A small
U.S. force is alread:~: on the ground
in Macejlonia monilllring its border
with Bosnia.
The U.N. Security Council has
refused to approve a repeat of last
week:s NATO air strikes on Serbian positions despite the Serbs'
advance on Bibac, a U.N ..&lt;Jeclared
safe haven.

Pomeroy opened the boli·
day shopping season with a
parade, spedal store hours
and other activities Sunday
afternoon. The crowds stlll
turned out to cheer on Santa
Glaus, despite--the wind and
showers. Abo:ve, T.he .Cele,
bramos, a 12-member bell
choir from First Presbyterian
Church in Parkersburg,
W.Va., entertained an audience at tbe Trinity Church.
The heiJ group has played in
the Pomeroy church for lhe
fourth year In a row - part of
its 20-concert annual tour. At
right, 2-year-old Hannah
Cleek reveals her Christmas
wishes lo Santa at an East
Main Street storefront. (Sentinel photos by Georgt Abate)

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Unsuitable weather fails to deter
hunters on first day of gun season
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Despite warm weather, early
estimates show this year's deer seas'on yield could remain hi gh in
Meigs County, according to area
check-in points.
By 9:30a.m. today, Joe's Country Market in Rutland had tagged
10 dcir. Only two were bucks. with
one an eight-point rack, said Regi·
na Walls. a clerk at the slore.
"It's really bard to leU this early. ·
About noon they 'll come pouring
in," Walls said. "Last year·wc were
flooded ."
Mo s1 hunters don' I like the
wann wealhet, which should soar
into the mid -60s today as skie s

clear. Walls ad ded. But. the number of hunters in the woods has
keplllle deer moving.
Corne liu s Phillips of Beech
Grove Road said he bagged a fivepoinl rack about 9 a.m. as it walked
around the side of a hill on his
property.
"They're al l riled up lll is morning . There's hce n a lot of shooting." Phtllips said. "''d r•Lher sec it
a lillie cooler. bu l people are moving them."
Phillips said he had earltcr taken
a doc tlurin g this ye;rr's how sea-.
son.
Fi flccn·yc;rr-otd Jeremy Council
of Langsville shot a six·poim buck
about R:30 a.m. His falher. James,

said he look off lwo days of work
to join his son in lllc woods.
·~ 11 jusl tickles me to sec him gel
one. We' re going back out because
r vc got to show him ur... the elder
Council said. "You sec a lot before_
the season. but when the season
comes they just hunker down."
During th e last few years. the
number of hunters ha s declined
along will! lhe size of the animals.
Co uncil said. By the middle of lhe
week. moSI hunters from out side
the county have already left leav ing more deer for local residents .
Ebcr 's Gulf Service Stalion in
Racine reported 15 deer as of 10:30
(Conlinued on PaRe 3)

Treasury chief
disavows tax
credit breaks
WA SHIN GTON (AP)
Ex posing a splil in lhe Clinton
Cabinet. Treasury Secretary Lloyd
Bent se n on Sunday disavowed
Labor Sec retary Robert Reich's
plea to overhaul business tax credits lllat Reich calls " cmporate welfare."
Less than a week after President
Clinton called the concept "an
attractive idea, " Bentsen said it
was not an administration proposal.·
And he took a personal stand
againsl call s to red.ucc the tu _
breaks.
"I didn't find myself very eKcit-

LmLE CAN BE DONE - Defense Secretary WUiiam Perry,
left, accompanied by an unlc!entilled aide, spoke to reporlers Sunday outside an NBC stvdlo after appearing on "Meet the Press" In
Washington. Perry said the Serbs have effectively won the war., in
BOIIIIa and NATO air power can do little to do chanae that course.
(AP)
.
'
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ed about them. No, I didn\" said ·
Bentsen. the Cabinet's leading .
voice Oh economics, speaking on ·
CBS ' Face 1he Nation.
In a speech Tuesday to the centrist Democratic Leadership Coun- : ·
cit , Reich challenged Republicans ·
to match lheir call for changes in •
social welfare programs with an
(Continued on Page 3)
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stnet
Pomeror. Ohio

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher

CHARLENE HOE(LICH

MARGARET LEHEW
Colitroller

C..niManapr

l.I!TIER.S OF OPINION ue welcome. Th,ey should be lea• than 300
'fiOids Ioiii. Alllellerl~~e oubject!D editing and must be signed wilb name,
addn:aa and telcphono number. No unsigned lettcD will be published Lette11
lboulcl be in &amp;ood tute, addmling i11uea, not personalities.

Ohio Perspective:

Ameritech, ONA
slug it out over
'superhighway'

-

Today in

h' ist~ry
(

By The Associated 'Press
Today is Monday, Nov. 28, 'the 332nd day of 1994. There are 33 days
Jell in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 28, 1943, President Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winstoo Olurchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin met in Tehran to map out
stralegy during World War II.
.
·

Berryls World

., 6&lt;,... ,,.. •. _..,

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01~ by~. lnc-

"Since there's fiOthing good on toriight, what
"
.
I
dO you say we watch the NEGATIVE CAM·
PA/GN AD~ /taped?"
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Claude Delaney

AID" 7 ..

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Local News- in;Brief.
'·--· -

--Area deaths--

=. '

Battle brewing over tobacco industry
;1
-.

WASHINGTON Rep. summer's watershed bearings to block il
Thomas Bliley Jr., R-Va., is a for- former Sen . Joseph McCarthy's . ·Last February the agency
mer funeral director who has anti-communi st wiiCh bunts.
announced an investigation into
helped deliver giant tobacco com·
But as federal Drug Adminis- whether n1cotine is addictive and
panies from a near-death political
should be regulated as a drug.
experience.
· Wbile a prohibition on cigarettes is
With Bliley slated to head the By Jack Anderson ruled out, Kessler could use that
House Energy and Commerce
jurisdiction to gradually reduce the
and
Coaunittee, tobacco chieftains are
nicotine levels in cigarettes, make
promised a safe haven from new
it harder for minors to get
Michael Binstein ci~arettes
regulations, taxes and iovestiga·
and issue new rules cov·
lions. Bliley appears to bave tacked tration Commissioner David ennf advertising.
an 11th promise on to the Republi- Kessler put it at the time: ' 'These
' There' s nothing you can do
can Coottact With America: Capk • J).ndjngs,lay to rest any liOtion that that's not going 10 lead to a nuclear
tol Hill will be Marlboro Country. there is no manipulation and con- war," one FDA official explained
A Bliley spokesperson says lbatthe trol of nicotine undertaken in the earlier this year. "Everyone knows
Republicans did not win "new tobacco industry." He added that the companies are going to sue. If
majority status to beat up on busi- the documents "are relevant to the we don't assert jurisdiction, everyness."
determination of whether qicotine- one knows the {anti-smoking)
Tobacco has proved to be a containing cigarettes are drugs."
coalition will come in with a lawdeserving target. Only lastsummer,
That "determination" is at the suit on the other side.''
Democrats on the health subcom· heart of a decision Kessler is
Kessler bad privately considered
mittee were uncovering a paper poised to make in the near future: taking jurisdiction of cigarettes this
trail proving that the industry Should the FDA assert jurisdiction fall after the congressional se~ion
knowingly misled the public and over cigarettes? The move is to minimi2e the political repercus·
Congress about the health risks pf strongly opposed by tobacco exec· sions. He is said to be entering the
tobacco and that it had conducted utives, who still deny cigarettes are end game of this tobacco battle,
research on how to keep smokers addictive. A decision by Kessler to since most of the scientific and
booked. Bliley, who ts the top take jurisdiction would leave legal questions have been
recipient of tobacco political action cigarette-makers feeling burned answered. The Republican landcommittee money, compared last and. not even Bliley could easily slide bas apparently depressed, but

___

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not deterred Kessler. wbo was•
appointed by President Bitsh and:
once served as a health aidC li)Scn.:
Orrin Hatch. R-Utah.
:
"He's very dlsappoiilleil' wlth :
the election," said one source close f
to Kessler. "He realizes that a lot ~
of the progress he was making on a!
variety of fronts; not just IQbacco, :
is in jeopardy. David Keisler is •
now more committed than he has !
ever been. In fact the election may :
have made him m~ committed.'' .:

Betty Jane Lambert
I ! 1, 72. of litailka= , diad M ' J, No., 21. 19M a
*' Pw"a*' &amp; W.VL
Den Afrill. 1922 ia Mii" 1 •1. a &amp;I of die llle Alfllllll_.
lil:ll:aVT
I .SI!e-atm'PF
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lo of lk Finl D I "" Olaldl ill "
•~
pon ..~
w.v--.~~~:a ••·•ep.FallllBiaV'M 5 .,_. • ....._"-·
i1iary VFW Fall9053 ia 'flllpiD PlliaL !lie- I &amp;' • a t2le ll6ts
11cay ,r.e I

..

St.~'d'1-

UNDER THE 'DOM~ ~ As:
President Clinton tries to forgC:
bipartisan ties to the new ltepl!bli·:
can majority, s001e membets• of~
House Democratic leadership feel:
like suing for abantlotlllleiii.' · •
i 'It's potewort~y tb.at all. ~~
Clinton's meetings since the, elec~
lion have been with Republicans .....:;
that's been noted" one House
Democratic leader .told U$,' -~ :l'Cop~
in the leadership are upset by·(pres.
idential pollster) Stan Greenberg
and others at the White l;l~liC say:J
ing that an ·albatross has been ~
removed now that the Democratic •
leadership has been
iemQ~e,ii,;'' -·' :
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•a.-.•-•.,

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Meanwhile, House DemocratSJ
this week vote for new leaders ~ .
with Rep. Richard Gephardt~
expected to beat back a spiriteif~
challenge from Rep. Charl115 Rose.: ~
D-N.C., for the job of mlnorit~
leader. Gepbardt, once poised tq~
succeed Rep. Tom Foley,]).Wash.,
as House Speaker, now must retoo!. _
himself to perform a role requiring&gt;;
more cif a social worker. "The"
majority leader was able to dole OUl,~
a lot of goodies, and now the ..
minority leader over a defeatecf'·
flock oversees a demoralized ~uP'!
and has a lot less to give out,' saiil-one Gepbardt ally.
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killld a da:r dell . . ita
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Senior While House officiar~
George Stephanopolous, a formel\.v
Gepbardt staffer, believes his old;,.
boss bas what It takes' for the new' .
task: "He knows bow to use the~"
floor to define issues and he knows ••
bow to unify the party and be~~
knows bow to ligbt.''
•u\
(Jack Anderson and Michael ;.
Binsteln are syndicated colum~'
n~ts for United Feature ~yndl· t
eate Inc.)
-;

·

*"'·

,,

Before the new chairuian of the
FCC was appointed. James Quello,
a veteran member of the commission, confidently predicted tbe
return of the Fairness Doctrine.
{When in force, it required the
broadcaster to devote a reasonable
amount of time to controversial
issues of public importance. And
the broadcaster bad to be fair giving opposing viewpoints a reasonable op[!Orlunity to be beard.
A vigorous, insistent opponent
of the Fairness Doctrine was JusUce William 0. Douglas: "Tbe
prospecrof putting government in a
position of control ... is to me
appalling, even 10 the extent of the
Fairness Doctrine. The struggle for
liberty bas been a sttuggle against
government"
In 1987, the FCC abandoned the
fairness Docuine, because, among
other reason&lt; the commission realized the public bas "access to a
multitude of viewpoiqts without the
need or danger of regulatory intervention."
Ever since 1987, there has been
a regular p~ rade of liberal organizations urging Congress to rescue
this seductively worded doculne,
which aciU~Iiy chills speech by
making bro~dcast stations leery of
any controversy. In the past couple
of years, there were auguries indicating that fans of the Fairness
Doctrine might succeed, but
prospects arc dimmer now that the

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IIIWii: by a dJ:a: • 1111: U&amp;adcot ia • 1991
Dmu1r:t pitbp • Piac Grote Rom. D
z - M ' • _,

PolftDYIJ polke probe wreck

cartoon ish encounter between "us," respect for life should be' II' centrat ~
the aggrieved good folks , and m~ure of all or our instiwtions - =
"them," the evil perp. etrator~. commuo\!Y· economic, _politica~~ ~
"Three smkcs and yo11 re out" u 1 and legal.
·
:ih'
the closesl 1hat most ?f the conver. W~ile there is certai~ly. some.'::
sation - and legislation r - comes thing m the pastoral for JUst)lbout ._ :
to complexity.
everyone, there is also sodicthing·· :
But for the bishop~. · sim~le tha~ advocates of;virtually eve~. ; .
answers for the· pandeou.c of vto· - political p.ersuas.ton In A1nerlea ··
Jence are not in order; As they put could lind offenstve Qr .unaccept·..;
it: ·
ab!e. That is the way when _ public~
"Violence in our culture is fed positions are informed by·'mol'llfo'
by multiple forces -the dlslnte· values.
gi'ation of family life, media lnflu,ences, growln• substance abuse
But consider how much closet"~
_the availability of so many to .the one such a forthrigb( : .
weapons and the rise of gang~ and approach cuts th~ one carefully ~ .
.increasing youth violence. None balanced to ·appe8l 'to tlie broadest S
.one response can address these po5sible audience. For instailce, the';&lt; 4
diverse sources. Traditij&gt;nal h'belal bishops' position'on aboltinn is far..,.,.
or conservative approaChes cannot less persuasive IIi inC than IOjlbem.:-·:
'effectively address all of them But it takes on added weight/~~• ·
.simultaneously."
because it is connected to their
: That includeS the "less obvious ·. principled qpposltloli to l!buse, ~f
and Jess visible ... slow motion vio- the death penalty.
.
lence of discriminadou and pover· ·
·
'· ·- · ' •
·
IY· hunger and hopelessness, addle·
(Hoddlna· Carter Ill, former, , :
iion and self-desbUctive behavior," ;State Department •pokeam•~· :
The bishops added, "Economic andaward·winllllllreporter,edJ..'~ •
social and moral forces can tear :tor, •J:HI. pubUsber, II lpredileat 1(&gt;,
ipart communities and fiunilies not iMiilnStreet, a Wuhlaataa, D.c..;j~
as quickly, but just as surely as bul· · : ~,~!e~£!1.~ ~!
lets and knives ... An ethic of , . pany.,
·i
;l

by Item D. Md

· Pill. Mi+" 1••1. -

- , . . . · -iqiiOCad.

Bishops sounding call to action . ;
There are two ways to approach behind closed doors.
deep-rooted problems. One is to
"More than 50 percent of the
blame. the~ ~n someone else: The women m~rdered in .the United.
other IS to ms1st on the necessity of States are lc1lled by the11 partner or
cb~nge ~~ilc a~k~o~ledging the
·
·
twm reahucs of mdivttl!taJ and col- · Hodding Carter //I
Iective res[!Onsibility. One scratch·
es a feverish .itch. The . other ex-partner," the bishops noted.
auemp~ 10 cure tt.
_ . "Millions of children are victims of
In DUd-November, the Catholic famjly violence ... We mus1 never
Bishops of lhe United States adopt· forget that the violence of abortion
ed tbe second approach in their bas destroyed more than 30.million
pastoral message on America' s unborn children since 1972. The
"culture of violence." Oear, con-. U.S. has embraced Increased
sistent and insistently grounded in teliance on the death penalty to
moral principle. Its Indictment deal with crime."
begins' with the sweeping truth that
Wrong, all wrong, the bishops
"no nation on earth in peacetime proclaimed. "We cannot teach that
has as much violence as we do."
tiDing is wrong by tilling;"
Its prescription for change is no
lbe Lord knows that the bisbJess unconditional: "Respect for ops did not .come upon the subject
human life is the stattlng point .."
in a wilderness of Indifference.
The pastoral is a product of Violence and crime are bot-button
unblinking Catholic theology. Con· topics. Politicians run on glib
sequcnUy, in the category of disre· promises to do something about
· spect of buman life, abor-tion is them. Government at every level
r~d with mu1'der in the stteets legislales and appropriates 'kt
lmd that state-sanctioned form of steadily escalating cost to make
· ~u~er we call the death penalty. -· good on those promises, as witStmtlarly, the pastoral message nessed in this year's $30 billion
refuses to elide either the casual federal crime biU.
violence of eveJYdaY tele~ISio~.fare
But the public rhetoric u:nds
or domestiC v1olence mfltcted invariably to reduce the issue to a

:e .-~~~epill.aldttm.ewd.

~ S:lO pa. ftiday, a1Ciidc tliwa

Elizabeth Well

- ~ •. .-•!~' . ... \~ ·· ·-;_·,
·J&lt;·~
&gt;J; ..... . .r;.;..
speech.
·
..:.
The great appeal of lallc shpws,;;
is their ~pontaneity and the chance.~
they give all. kinds or listeners to-.\
join in public discussion. For sever~
al days and nights in New Yorlc, on
just about every. talk sbow on a1 ~·
number of stations. there were. .
intense reactions by callers to Thti:;;
Bell Curve by Olarleii Mwtay and
. the late Richard Hermstein. Some
of the. language was inllaminatory,
but there sure was a diversity of.,.
ideas. Before talk radio, .that bookv·;
would bave been explored primari·:, ;..
ly on public broadcasting and in the
academy.
•I
With all its skepticism and dis-.,...
belief,"talk radio does very well by
the First Amendment. And Com-;:=
missioner Hundt ought to remem, ~
ber Justice Lewis POwell's advice::1
"The First Amendment requires
some falsehoods to protect speech ~
that matters."
·.r: t;
The commission might pay heed~ :•
to D.C. Circuit Judge Patricia
Wald, who says of the indecency
rule that the FCC should let parents :~
decide what children watch instead~:;
of being the nation's grandmother.
Also, why should adults, by tbe;t'
'otder of the FCC, be limited _;; "
until midnight - to wbat children •
can bear?
(Nat Hentoff Is a nationally ,
renowned authority on the First: ~.
Amendment and the rest of the - -•
DIU of Rights.) .
;m
•

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*

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.
d ment--~fer noW· ~em b raCeS amen
relativelY new chairman of the · broadcasts intended to:protect chilFCC. Reed I I undt, told the lnterna· dren. Lenny Bruce recordings still
tiona! Radio and Television Society can't be heard before midnight.
last month that be does not intend
Hundt went on to quote James
Quello' s notion that broadcast
owne" should more and more
NatHentoff
assume the role of publisher or edi·
to breathe new hfe into the Fairness tor in chief of lallc radio shows.
Doctrine.
"As far as 1 can tell," Hundt
· But there is suppon in Congress said, "broadcast TV and radio Is
for .another form of goyernment long on opinions, but short on facts
regulation .of broadcasting ... ·Whether broadcasters are doing
cleansing the air of violence. How· as mucll good as they could or
ever, as reported by Broadcasting should to disseminate true facts and
&amp;: Cable magazine, Reed Hundt to conect disinformation or misinadded that he has 110 plans "to try formation - that ·is a serious and
to mitigate TV violence through open question."
regulation.!' He does not want the
These views parallel those of
FCC to be seen as "lbe Federal outgoing House Speaker Thomas
Censorship Commission."
Foley, D-Wash., who characterizes
The chairman does ncft believe talk radio as "abusive and slander·
."there is a need for a widespread ous." And the president has comself-initiated recognition that (vio- plained of talk radio's "constant
lence) is a serious and important unremilling drumbeat of nega·
issue." Over ly apprehensive self· tivism and cynicism."
regulation can sometimes also chill
Bow bow is management supspeech, but at least the government posed to regulate talk shows?
isn't invoh·cd.
Much of the more sulfurous com·
Hundt hccrune less of a paladin ments come from the callers, and
of free speech wben be targeted . there is no way to predict what they
talk shows. lie wondered rather are actually going to say uotil they
worriedly whether ialk radio get on the air. As for the hosts, how
"engenders widespread skepticism would it be possible to exercise
and disbelief' and "enhances the prior restraint on their responses to
potential for disagreement."
unscripted angry callers? It might
Skepticism and disbelief, bow· be possible to lay down rules as to
ever, arc no1 un-American. Instead, the views the hosts themselves canHundt might look more closely at not express - but that would
the FCC's regulation of "indecent" approach would indeed cbill free

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nere is no technological reason why people couldn't advertise their
garage sales or used car electronically or wby tho Yellow Pages have 10
cane in a book, said Phyllis Bernt, director of the School of Communica·
lion Systems Management at Ohio University in Athe11s.
"I think there are a lot of inroads being made already," Ms. Bernt
• said. citing computer bulletin bi!IIIJd~ and cable television's home shopping channels.
.She said newspapers are overstating the argument that the phone company will be able to monopolize the electronic information industry.
"If there's enough money in Ibis, there are going to be enough people
running in," Ms. Bernt said. "I don't think the phone companies will be
able to lock it up."
Ameritecb bas not yet officially said it even wants 10 get into the busi·
ness.
"We would like it be an option," said spokesman David )(andel. "We
do not have any plans in place."
Ameritcch bad argued that it could offer the service without forming a
separate company.
·
.
"If we were going to open up that business, the PUCO could open up a
proceeding and look at it that point." Kandel said.
But PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer pointed out that Ameritech has
agreed to set up separate subsidiaries in IUinois and Wisconsin.
"There was 110 good argument presented why protections for newspa. pers and for ratepayers in Illinois and Wisconsin should be better than it is
in Ohio." Glazer said.
·
·
. Newspapers should not consider the battle won, Ms. Bernt warned.
' "Telephone companies right now are fixated on video," sbe said.
''They want to get iniO enlertainment.
"Newspapers should be more worried about what the broadcasters are
doing to them."

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Monday, Novem~ 2t 1994 ,

By P~UL SOUHRADA .
Aaodatecl Press Writer
COLUMBUS • The fjgbts brewing on the information superhighway
have been splashed all over the front pages, but a major light is also tak·
ing place over the dassifteds.
.
.The Ohio Newspaper Association landed a pre-emptive strike last
Week. when it got the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to put up a
potential roadblock 10 Ameritech's entry into the electronic publisbmg
business.
The PUCO, in its alternative regulation plan for Ameritech, added a
requirement that the company set up a separate subsidiary if it ever wants
to produce information instead of j~st shipping it.
lt was the only substantive change to an agreement worked out in
September between Ameritecb and the Ohio Office of the Consumers'
· Counsel. The agreement bad been challenged by a coalition of long distance carriers, cable television companies and pllYJlhone operators.
Wilhou~ separate subsidiaries, Ameritech could subsidize its new ventures with profits from its monopoly in local pbone service, argued Frank
Deaner. executive director of the newspaper association.
"We are cautiously pleased that the coaunission confumed our argu·
mcnt about cross-subsidization of unregulated new businesses," Deaner
.said after the ~UCO approved the regulations Wednesday.
Many of the association's 84 daily newspapers are already tinkering
with electronic publishing, offering readers stock quotes, weather, election results and sports scores over the phone.
But most observers say current offerings are child's play compared to

tbe~tential.

~.

I': '

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Commentar

'

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-·

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llwiNd's &lt;Jn:m!toqsr:

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sail aMilc 1le PqiA -..:k lllll a
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Announcemenls
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The Daily .S.e ntinel

Sports

·

By winning 34-10,

.

n th'e NBA,

By The Asscic:lated Priu
Tbe Phoenix Suns didn't bave
Charles Barkley Bgain. Instead,
Dann~ Manning, took center stage
... agam.
"Every night we have somebody else step up," said Mannilig,
wbo scored 10 of bis 18 points in
the fourtb .quarter of tbe Suns' 115110 victory over New Jersey on
Sunday night. "We have a lot of
guys who can go out and play and

.

103 yards and two touchdowns.
Mark Rypiel) had started tbe
previous three games after Tes·
taverde was knocked out of tbe
final two games in October because
of concussions. Tes1averde worked
briefly in relief in a loss at Kansas
City last week before Sunday's
Slart.

The results were mixed, Tes·
taverde alternating between awful
and brilliant.
He was intercepted by Darryll
Lewis in the end zone in the ftrst
quarter, was nearly intercepted at
least two other times. and fumbled
the ball away when he was sacked
by Lamar Lathon in the third quar·
ter.
Bul Testaverde was on target
when he had 10 he , throwing a oneyard touchllown pass to Frank
Hartley . th e first of Hartley's
career, early in the second quarter,
and an II -yarder to Brian Kinchen
later in the period, helping Cleve-

run-and-shoot when Fisher took
over two weeks ago. The new runoriented offense is far from popular
with the Oilers' receivers; Webster
Slaughter, wbo asked to be released
earlier in the week, was even angrier after be played very little in the
fourth quarter.
"I hope I won't be around much
longer. The way they've treated
me, I can't see puttin~ out mucb
effort for these people, ' Slaughter
said.
"It's difficult," Haywood Jef·
ftres said. "It's something 10 adjust
to as receivers, because we were so
used to getting the ball."
The Oilers had lost each of their
past four games by three points but
found themselves down 24-I0 after
Hoard's first touchdown, a one·
yard run at the stan of the fourth
quarter.
"We got in a bole. I don't think
we executeil particularly well

land build a 17 -10 halftime lead.
The Browns' defense, which bas
given up tbe fewest points in the
NFL, took it from there, blanking
the Oilers over the last IWO quarters
as imerminent rain grew steadier
and heavier.
" I think we're a much better
·offense than we were a few weeks
ago," said Testaverde, wbo
clinched a winning record for the
first time in his eight NFL seasons
with Tampa Bay and Cleveland.
"The running game bas improved,
and we ' re starting to mix up the
passing and running, k:eep teams
off balance that way . As long as
Bill (l:oach Bill Belichick) bas confidence in me and lets me play, I'm
going 10 1ry 10 belp Ibis team win in
any way I can."
Houston, which bad won its pre·
vious four games at Cleveland Sla·
dium, was ill-prepared to come
from behind, having scrapped the

Scoreboard
7S

NBA standings
X..

lY .. Ell.

OrlaDdo ....................9
!'rMw Yort ................6
8018 ......................6
New Jcney .............. 6

w.... lqton .............. 4

Plliladelphla ............. 4
Mioml ...................... !

2 .I l l
o4 .600
6 .soo
I .429
6 .400
I .333
7 .300

CntraiDIY.._
lodiaDI .. ...................7 .. .6J6
CLEVELANJ) .........7 . S .SI!

!&gt;droll..................... 7

Cblc:qo ....................6
C. lone .................. 5
MII_.U. ...............5
Allula .....................4

S
6
6
6
8

.513
.SOO
.455
.4SS
.333

MWw_. DtriiiM

lY .. Ell.

HclU1lOJI .... .......... .... .9

3
Ulah ......................... l
S
Dolla ....................... 6 4
Dcawr .....................&amp; 5
Su ADtonlo .. ........... S 6
MIDIICIIota .......... .. .... l 11

.750
.61S
.600
.545
.455

2.S
3.5
4.5

4.S

S.S
H

.S
.5
I.S
2
2
3.5

LA. ..-, ..............7
'Seolllo .....................7
Ponllllld .................. .6

S .SI!
S .!13

s

.!4!

s.......... .............. s s .soo
li,J\., GIIPFctt ..........,o ll

llawoii 96. Selonlloilll

I.!
2
2.5

H
I

2
2
2
2.S

nlr• place

Ohio men's
college scores

cauo~~~••Mowu Veruoa Nu.eae 112,

Comrort Inn Tournament

a..,......

Woilh69. W-er62

c-.lot....o........
Lm Erie SO

Harvest Cluslc
Finl ......
Hampton lli, Wilberforce 59

Lapchlck Tournament

)

Sl

Saturday's scores
Olarlone 105, New York95
Boaton 108, PhihD:Jphia 99
LA. Laten 112, WllhiD&amp;tOD 96
CLEVELAND IOI , Ooldeo Slale87
Orlllldo 113, Milwaube 105
Seanle 91. HoUit()n 94
Dolla 124, Denvrr 12! (01)
PnoeDil til , Sua AltoDi(l 101

Sunday'sscores
Oetroit106, Golden State 91
POOenil US, New Jeney 110
Uoh 94. SaaamenlO 89
Portland 99, Indiana 89

W~~Rm

Willoa 55

ioM'I~~tlr..;o64

Capilli IS , Deniloo71
Cenlle 72, WilmiDfOD, Oh;o M
CioctoliiiiiOI, AUJlln Polly 73
Clevellllld Sll7, Hilildlle 71
llo)loo 91, Howord 12
- Fairfield 74, AktoD 64
fiodloy 15, Sl Prucis, 01. 7S
lololone 104, RoiNrll Weoleyon (N.Y.)
79
.
Ohto Wttleyan79, Ohio Nonhera 75
(01) .

Tonlt!ht'a gomes
Minnet!Oll at 1an Antonio. 8:30p.m
Indiana at Seattle. 10 (HR.

Tu...tay'sgomes

COIUOI•Iion
Mlrietta SI. Delliaon SO

22

Non-conference actlon

NYU 70, CMe Western S6
Dnio St. 87, Kanua St. 73

fint J'OUIMI

Hanover 71 , Marietta 54

Capital 77, Ohio Wesleyan 62
Centre, Ky. 7l,Ohio Northern SS
John Canoll 79. NDtre Oame (Ohio)

62
l'lfthpiDIInoil St. 10. N. fow110

48
Mertyhunt19. Ashland M
Northeutern lllinoi166 , Alaoo 62
Ohio Dominican 67 , MOunt Vernon

s.....thpl.n
Niapra 76, Hawoii-HUo 71

Ntm"eae62

Lobo Classic
Ph'll rouncl
New Mex ico 122. Sterhcn F. Auatia
10!
Te-.• Soulhern n . San Fraot'ilro 65

Cll•p_..,
Dlinoil ll. Virtinia Tech 7'

llolrd ploot
N&lt;tnW 74. Coil. of Cllor!OIIOI 72

IJEPMTMENT OF

~===
Milling.,... 11/18114
Mtf.t(17t)

...led propoMtl will be

• accepted from all pre·
q11atlfled blddare at th•
llllf•U of C .r.ract S.lee,
Room 111 of the Ofllo
Dapartmtnt
of
Tr-portllllon, Columbue,

' '
;

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

702
610
558
482
402
392
3116
368
240
226
185
9S

8
9
10
11
12
14

IS
· 16
19
18
21
13
20
l·7
. 21
24

East
Appalachian St. 17, New Hampshire

.soo

10

2SS 2!3

Pl-nn Sl. 59, Michigan St. 31

South

C~tnfral

Bdhunt-Cookman 27, Florida AAM

Dln.6on
Pil~burgh .. ....... 9 3 0 .7l0
CLEVELAND .. 9 3 0 .7l0
CINCINNATI .. 2 10 0 .161
Hnu•lOn ............ . I II 0 083

213
266
201
167

172
148
283
265

Wut~trn DiriiQI
San DieJO ......... 9 3 0 .7SO
K.aUlll Cily ...... 7 S 0 .l83
Denver ...
6 6 0 .SOO
LA . Raiders ..... 6 . 6 0 .SOO
Sealtle .............. l 7 0 .417

291
224
267
230
221

200
21l
214
262
226

24

E. Kentucky 30, Boaton Univ. 23
florida J I, Florida St. )I (tie)
Jama Modiaon 4,, Troy St.l6
l.l.luiaville )4, Tulsa 27
MARSHALL 49, Middle Tean. St. 14
McNeese St. 38, Ieiah&lt;, 21
Miami 23, Bo!iltiO College 1
Miuinippi St . 21. Miuialippi 17
Soothem 34. Grurrbting St. 1
TenntliliCCM, Vanderbilt 0

EultQIH.Uion

Far Wesl
Boise St. 24, North Teau 20

=~~~ . ~mWY

Public Notice

45'·0"·31'·6" center to
Olllo, ·untll10:00 a.m.
TIMCIIy, December 20, canter bearlnga; roadway
flit bridlll 54'~" toe to toe
181M for lmprOVIIIItnlllln:
llelge County, Ohio lor of parepeta and right bridge
Improving ltCIIon MEG-7· 42' ~,. toe IO IOI of
ov_er
1.18, IIIII Route 7 In pe·npall),
Sallabury end Cheater lm.raectolon B".
The Ohio Department of
Townehlpt, by grading,
draining, paving with Traneportallon hereby
11phelt concrete on • notlfltl 111 pre-qualified
.bltumlnoueegpiiJIIII bill blddtre thll dtlldvanlllged
IIIICI by --.ctlng: Bridge bueln... entarprtMI will bl
·No. MEG-NI8t5 • I thrH aflordtd lull opportunity to
apM oontln- ~nforctd eubmlt bide In r•ponae to
concrete elal:l. on capped thle lnvtlltlon and will not
pill abutmlntl and Clip and bl dlecrlmlneted agelnll on
cOlumn pllrl (apane 31'-e"· the ground• of race, color,
11

rnaalO St. 49, San Die1o St. 42

The fllSt World Series title for
the Yankees came in 1923 when
they beat the Giants in six games.

PubliC Notice

or national origin In
conaldtntlon lor an award.
aA,
Minimum wage rate• for
thla project have been
predellrmlned •• required
by·law and are eel forth In
the bid propoeal. "The c1a1a
ell lor completion of thla
work lhell be ea 111 forth In
fff IIDDnd ... f'cllneNJ
the bidding propoHL" ·
Plene end Sepeclflcatlona ·
are on file at the '
Oepertmenl
of
Trenaportatlon.
• . . . COIITY
JerryWriY ,
Dlreetlor of Tranaporlllllon
(11)28,(12)12TC I.' - - - - - - - - - - - '

uvWIII GCHILDS
MU.LUI MUS
. II·I .
IISUUICE
YOUI IIDI-IDIIT
•••Ill llrsiVII' .
1

LADY EAGLE VARSITY -The Eallern
Lady Eagles are ·looking forward to • much
improved 1994-95 cage season under third-year
bead coach Scott Wolfe. In front arc (L-R) Jessica
Radford and Martie Holter, Seated are Mindy
Sampson, ·Nicole Nelson, Crystal Holsinger, Tracy

&lt;

play and sank two more free •
throws, all in a 25-second span.
Tbat keyed a 7-2 run that gave the
Suns a 108-104 lead with 2:51 to
play.
While be was only two for
seven from the floor in the final
quarter, Manning bit five of seven
free throws and made up for the
scoring droughts of Dan Majerle
and Wesley Person, who each

7~0

Annual
Percentage
Yield

Annual
Percentage
Yield

Minimum Deposit: $500.00

B.C. Lions
win Grey Cup

RIFLED
DEER. SLUGS

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CO.
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634 E. Main St.

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·S:IW 111\ll uri 1~\ b ti s~ or

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(Omfl'JrN:ln 10 Ohio Bdl~ lt~l

sdK.'&lt;.Iulc! 8. ~uhwc:! 10 t-llli~ &lt;IV'J ilahility Not ;JV"Jilahlc: in MI. Vt.mort
Frt•t.lc,:ridtm ll:,O::•m·ilh:. ('(lmhier. Maninshurg. Uhra. Hooll'f :and

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Ccn&lt;emu~ an:~' l'rumolioo exterid..'ti lhro11gh 1(3J/9'\

C&gt; 1994 Al l!tT

''

..

•
•

Wblie, Joanna Gumpf, Mlcllelle Caldwell and
statistician Susan Brewer. BehiDd them are IIIIIs·
tant coach Penny Aelker, Melissa Guess, Amy
Redovlan, Beth Bay, Rebecca EYilns, Paby Aelk·
er, Jessica Karr, Crystal Morris and Wolfe.
Absent was varsity assistant and junior lllgh
coach Paul Bnnnon and BID- Buchanan.

BySCOTIWOLFE
stead 3-0·1~7. Hash 2-0·0~4 .
Sentinel Correspondent
Meade 2-0-4~8, Staton 3-2-0=12,
Eastern and River Valley split a Ward 2-0-3~6. Totals: 11-1·11::38
pre-season cagefest doubleheader
Eastern (17·11=19): Redovian
Saturday night at Eastern High 0-0-4=4, Karr 3-0-6=12, Evans 2School.
0·2=6, Nelson 3.0-0=6, Aeiker 0Eastern's boys claimed a 23-18 0·1=1. Totals: 8·0-13=19
win over River Valley, while the
Boys' actign
Lady Raiders claimed a 38-29 win
Both teams got physical early,
over Eastern's girls.
but relied on fmess 10 get the scoreGirls' Ktlon
Eastern took a 4-0 lead in tbe board starled. River Valley went
girls' game on buckets by- Jessica up 2-0 on a Bruce Ward jumper,
Karr and Nicole Nelson, but a back . tben Eastern took a 4-2 lead on
door lay-up by Amber StaiOn and a goals by seniors Jeff Stethem and
layup and ensuing free throw by Charlie Bissell.
Greg James, a second-generaNickie Meade gave River Valley a
tion heir to the James Gang, tossed
54 advanlage. •
A lot of fouling highlighted .lhe ·. in_a goal and ensuing foul for a 5:4
aggressive first quarter, as River RV lead. Eastern then look comValley hit 7-9 free throws to go up mand and held on for the 11-9 lead
13-7, ending the frame with a 7-12 at the initial bozzer.
Eastern beld as much as a fivenight from the line. Eastern also
capitalized from the line, bitting 7- point lead in the finale, but led 19. 16 with a little more than two min8 in the frame.
Down 18-13 with less tban a utes left Neither team prolected the
minute in the ftrst round, Eastern ball very well at this ·point, but
pressed and cut the score to 18· 17 maintained its three-point lead.
on Patsy Aeiker's steal and steal Bissell and Stethem hit a pair of
and Nicole Nelson's layup. Eastern free throws eai:b around a Ward
then was beaten badly on the next field goal, while James hit a pair of
possession, as River Valley center charity tosses to conclude the scorCindy Armstead hit the layup . ing with EHS on top 23- 18.)
Jason Stout had a three -point
Then after a steal and turnover by
Eastern. Staton drilled a three- field goal for River Valley in the
pointer at the buzzer for a 21 -17 canto, while Eastern's Brian
Bow,en bad one in the opening
tally.
Eastern was beatenon the back frame.
Stethem and Bissell each led
door numerous times in the second
Eastern witb nine, while Brian
period, falling to a 38-29 defeat.
All 15 Eagles saw action, as did Bowen bad three and Eric Hill two.
James had nine 10 lead River Val·
all II Raiders.
ley.
Eastern's girls will open tonight
River Valley (ll-16=38): Arm·
at Nelsonville, while Eastern's
boys open on Friday, Dec. 9 at
home against Alexander. Eastern
will have a meet the team night
Tuesday for its varsily, reserve and
VANCOUVER,
British junior high teams. Admission will
Columbia (AP) - Less Browne's be a I2-pack or case of pop, dry
football fantasy came true in the Gatorade mix or spons drink mix
82nd Grey Cup.
or cash donations. Tuesday night
Browne will retire with three will also be picture night for team
Grey Cup rings as CFL champion, members and their families.
along with the league record for
Boys' preview
pass interceptions.
Tbe cornerback for British
River Valley (9·9=18): Stout 0Columbia earned another ring 3-0=3, Pettit 0-0-2=2, James 3-0when the Lions responded to the 3=9, Ward 2-0-0=4. Totals: 5-l·
challenge of stopping the potent 5=18
Baltimore trio of quarterback Tracy
Eastern (11·12=13): Bowen O,
Ham, running back Mike Pringle 0-3=3. Stethem 3-()..3=9, Bissell 3·
and slotback Chris Armstrong to 0-3=9, Hill 1-0-0=2. Totals: 7-1win 26-23. II kept Baltimore from 6=13
becoming the first U.S. entry to
win the CFL champion~ip.
Mason Bowling·
, Pringle and Armstrong, wbo
: combined for 34 touchdowns in League results
league play, were kept out of the
{Results u of Nov. 16)
~ end zone. Ham got in once,.but be
League -Early Wednesday
also fumbled at the B.C. one-yard Mixed
. line in the fourth quarter, with
Team standlnp- J&amp;:L lnsulaTony Collier recovering for the tioo (62-26), Tony's Carryout (51· Lions.
37), No. 4 (49·39), Thunder Alley
· B.C. won on a last-play field Cats (44,44), Captain D's (42-46),
; goal by Lui Passaglia from 38 Banks 'Construction (40-48),
· yards after Browne and the B.C. Cbainsawa. &amp;: Roses (34-54). and
' : defense held Baltimore inside the Coun Streci Grill (30-58).
: its own 10 in the final minute.
Team blab aeries - Captain
• Collier will replace Browne at D's (1802)
: the left corner in the B.C . sec- .
Team hlah aame - I:'Jo. 4
: ondary next season as Browne ends (649)
• an II -year CFL care.er with a
Men
: record 87 interceptions in league
Individual high aerlei-I...Qml
· Coleman {522) and Roger Carpen: play.
• "After Lui missed that one field ter and Larry Dugan {509)
: goal, we knew we could stop Balti·
Individual hJah 11ame - Cole• more and get the ball back. just like man (214}and Cliet Wigal Jr. (197)
: tbe Edmonton game," Browne
Women
: said. "It's so sweet. We came
Individual hlgll Hrlu -Opal
' : through one more time."
.
Wigal (579) and June Mowery
• B.C. lived a charmed existence (503)
: in the playoffs, winning by one
Individual high pme -Wigal
: point in Edmooton on Passaglia' s (186) and Debbie Sayre&amp;: Mowery
• field goal and by one point in Cal· (185)
.
: gary on a last ·play IOUchdown

SPECIAL

,.,

....

River Valley and Eastern.
split cage preview twinbill

O'DELLS SPORTSMAN

VIne St at Third ~VI.
Galllpolll
446-1276

•

••

These CDs are automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to change.

SliCE 1161

I,

front 102-101, die Nets' fiJSt lead
since the opening minute of. the
second quarter.
"For a while tbere, it looked a
little sbaky," Phoenix coach Paul
Westpbal said. "After building up
that big lead, it looked like tbey bit
everyd)ing. They were rigbt bade in
the game before we knew what bit
us. "
That's wben Manning took
over. He converted a lbree·point

Minimum Deposil: $2,500.00

W. VIRGINIA.

l.SlJ lO, Atkan5a.'! 12
Rice ll . Huuslon J3 ,

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

be very versatile. I think we can
bold the fon until they can come
back."
Barkley was baek on the bench
with a sore abdominal muscle. No
matter.
With Manning, averaging 20
points, leading the fourth-quarier
surge, PhoeniK captured its third
consecutive game.
Kenny AnderSon's layup capped
a 31-12 run that put New Jersey in

6~0

play of the f~urth quarter bad
drawn the Bengals 10 15-13. Pickens beet cornerback Ben Smith on
the sbon pass near the right side·
line, then tiptoed down the sideline
before cutting back to the middle.
It was the only score of the second half as both teams missed field
goals and the Bengals were stopped
on downs at the Denver 3I when
Atwater nearly intercepted Blake's
long pass to the end zone.
Blake recovered from a poor
first half to complete·15 of 33 passes for 215 yards. "He missed some
throws and missed some reads in
the. first balf." Shula said, "but it
was a good sign that he regrouped
and put us in position 10 win."
Elway' s touchdown pass to
Miller accounted for the only
touchdown of the first half as the
Broncos lOOk a 15-6 lead.
The Broncos failed to fully capitalize on three Cincinnati turnovers
at the Bengals' 40, 20· and 26 yard
lines, getting just two field goals
off those mistakes.
On the game's opening possession, Elway's 49- yard pass to
Miller set up Jason Elam' s 34· yard
field goal.
Cornerback Ray Crockett's
interception and 6-yard return to
the Cincinnati 20 set up Elam's 33yarder.

The Bengals (2·10) bad
marched to the Denver 20-yard line
when Harold Green took a handoff
to the left side. Safety Sieve Atwater's hit sent Green reeling backward, and he was tackled by Ted
Washington, forcing a fumble that
was recovered by linebacker Elijah
M!l!.way_ th.r!?!!g~ !!It; SCC\)nd
AlexanderJ ll tile :U, !m!Yer 1!il:n
quaner, blakelitt Darnay Scott on
ran out the cloek.
. ,Atwater said he got a jump on a 28-yard pass and then scrambled
for a 16-yard gain, and Doug Pel·
the play, reading run.
"I just came up as hard as I frey kicked a 43-yard field goal.
Denver responded with a touchcould," be said. "I saw {fullback
Derrick) Fenner and I saw Green down drive of 58 yards, including
. running behind him. I hit Fenner Elway's passes of 19 yards 10 Glyn
and knoekcd him back into Green. Milburn and 2I to Miller before
Then three other guys came over Miller beat Corey Sawyer on a post
and all of us gang-tackled and pattern for tbe touchdown with
somebody caused the fumble. The 4:09 left in the half: A bad snap
next thing you know. Eli is running ruined the exira-point attempt, and
the other way. We though! it was a Denver led 12-3.
On the next play from scrim·
touchdown."
The officiills ruled Alexander mage, Blake fumbled when sacked.
had stepped out of bounds after a by Harald Hasselbach, and Simon
Fletcher recovered at the Cincinnati
nine-yard return.
The Denver defense came into 26. Elam kicked a 37-yard field
the game ranked last in the NFL, goal.
Battling the clock, the Bengals
but Phillips insisted, "Our defense ·
moved
into position for another
can win games for us. I talked to
Pelfrey
field
goal just before interthem about having to step up and
play. They did it today, and this is mission, a 32-yarder. Steve Brousthe kind of effort we're looking for sard's 26-yard tackle-breaking run
highlighted the drive.
over lhc next four games."
Despite a wind gusting to 37
mph, Elway completed 21 of 38 . - - - - - - - - - - passes for 239 yards. giving him
his ninth 3,000-yard p;~Ssing season
-one shy of Dan Marino's NFL
COUNTY MAPS
record. He also went over 40,000
IN
STATE BOOK
total yards for his career.
A
book
containing all of West
"We played poorly loday,"
Virginia'a 66 county maps is available.
Elway said. "But we're glad to be
Printed on 16x22 inch double opread
6·6 and still have a shot at the play·
pages, each county Ua a separate map.
The book contains 144 pages.
offs."
The state's 34,242 miles of roads are
"Eiway didn ' t have a great
shown
in detail. Towns, citie!ll and
game," Cincinnati coach Dave
villages are indexed and located, and
Shut~ sail!. "He missed some passt.here is much additional infonnat.ion. To
es, and we knocked down some of order West Virginia County Map book,
bis passes in tbe flat. But tbe
oend Sl4.86 (price includes delivery).
VISA and MastA!rCard accepted.
turnovers killed us. You can't
Make checks payable 1.o
expect 10 win with four turnovers.
Coualy Mapo
II was remarkable that they only
621 Puetz Place
scored I 5 points. It came down to
Lyndon Station, WI 63944
the fumble al the end." ·
(608) GGe-3331
Jeff Blake's 70-yard touchdown
Other statA!s available: AR, FL. IN.
pass to Carl Pickens on the first
KY. MI. NC. OH. PA. SC. and TN .

Southwest

Akron fJid 49, Walth Jetuit._.
Akron Hoban 80, Mroa EMt 23
AICIDUfiiO 10, An10nia 79 (OT}
Btllbrook44, Xeni• 41
Baa s2. w.um 41 1

Public Notice

m

4
1

Major college scores

Satunlay'o action

San Juan Shootout

TRANSPORTATION
Columbua. Ohio
. _ ol Conlr8Ct . . .

·

Toledo 13, Oevelaad St. SJ
Xtvier. OhiniO, Central Michipll45

1,200
1,186
1,095
1,057
969
945
918

3
5
6

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

New Enaland .... 6 6 0 .SOO 24S 266
lndilllllflOli&gt; .... s 1 0 .417 243 2l l

Non-conrerence action

1,346
1,308

I

2

NFL standings

Buffalo.............. 6 6 . 0

M111bnaum IS, Wilmial(on 72

1.!23
1.509
1,426

Olhefl rnehin1•otw Teu•ee 67,
WashinJ,ton 46, Bolton Collqe 43, Notre
Dame 40, Syracua;e 24, WEST VIROINIA
IO,lllinoili I, Wiico n1in 7, Baylor 5, CeD·
tral Michi~an 3, Telll Tech 3, Te . . I,
Te•• Cbrutian I.

N.Y. Jell ........... 6 6 0 .SOO 228 233

Alleahcny 61, Tholllll More 54

Thlrd , •••
Va. Commonwealth 65 , New Orleans

STAT! OF 0tH0

Warren Champion 70, Nilca McKinley

Iulll
l! .1. I f [ lA lsi.
Miami ............... I 4 0 .667 28D 227

flrotr-"

~\"'i1'1rm

. NOTICE TO BIOOEflt

North Royalton 62, Bay 23
Piqua 31, N~mont 3'1
Ruuia SS, Wayne 30
Sherwood Fairview 100, Fayene SO
Sidney .S 1. TrOhYood Mldiioo 33
SmitllYille 43, Orrville 38
Suprcrec:t. Garaway 68,1ndiiD Valley

!Uern Dlvllkla .

Memorial Tournament

laYitatloul

Pubic Notice

North OIITllted 64, Cle. John Manhall

C•oc:~e Mellom55, DcoiJon 52

Tournaments

llmlt'i fl•lYWi

I. NebraokA (31) ...... 12-0.0
2. PennSl. (23) .. ......11 -0.0
3. Alabama (I ) ... ...... 11 -0-0
4. Miami ........ .......... 10·1-0
S. Colorado .............. 10·1·0
6. Aorida ......
.. ...9-1 · 1
1. AoridaSt. ............. 9·1· 1
8. Te1u A&amp;M ........ .IO·D- 1
9. Aubw-n ....................9·1·1
IO. C&lt;lloradoSt ......... I0-1 -0
11 . KB&amp;as St ..............9-2-0
12. ClreJOD ..................9· 3-0
13. omoST ...............9· J.O
14. Ulah ......................9·2·0
IS. Arizona ................. 8-3-0
16. Miui!Uiiflri S\. ....... 8-3-0
17. Virginia Tech ........ 8-3-0
18. Nmth Carolina .. ....8-3-0
19. Vir8inia ..... ........ .... 8-3-0
20. Michiaan .............. 7-4-0
21. Soutllern Cal ....... .. ?-3-t
22. BriaJ!am Youna .... 9·3-0
23. N. Carolina St ....... 8-3-0
24. Wou;hington St. ......7 ~4-0
25. 0.~ ...................... 8-J.O

•

Football

Saturday'sseores
Marlelta College
Turkey Shoot

MWwH4
Ennsville 63, W. Miehipn 51
Notre Dame 17, Valp.a.~ao fiJ
St Loui1 66. Bradley 59

Lui

Ida

West Gcaup 67 , Mentor 32
Wetit Holmes 18 , Mansricld 31
Westfall .SO, Mii1mi Trace 34
Willoughb)' South 64, Paincnille
Riverside .Sl
Wonhing10n Kilbourne 57, Col. MirOin 13

47

Soulh
Arkan181 97. Georaetown 19
Tc:mpk 65, Southna Col 54
Tenncwe 74, Tt ni\Cllltle Toch 54

The Top 25 1c:11111 io The Auocialed
Proaa oolleae rootball poll. with Rnt·p l~te
votea in parentbeaea, recorda throuah
Nov. 26, total rointa based on· 2S ~illll
(or a finl·ptace Vote throu(Jh one po1nl ror
a 2Sth-pJ;w:e vote.• and rankina ia the pro·vioua poll :

12

Duquesne 19, Dayton 82
Dcn1nce 87, Monmoutll 60
Moun! St. Joteph 74, Ohio NortherD

New Harnpihire 104, Hofatra 97

AP Top 25 college poll

Tea)'I Valley 66, LaDCUlet 40
Troy 63, Weat C.-rollton 37
TuiC8111W• Val. 65, Woodrip 21
Uniontown Lat.e 59, Canton Timk.en

Con.olatlon
Thomaa More 93, Wilminaton 14

E••
Cani1i~11 80, St. Francia. Pa. 62

lnd\Wpolilll Seattle, 4 p.m.
New OriCIDl at L.A. Rams, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Gianll at ClEVELAND. 4 p.m.
Buff1lo at Miami, I p.m.

lO

Ch. .ploouhlp
AlleJReny 59, Musldnpm 57

regular-season scores

Pllrdut ••

Moltclay, Dtc. 5
L.A. Raidcn 11 San Dieao. 9 p.m.

so

Musklngum Memorial

Big llland

Malv«D 47, United Local 46
M1100 31 , Ld:laoon26
M•illon Petry 52, Wldaworth 40
M-.sillon WllhlnJIOo 56, Alliuc:t 24
Mechanitabura5f. Urbana 53
McdiDA SS, Valley Forse 46
Medina Buckeye 46, Mtdput 35
Middletown Mldiaon 51 , D1y. Oak·

Ch. . plonihlp
Carneaie Mellon 5~. Hanover •9

Sunday's

Alllilla ifl!ilfl'ffii~-. 4 p.m.

Deaver II. Kanlll aty, 4p.m.

N~w~t~

Sunday's KOres

Major men's
college scores

SIUidoy,Dot.4
OaJiull Phi ladelphia, I p.m.
N.Y. leta 11 New Enalond, I p.m.
Pilllbu'lh al CINCINNATI. I p.m.
WashinJion at Tampa Bay. 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Detroit, 4 p. m
Art!!!!! at ~·w.n, ,! P.:m: _.,

Minster 49, SpeltCef\'illc 39
Mogadore S3, Akro(' Mantheatcr -43
Navarre Fairlea• 52, Canton South 47
New Bremen S?, New Knoxville 40
Newark 63, Groveport 4S
North Adami 59 , Portlmouth 52
North Canton Hoover 56, Canal Fulton

Marlelta College
Turkey Shoot

p.m.

n.......,.

Oticaao at Minnesota, 9 p.m.

/

Broncos outlast
Bengals 15-13

ry ..

Week 14 olale

Hilll.,. 37, Weo~lllld
Kettc:ria1 Alter $S, Day._StebbiDI25
LUowood 89, &amp;clld 27
Liekill Valley 69. Maysville til

Ohio women's
college scores

LA. Lakm at New Jcttey, 7:30p.m.
New York at Wuhinl(on,7:JO p.m.
Slla'IIUCnto at Miami, 7:30p.m.
Otlr1otte at Atluta, 7:30p.m.
Phoeniall Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
Minne.ota at Dallu, 1:30 p.m.
Deaver at Houtlon, 8:30p.m.
Utah at Portl1od, I 0 p.m.
L.A. Clipper• at Golden State, 10:30

16S 261

Tonight'• game

wood 39

Olivet Na..ene 97, Cett. St. 71
WiiCOftlin 13, Wril,hl St. 63
Yort n .Timn 63

244 2S8

San Franciaco 11 New OJ!Cilll, 9 p.m.

Loudoonllo 61, Locu 24

••

211 208
262 21!
2S6 214

Miami28. N.Y. Jets 24
Atlanta 21, Philadelphia 21
Tampa Bay 20, Minnesota 17 (01')
Chiea51o 19. Arizona l6 COT\
Denver 15, CINCINNATI 13
Seattle I0, ICanus City 9
San Dieao 31, L.A. Runt 17
N.Y. Giaota 21, WMhinaton 19
Piruburg)l21 , LA. Roiderl 3
New England 12, 1ndianapolis 10 ·

';!

Non•mnrereace action

214
249
223
331

CLEVELAND 34. Houalon 10

em 29
·
Copley 67, Akroo Ceotrai-Hower 46
Cuyahog1 Fall• 41, Camtou OlenOak
!S
Danbury LUeaide 73, Sandusky St.
Mory lS
Day. Pauenoa 78, Cin. Woodw.-d S I
Doylestown Chippewa 70 , Wooater
Triway S9
Eut Caoton 72, Minern 37
Eaton 4S, Orccaville 44
Ediloa South SO, c.rrontoo 49
Elyria Open Door 59, Lorain
Oc.view 26
Fairlcaa S2, Culton South 47
Failmont66, Vandalia Butler 42
Fairview S$, Wellinaton 37
Field 64, Akron Nortlt61
Rrelandl ,9, Anllent·Stccle 48
Fort Laramie 49, Marion t..oc.l47
Frcderic:ktowa 62, Mount Oilead 42
Fremont R()ll 64, Huroo 60
Gahanna SS, Rcyoold•bura38
Caraway 68, lodilll Val. 30
Oilmow Ac:adcmy 49, Otaael39
llobnlfi tomfu011 !7: Ziiii&gt;tlle.l flllalillllld 62, Ceo1ab 39
·

No.~trtllft

243
20!
ll4
246

Sanday's scores

Col. Hartley 61, We.tcrvlllc South 48
Col. Ready SI. SprinJftcld North eat·

NY1176, C. . Weole11164
Siua Heiahb 91, York 61
Tiffin 91 . Wtttern Oalltio S7

.l83
.417
.417
.167

Wtllern Dtflllon
Son Franc:iJ&lt;O ... 9 2 0 .Ill 326 213
AIIUII .
6 6 0 .SOO 2S6 279
New Orlean~ .. . 4 7 0 .364 221 28S
LA. Rana ....... 4 8 0 .333 223 2S9

41

Sunday'• ICOres

.000~·~·~

Carliole !6, Twin Volley Soulll26
Centerville 60, Hami lton 34
Olwdon 38, Berbhire 24
Cin. Oak Hi!~ l1. Cia Toylor 34
Cin. Turpin S2. Cin. Nonhweat 47
Oaymonl 68. Ridaewood 40
Cle. St. Joteph Acad. 79, Rocky River

S. Dllaoil 74, St. Bouwntw'e 12

0
0
0
0

Cmtrll Dhillon
Olicqo ............ 8 4 0 .667
Minoeonu......... 7 S 0 .SI!
Groen Boy ......... 6 6 0 .SOO
Detroll .............. 6 6 0 .soo
Tampo 811}' ....... 3 9 0 .2SO

CanaJ WiDtheater 71, Jonathan Alder
S2

a.-p~oa.wo

Satunlay'• oeoroo
ea.auer c1-1c

Iii

.013

Pooille D;.isioo
Pttoco.il ................ ....9 3 .750
Colden Stale ............? 5 .Sil

United Alrllaes
Tlpolf Tournameal

Iii

WESTERN CONFERENCE
l'la

Brcctaville 75, Dl•piD Falls 55
Brooklyn 4!, l.orain Brooblde 32
Brulllwict IS , LaGranae KeyRoae SO
Buckeye Tni160, l.ateland 31

Snenth pl1re
Ala.-Birminaham IS. NE Louisiana 61

All•lkDMolao

Plliladelphia ...... 7 !
N.Y. Oillllia ....... S 7
Arizona ............. S 7
Washiafon ...... 210

Berlin Hiland 3S, Dover 32
Bethel 67, Miami East 63
Belley 60, Wliilehall 29
Bolltil• 42, O.poll Rlvenide 39

Fin• pl11&lt;e
Montan1 St. 80, American Univ.• P.R.

Basketball

offensively," Fisher said.
fourth quarter came after Marcus
Houston ended all doubt by Robertson was whistled for pass
fumbling in its own terriiOry on its inlerference in the e*.one.
next two possessions, setting up a
Houston's BillY' Joe Tolliver
23-yarll field goal by Matt Stover ·was 16 of 33 for 124 yards. The
and Hoard's live-yard scoring run.
Oilers' only touchdown - on a
Stover, wbo also opened tbe one-yard run by Lorenzo White- ·
scoring with a 37-yard kick , has was set up by Todd McNair's 44made 14 consecutive attempts, two yard kickoff return to midfield in
away from matching Don Cock- the second quarter. White ran for
roft's team record.
40 of the 50 yards on the scoring
Testaverde completed 15 of 28 drive.
passes for 199 yards and was ' AI Del Greco kicked a 42-yard
helped several times by Houston field goal for the Oilers late in the
penalties. Cleveland's first touch- first halF.
down drive was aided by a 27-yard
Houston managed just 182 yards
pass interference and an offsides total offense, including White's 80
call on fourtb-and · two, and yards rushing, to Cleveland's 343
Hoard's one-yard IOUchdown in the total yards.

By JOHN MOSSMAN
DFNVER (AP) - Tbe Denver
Broncos completed their tonurnus
climb back to .500 by barely out·
lasting the Cincinnati Bengals.
John Elway threw a 16-yard
touchdown pass to Anthony MiUer
and Jason Elam kicked three field
goals as the Broncos edged the
Bengals 15-13 on Sunday.
"Tbat was all right," said an
unenthused winning coach, Wade
Phillips. ''Another win at borne,
and we' II take it. Our defense.
played an outstanding game, but
our offense cenainly bad problems
in the second half.''
Tbe Broncos, wbo did not score
after intermission, Iiad on!y 53 total
yards in the second half, including
minus-four in the third quarter, fin·
ishing wilh 256 compare,d to
Cincinnati's 328.
Denver (6-6), which bas won six
of its last eight games after an 0-4
start, needed a key defensive play
with 3:36 left to preserve the victo·

••

Mannif~g helps Sun.s beat Nets; Pistons &amp; Jazz also win

Menday, Novliin~ 28, 1994
'
Page-4 ·

Browns beat Oilers in Cleveland for first time since 1989

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - For tbe
first time in his NFL career, Vinny
Testavcrde is playing games that
mean something. He doesn't intend
to blow it.
" I' m having as much fun with
this as I can. Hopefully tbe rest of
the team and the rest of the city
wiU enjoy it along with me," Testa verde said Sunday after be
returned 10 the starling lineup and
directed the Cleveland Browns past
the Houston Oilers 34-10.
Playing a full game for the first
time in six weeks, Testaverde committed two turnovers in Aouston
terriiOry but also threw two touchdown passes, helping the Browns
(9-3) send the Oilers (1-11) 10 their
eighth slraight loss. The Oilers are
0-2 since Jeff Fisher moved up
from defensive coordinator to
replace the fired Jack Pardee.
Leroy Hoard made Tes1averde' s
return easier, running 23 times for

-111.,.{-peg•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 28, 1994

I

r ·

,,

�...-..

••

''l

.... 'JONDUI , _ . , -

.._....... . .,......
Monday, November 28, 1984

The Dally sentinel . P~• j
1

Pomeroy-Middleport,·Ohio

·•

'
"
J
•

.
'

CHRIS:TMAS
TREES l
WREATHS
Ready Nov. 23

$101. Up
Open 10 em • 9pm

I .. Snew...'aLet
S.l. 124
. htlnSMI, Ohle
614-742·3051

ANNOUNCEMENT

DEER CUT '&amp;
WRAPPED

Now lcceptina llew Clle•ts

DENISE L.BUNCE

Cundiff;s
Custom
Cut

a Exterior
P-"'tlngallo concrete

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG Ul

m ..21s

Pomeroy,

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine,OH

WHALEY'S AUTO

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

PARTS
Spec:illllzlngln Cuetom

One mile out
143 from Rt, 7
Tues. ·Wed. • Fri. Sat.

CaR 949 2734
7

NEW I USED PARTS FOR
ALL lUES I IODELI
112·71UOR
, · -t12-55U OR
TOLL FREE 1_,11·141·1111
DARWIN, OHIO

CIIISTIW
liEU

•Toys
•Guns

Loads of Mlec.
Buy Sell Trade

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; Up wtth
a great selection of
larger trees,
Call 742-2143 or
742-29 7 9

7

TREE TRIMMING
._ AND REMOVAL

.......... Sect. . . ..

Ugt)t Hauling,
Shrubs Shappe~
and Removed
Mia._Jobs.

___ ............

....

Mll711 .... .,....,

8111 Slack
992·2269
ilfiS
CHRISJMAS l'RHS
Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut it for you)

Riggs Tte, Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd,
(at comer ol US _Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5702
Carol &amp; David Ri99§
11/21194

7

MANLEY'S
HOllE IIPIOVUilNr
Roofing, S(ding
Room Aclditons
Siding
Concrete, Elc,

Fal Special

LINDA'S
PIINDNG &amp; CO. ,
llftrlor &amp;
Exterior .

Tab lhe poln out of
polnUng. Let ut do I Ear
you. Vary ..-nibiL .

Get 25 yr, shingles for
the pnce of 20 year

(6141 388·9865

P,6, Box220
·Bidwell, Oh 45814

mMNge.

Arr.rl p,m.
814-185-4180-

IESI RECEPTION

Fo~ ihe best in sateUite

sales·and service contact
Bryan of
Best Reception,

GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M.

-We have even better
and quicker service.
, Over 10 yrs
experience
- Service on all system
types.
- Best prices all around
the area,

..

wittJ

plan offers coverage of up to $1 0!000
no
physical exam and no health quest1ons asked on
the application . Ages 40-80

.

'

ROCKY R. HUPP
American General Life &amp; Accident Ins. Co.
P.O. Box 189
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760

-

614-843-5264
Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
Health • Accidem • Annuity • IRA • Mortgage

-

••

L-~~~~~~~~--~~--~.;

Speclollllng In P1rt-cotcrs
for lhow end companions,
SIUd •rvlce ll puppill,
youngdlbforule.
41750 Mle Hill Rd.
Racine, Oil
114-1404417

ForAII . .)fr

12 Gaige
Factory CHle Oily
Bas.. B•llchg

·•
1111111 mo. ~ "'

~----~--~--~~~
Graded Benefit Whole Life is now available The

....---.-.-:••-.-.-.--. .'"'""rrl~ft:-::::0~1---.., ·.:
POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanka cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented,
-..

.

Dally, -'!ly &amp; monthly renta7 naPes.
Job 111e1 ' Camp Sites ' Family Reunion• 6 Plrlln
NOW OFFERING GENE RA L HAULING

DU'I
IPPLIIICI
IIIVICI

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

FrMEetlmaiM
Beto.. s p.m. laeve

;~

Tel. No. (614) 992-5730 ~..L.~

General Practice of Law including:
Divorces, Real Eslate &amp; Business

AMBERWOOD
KENNE~
Cocker Spaniels
Brad lor
Qualtty and
Temperament

.r+l_ •.;.

(above Bank One)

7111181 TfN

992·2060 Hll!l/1 mo.

.
'
:;

''

105 Second St., Pomeroy, OH.

m
~..L.~

fr11mt f\epelr

1-6
• Cndblman Tools

Willi'S

tQ.SinA
"11155.............
...... L I EW, Sed. Zl
hl'l ElL 1 M 14-tM,-.sl.

-

AnORNEY IT LIW

7

CARPENTER SERVICE
oRoom Addition•
5....... a......
oEieelrlc81 a Plumbl1111

.) .

Us••lr••••
Applitn••••
forS.It
C•ll
614-992·5515

10't11Wn

Umestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A I TOP SO IL FOR SALE

u

Mel

a Bonded

20 -.experience

" '

992-3954

,...--------....,
Erne&gt;rqf't r:y Ph nn i' fJR S :1 l1 H

~·

BISSELL IUILDERS, INC.

• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '•
FREE ESTIMATES
.....
614~992:7643

ROBERT BISSEll
(ONSTRIKTION

.

(No Sunday Calls)

\

~

.

-~

..

~-:-:· :-::::::::::::::~========::~ . .,
TRI COUNTY RECYCLING ' .

992-2903 or 992-6320

OPEN 1 D-YS AWEEK fOR Y.OUUOIIVINIIN
MON.·FRI. 9-6; SAT. &amp; SUN. 9 3
Payl11g Today 55 Clb. for ciHn dry
aluenninuenn cans.
I c Sc Bonus per pound for flattened 'ans.
7

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

Howard L. Writesel
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESnMATES

.............a ..,

................
..............
~7 '

5

~·

7

...........

...........
1·;-::::
1Mm7-........... .nrc..

949-2168

.............
-11

..... Ellll,

53111ry.n...._
lllcldloport
112·2772
Olllol Houn: llon.-FIL
1:00 -a:30 filii
VInyl&amp; Alum. Skiing,

ROofing, VInyl

992-4103

HAULING
Ulnestone

&amp; Gravtl

s.,...

lntuletlon, Storm
Doo111, Stonn
WlndoWI, Geragea,

011

614·742·2138

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

O&amp;E ELECTRIC

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

1MIM1-.

FAMILY

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

Real Estate General

--

sunoNlWI'
SI)UTHERN LSD
.
1S·00140;000, Brown,
P•trlct• II 1/or lltchlll ~ ••
Stet 19 R.12 T.3 U51A1
$115.18,
11·00211.000, Cl•rk,
Wttlty a Qenav•, Stet, 10
SE Comer'U1A, $33.71.
18-00711.000, Dey, Rolph
~ 1/or Rttlll K, Lot 22, P•rt
42'x7S', $24,11,
18-00718,000, Ooy, Rolph
~, 1/or Rette K., Lot 21 Sub
C Ex, Strip N, $208,11,
1a-oc1787.0!10, D•y, R.lph.
~ 1/or Rette K, Lot 21, Sub.
B, 1111,12,
1S-G0721,000, Dllg11d,
Boyd •nd CEtrl y,, LoS 11,

,,"

. ..... , Ill, .....,,
............ L. ...

...........
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$1154:33,

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1.......... , • ....,.

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.......

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'I 132.11.
AdJoining

ol
to .12A

.

11-ootss.ooo, Phll1on,
I

,.,

.

11-00117.000, HoFIIngtr,
Larry 'Jr, &amp;/or lltlllll Ann,
Sect t E oF Rd Ex 12 1/IA S
4IA, .....51.
11-00722,000, Joneo,
Wlllllm II., Stet. 2S NE
comer ol Sect. I2S S.I44A,
...,75,
1S·0087S.001, lloort,
Tarry, D a Uncle II, 1CIOA Lot
2111 Tll R12 1.02A out of
1.51A \ .OZA, 111.12t
1I·OOII:S,OO:Si, lloort,
Tarry 0 &amp;/or UIMIII II., Stet
31 tOGA Lot aea n 1112
UIA out of I.IZA UIA,
$17U1.

•

·.~

.

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also

992 5251

992 7162

John

Doug

7

7

11117Mn

Morrison's Heating &amp; Cooling
Sales, Service &amp; Installation
AFFORDABLE !fOliE LOCATED ON EDGE OF RACINE
ON SR 338- This cute home on 1+ acre offers 3 bedrooms,
bath, shed. A great starter home or posslbl~ rental
lnwstmenl At.only $19,900 it's definotely wollh looking aU ' .

Your Total Comfort Assured Dealer
Low Rate- Financing Available
Call Today for Free Estimate

(614) 992·7434 ·.

BRADBURY RD, - 1977 double wide with 2+ acras 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump/C.A. appliances. l!bove
ground pool, ntwer siding. Great ~tlonl ASKING $3e,&amp;OO

ATTENTION HOllE AND PROPERTY OWNERS! IF YOU
HAVE EVER THOUGHT ABOUT SEWNQ., THIS IS THE
lliiEI WE HAVE BUYERS FOR ALL AREAS OF IIEIGS
COUNTYI _IF YOU WANT TO SELL GIVE US A CALLI WE
HAVE THE BUYERS ••• WE NEED LISTINGS! WE
ESPECEALLY NEED SIIALL FARIIS, AND TUPPERS
PLAINIICHESTER AREAS!

HEHIIY E. CLEUND,,.,,.,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,II2o41181
TRACY BIIENAGER.,,.,,,.,••, ,,,,,.-, , ,,,,,,,,,,941-24311
SHERII H~,.,,.,, ..., ..,.,.., ...,,,,,..,...,.,,,,742~
HENRY 1!. CLELANU IM,.,•• ,,,..•••••• ,.,, ,,,•.•,,, II2o41181
KATHY CLELAND,,,,,,.,,.,,,,.,,,.,,.,,, ., ,, , 112:41181

1

StateRt. 33 •
Darwin, ~hlo

A.......Jd A...-fe1n sa.....I'IIU.IIcr

ttnt~MMN

1--

•

FRESH CUT TRIES AVAILABLE

01 CUT YOUI OWl
Crlft Shop
LocAted on Cheny Ridge: From At 33, tum East
at Darwin onto Rt 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd, 1 112 miles to tree farm .
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am til dark

Nov, 251hru Dec, 24.

.:·~

--

~·

-'--~

Kenny's Auto Rental "~~

--

lenny's Is the place to co•• ~::
when you :need a car rental. '

w...... ,,,. ••, , •••,

Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper River Rd,
Gal~is, OH 45631

c '

-. . .'

....

"'
)

1.aoo-486-1590
Bus, (614) 446·9971

~

u

..
I--=~iiiiiiii.-.;;;;;;t
IYI ,,•• .;
• Cuatom llade
• Solid vinyl
rtpiiCIIIIRt ,

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BUDFORD'S

.

'

a....:====:::::::::::::::::==! ..

.ILI'
I
Y
......
,_

AnENTION HUNfERSII VACANT GROUND,.PRICE
REOUCEDIII Located on Ross Ad . Lebanon Township.
Approx, 120 acras rnosUy Wooded! ASKING $350,00 per

-

Step C.mplete Aute B••Y Rep1lr ..• '

SAYRE TRUCKING

F,.Etotlmollll

1 .....- .. . .

992·5114

........... Ratts
Joel.

Rapillc..nt
WlndoWI, Blown

taD.

We Buy All Non Ferrous Metals
CAll FOR CUIREil PRICES

10117/ln

J&amp;LINSULATION

...

7

7

151111114 TfN

a.tm..n

•

lack Hoe
Senlct
Hay for Sale
DnldWIIHa•
Geaeral
Coatradl•l
&amp;Excavatl•1

windows
~ Fr•.• Eatlm1t11
• $200 Installed' .
·,Call For Details

.- ...

, _..

��Monday, No~mber 28, 1994
~The Dally sentinel

P,gi

The

Ohio

Monday, November 28, ~994·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BRIDOI
Over 15 words

Classified Line Ads

3 papers

Tribune 446-2342 Sentinel992-2156 Register 675-1333
Announcem ents

lor Sale

3 Announcements

tm Scllul 1411111 Badt-

E'*'lve · lmmocl!aleirno
t-ul!lll on l!v.ntt ond
L~hw Smfth Fuw., B~
Grovt1 Rd., A.-lind
to huntoro, thtlt ond dlltructlon ol
property, All .mn.n pemtlla .,.

t 11a lllha, Waac~Jurnar.
=~ Applltncu, ~

Good~·~~:

*'"

114-441-11141 Ailer 4:30 Wkdya,

441

T-,_- - -

Celli--

15 words or less
15 words or less
1S words or less
l Swords or less

$.30 per wd.
$.42 per wd.
$.60 rer wd.
$.05 1 dey

6.00

1

1

9.00
' 13.00
1
1.30/doy

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

11-28-94

l{IT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

So l&gt;o W ~ 1-~Ave fo, 6!oot&gt; B'16"
o~ l&gt;o W' J~~f STAlL T
r~~lllil:l So~~~ fol't "11-11&gt;
Wl!ll'fr;~ ':

· "~oi'r&lt;

D....t

4-0IIAddoonPU..,C....
nor Of -um Tlal And 1-r
Rood, fl4,000, l.....,.'lltl.

Santa

Vllflr,

Apple

45

-llul :I&amp; loll, aaod - ·
=M=.a,.'Bowen,Jr.

Giveaway

Adorable PuDDiol: lllalhw Ia
Bugla.._WIIIIIiiSrnell Doge, 1144411-38vt.
Comploto Sot Funk I Wlflnoll
Encyclopodle'a 814-44HIZI AI·
tor 4:30P.M.
-

THEY DON'T
NEED WASI-JIN'
YET

...:: ::'1

-~ Coli Iller 2:00 p.m.,
304·71MIII, llloon WV.

18 Wanted to Do

. IIIII Brlttany, been -nd,
good hunting dog, very gentle,

Merchandise

814-1112-31112.

MORE ROOT BEER·.
MONSIEUR FLVIN6 ACE1

Splnot Hammond Crain To A
Chun:h Or Group, 1141411111:11.
Two ornoll gu hoot. . , 114-1112-

t.lE'f', CHARLES .:
VOUR DOS'S
HERE IN OUR
KITCHEN

1144.

BREAD ..

Found: IMge ling With · 12
Koyo, Houaoi Kayo, Cor Kayo,
Found Laying In Front 01 Plcfl·
Up Truck, 114'441-2222.
Lost: Black IWhfte Cocker
&amp;penial Allo Grey Cat, Kanauae
Anpan1111 lldult will clo
Ano, Family Pet, llawlnll I~
bab;llttlna
In,....~ - J04!
441-3851.
- . . ChrltiiJnae "!!IPPPngl
houn only, - , . , .
Lost: B,_n Cuehlon To A
Couch ADI&gt;n&gt;lr. :113 011 Of till =:..c::::.:.:.;::.:;.,::.:;.,=:_ _ ..._-..... ·· 3Q4.
112..,.,
. . tor April
.......
Bllw_, ,_ i Milo · - Elll r
a·
Bound In GaiiiiiOfla. SZI Ch"'"" Secnlery ~r
Rowordl814-441-1:112.
Elrpe- - • r y . lllllllng
Lost: .,.... .......... dog, 18.00 ,.. How. 40 Haun ...,
Five Mill, Ho11d11oon 11U. Willi, Holiday, Sick Time. AIIDiv
RIWirdi3Q4.t75.1173.
In Afllll Flls1 ~
---'---.,-..,.,..--1 Of The - · 1110 flnl
l.oat: old malo Collhi wlh A - Oatflllolll F""" 11:00
ootlor, 11blo ond - .. Amlllr· A.ll. To t :00 P.ll. TundaJ Nov
gw Rd. vlc:lnlty,I14-Mt-24111.
21th.
,

e--.

="':w;';~ ~·~
~-.

z bad- holaa.

Unlumllhlcl

I~··
, dapoelt requlnd,

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

'---

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

sm. ...

--

F111anc1al
For nnl Z bed- trailer In

Opponunlty

Llc-

Oocar
Clloli.
Llcenll
, Col.
714-114
• E.
llondod,

304..9~30.

Wanted to Buy

Cloan Lato lloclot Cora Or
TNCka, 1117 Or Nl~!!f,
Smfth Bulcll -loc, ,,..

••

D1carlltd......__. .....

=

..

~~---- ··
75 11oata &amp; lllotona
,.
lor Sale

POSTAL .JOBS
IIIII flut Mr. For IElllllll And
lnlo. ~~ .,...
011111,.
• P.ll.,

=II ,. _,
:J:.

Wlnl ID lluy In _,.., D / liN l.onc!-Tifftl
end UllOa - I t , 114-MW211. Nuiitl!'l Aallllri on lind - . $800 -

C...

tor

=~~t:,:
llghtln,-...............
a-;
EOE. c.nllovt111 o1 Pl. - n t

·-~.':::"""'
mo
.._ , . , . , - - . :Jo.~~-.wv

the Federal Fair Ho~ing Act

Plolno, UOO ..... t1opao1t ond

ol1968 which makes ltlllegal
to adVertise ·any preference,
llmllatkln or d~nmlnatlon
based on mce, color, mllgkln,

utiiMIH, 11W174417. .

44 ' Apanment
lor Rant

sex familial status or national
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or discrimination.·

1 lnd z .,............
lllmllhld end . lll1lurl\llhed,

This newspaper will not
knowllngly accspt
advertisements for real estate

\oJANTI~C, ·"ltJOR NJ./1(£

WE.'F£ 601t-(, TO CP

"'eoous ? - _ ..._.

Lorry Uvoly. 1141M IUS.

:-.hll•nc-.cll l i l_lilNl
. r~=

Top -

- · 11... .. Z1,

)111-..IA--Ipole.

- ........·.:lllln•.
Pt. PI

11'1."'N

Empl oyment Swv1ce s

010 Pl.

=1.

opportunity basis.

IS Aana And .... llollll I

Bod oooo-. 1 112 ...., LR. 1
,... ~.....,•.,.... 0111

STRIKf A8LC/W N Tl-f WAR ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP M CLASSf/EDS.

1113.

$200/llo. AU Utlllilaa lnc1ucle.!t
114-446-7733, . . _ . • ...1
4:00.

-lite, IP'
~~
·
IIU"*Y
room -lao - t o
In
town.~-ol: Yllloat ~oiMii Allie. 141 or
_

...

3 Rooma Furnlohad, U!lalolro
Apottmont~ Paid, M

Lr'~ :'H.! t;?-J=
r........ ,_.,...wv =·:MO.
Uotlna

fiOO Dopoott,

E~ fllllllo.
Utlllllle Pllld, ~ lltlt, '1111
Fourth AYWM~~, Q·Npatl• 114-

Fumllhad

AVON I AI I -_,
llplln,IOM'II--.

-~ Alt11 T P.ll.

'

Fumllhad Apt. 2 . IR $215
Utllftlle Paid 141. ' - ' d Ave.
Galllpola
7p.m.

11t ttl tt11
',

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

After

BEAIITIFUL APAIITIIEHT8 AT
IIJDGET PRICU AT M Q ( ESTA=~ 1M ......... Plu
liviii
to .... Walk to .._
' ....... Cal 114ttl2106.
·EOH.

CHECK THE
Tuesday, Nov. 2S, 1994
lilecent relationships might b.e strictly
businass, but ybu may discover that you
now communiCate With tht oppoeile sex
more Clearly than ever ore. KeeP look·
'lng lor prollt at lhls tim , ou h. not

romance.

.

'

~AOITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)
Sc:rutinlze inlormatlon passed onto you
· ~~y qthera today. SometflinQ might come
Jrom a questionable Sl)urce. Tht! copy
might sound imprea"ve, but the 1ac1s
won't hold· up. Altro-Graph yaar·ahead

'

S

U' R C H 1.:

Z B 0 L H 0

LCWN . '

(LDXKRSX

-

D M D U C X S V D )

-W S I D

8F

XSAOKF
S H S X U Z .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Why would I do TV? I want to entertain people whose
days are made a liHie easier by laughter." -Gene Wilder.
0 19&amp;4 by NEA, Inc.

26

_'_:'_u~_:_:~_'..,.;S__;@1~~c~a~.!Y-!fS•

....
IA81

Rearrange le"•rs of the
•
four scromblod
be, low to- ferm fowr word1.

-d•·

.,

C 0 G·H U R

I I 1I I
2

I

I
I1--TI-......1--..-1~1 ..
HINNT
3

'=r"'uc--::B-::-0-=o:---., ..
4 j

"If Ovemiti.eard atvoting place:
a po1 Clan w1 11 spe~d mil.1 .
lions to get elected to a job
that pays peanu1s, can we
ri--:-:K-:E::-::E-:P::-:A-0~--,~ ~~~?',!lem to balance the •
r--.

I

1 lodroorn ~-For Ront,
Goiii)IOIIa
lion &amp;
Rol11glrolor Fu
, 114-245-

calll14.fiZ-3711. EOII.

A K D D L E ,.

8

·2 Roome I loth, No Kitchen,

31 Homea for Sale

XBNNOL

::=,'
.

•

_

.

·16_ O by filling in the miu,ing words

Complete the chuckle quoted

L.....L.-.JL.-..L......L-.__, you devel01&gt; from step No. 3 below.

nqulncl, no

2bdnn. lpll., Ioiii

NDSOA

S

• ·1

Real EstJte

'S , KDFDOX

•

Our readers are hereby

eD,IIIO.

Help Wlntac:l

=~f.

by Luis Campos
Cellbrily CiP* crypeogrerr. are cnm.t from quota!.._ by I~ ptqJtl, .-.end~
' EliCh letter in 1M cipher stands lor 1ncMhet. Todly'J clw: Y..,.._ V

I I I I

lnfonned lllatall dWellings
adVertised In lhle newspaper
are avaiabla on an equal

AN or LPN In lacll
Wonlad To Buy: J..,k Aulol Dhnla!IM ...... 111111 havtl
Wllh Or Wlthooit lllalore. Colt WY ...,_ I bit clljlllbll o1

g::.~msa:=:

23 Valuable fur
24DHtlned
25 Part ol the eye
26 Orenge-red

CELEBRITY CIPHER

l

which Is In Ylolallo,n olthelaw.

- ....
lnd - Tn(
Ooby
....ln,ll44f2.'JII41.

Pilei: AI Old U.B.

..

It was Hanuldtah. Rabbi Sam Shapiro
and his family were back from the syn·
agogue, feeling happy. They were enjoying this holiday and even the freezing weather failed to dampen their
spirits. FoUowing a delicious lunch, the
card table was set up for the family's .
traditional bridge game. The Rabbi and
his wife, Lucyle, played against their
daughters, Elyse and Judy.
This was the first deal. Over Judy's
three-dub rebid, Elyse might have continued with three diamonds, hoping her
sister could bid three no-trump with a
heart stopper. But Elyse chose the
straightforward approach, jumping to
five clubs.
Lucyle, happy her daughters hadn't
bid a slam, led from h&lt;;r shorter.red
suit.
When the dummy came down, Judy
saw thai the contract appeared to rest
ori the spade finesse. And if the fi.
nesse was winning, she could bring
home an overtrick. But she wanted to
give herself the best chance to make
her contract. After winning the first
trick in hand and drawing trumps,
Judy cashed her other two diamond
tricks, ending in the dummy. Then she
called for the heart four.
The Rabbi won with the king as
Lucyle signaled an odd number of
hearts with the two. It was clear to the
Rallbi tl\at irh'e cashed the-heart ace,
he would be endplayed, forced either
to lead into dummy's spade tenace or
to concede a ruff-and-discard. In desperation, he returned a low heart.
After winning with her queen, Judy
took the spade finesse for a possible
overtrick. It lost and she made her
contract exactly.
"Nice try, Sam," said Lucyle appreciatively. "Sorry I didn't lead a major
at trick one."

llilt

PC U..
· at.
$31K/Vr.
............
7M .
. t•
111411.

=·~=-773-A41~

..

NO...THf&gt;.T PNrr AllOJT~

Houra Mon. • Bol. N Wad. N: '
Don, Forget Our REPO. .....

_ ..h_...JGU:S"t:':

With ........,_ EOE.
• • Or Hind .,.._ ........
To: .._.. AI ..........
lla11
n lllciiCIII SuaiiiY. 111
PI• ...... Ottlllpalll. OM 4el:tt.

11

Fa1rn Supples
&amp; LIVPSIOCk

homa In MI...._,., 114-1112_....,. thll J04! tlo 111151.
•
NOr to llild _,.,
thll
Rant 0. Soli On Land Contracl Z
111111 unll you have .,_
Badrooma, Natural Gea F..,.
lfte ollwfnil.
naco,lnGIIIIIIOIIa.114-4441-2003
Or 114-44&amp;-14011, S0'7 P.M.
Thr11 bad.- rnoblll home In
Pomeroy, 2 IUU lathe with gorclan lub, ,_ carpet, nicely
nllllldelld on z 112 oulllcll , _ , lon
llmhe. f3711mo. lllul ~
1nc1 nto.._. Available I.,.
IJIN To lo c:uot.Mr lonlao
mocllotlly, W/otllkln to lluy
....,._lllllvL Ro_..,.llteo
........... ltWR·m2.
All real estate advenlslng In
WOuldAIID.,_IorneHoma
Two ...._ tralllr_ln Tuppln
tlis newspaper Is ~ublect to
Vlolte And ...... With ~

eo.-. - · ..., li-'-

JID'e-Pwtllnd~

••
• •
: .· · ·~....

·' AC..COVNTS

.
INCmCEI
OliO VAUEY PIJIIJIIINQ CO. N l c o 2 o o 3 - - l l

- - o l d~t,~
......
1:10 4:06.
lumhuno.AI t.eaot 2 Yean
PI*'ued.
W~
ColuMnRua lllocn, - · fiM.tla.
2UI.W.IIuy-

. phonlo, old

Old~

G~f(,~ING

814258· 11408.

auction
aervla&amp;
1188,0hlo I Will VJrVnlo, 304773-5785.

. e.-~o....,

•

Pomeroy 11N,I-.ao31.
Fumllhld $300111o. Plua $300 lion.
De-'! On Cloy Chlpot Road,

Business

&amp;Auction

,,

YrRA FURNITURE
4111111 OUt Rt. WI

4 VIcinity

Public Sale

BANIC

=-- •

Z BR Trolllr In ICanoiguL Nlao
Looatlon. 114..._.

IT QIP1 ··W~Lt·,
/ COU~P YOU ICteP
IT rOIJH(,ING
Tl~"' PAYPAY1

'liY \

2 ....,_,
month
SWAIN
$210. -urtty ....... z """' AUCTION I RIRNnuR£ U
fZIO. per _,.h $150. Ollvtla, 0a111po111. - 1 Uaad
-urly ciiDolft. ~ paid No
~::... Ill.
Worklloale.l
=~· :IOM1M2!7 ••• i:oo lumllan,

.GaDipoiiL

9

AGAIN ..

HE SEEMED
t.IUN6RV SO
I GAVE I-IlM
SOME FRENCH

Lost &amp; Found

Rick Pllraon Auction Comptlll)',
full lima 1UC1Iona~ oompllle

8 Numero 9 Mike lace
35 Utcanell
10 Actor Sherif
36111dlaon Ave. 11 Lavish
people
enterllllnment
37 Bridge etrategy 12 Escape
3DBeaan
'e~veou
4t CIA''a
21 Movea gently
loreNnand emOothly
44 Peathlry - r f 22 Feel Indignant
45 Gravel ridge
at

By Phillip Alder

114-H2-3917. '

8

7 Makaa collse

IBR llollll 100 lltaall W lVI.

Ot'lf olio ~·=~ft. Coli
111•1:00,1

King olzo mattraalorwatatbocl,

Yald Sale

1 Melon. e.g.
2 Two-toed aloth
3 Station
4 Deposit
5 The seH
6 Trloa

Don't finesse:
Exit first

1818.

7

DOWN

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North East
1•
Pass I •
Pass
3•
Pass 5 •
All pass
Opening lead: • 8

41 Houses for Rent

Frill 4 klnan. I 3 adul oatL
814-44.-.
Full bloocllcl 811gt11, 3CJ4.1175·

6

138ulllcllnt
14 GloiiY paint
15 Pariah prltll
18 Spin
17 Any
18 A..uer.d animal
. 20 Femete ruff
21 Lubricated
25 lnelfectlve
28 Hl&amp;hwaya

'

Fumlshecl

~-::c.

Rentals

.2
., 2
•Q 5
tA K 2
•AK J 10 9 3

Room a

-.,

7 Pwtpoo•

. (2 well.)

33 Fool
34 W•r -Y

SOUTH

3S Lots &amp;Acreage

1 llttrlonlltl

41 Colofldo clly
51 Fell bllilnd
54 More IJIICA!IIIY
55 Accuetomed
55.Attribute
57Mov11"-

32 Quo -

WEST
•9 8 5 4
•a 1 6 3 2
• 8 3
...6 5

mo.

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BEATriE BLVD.1" by Bruce Beatlie

NBA·Crottword

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predictions make excellent Christmas view as casual will be taken very serious· ·
stocking stullers lor all signs of the zodi· ly by others.
ac. Mail $1.25 to Astro-Graph, C/o of this GEMINI (May 2t.June·20) SeH-discipline'
newspaper, New York, NY 10163. Ba will be required il you hope·to perlorm all
sure to &lt;stale the zodiac sign(s) ol your your duties today. Tasks you neglect or
overlook could cause complica1ions later.
choice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) Today CANCER (June 2t.July 22) Snmatimes
you might become envious of a friend's you are smitten with extravagant whims,
good loatuna. II any na~ghts creep Today could be one ol those days. Avoid
• lnlo your mind, dismiss tt&gt;em promptly. . stores with tampting marchendise that
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Fell. 19) It could couiO bust your budget.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Usually you ara
prava wise today to rely on yourself not on others' promises. They mighl want active and highly motivated. Today, how·
ever, you aren't apt to be industrious
; to help, but will be unable to do so.
unless you concentrate.
1 PISCES (Feb. 20-llarch 20) Do not be
' ovar-clltical ol co-workers today. aspe· .VIRGO (Aug: 23·Sipt. 22) Try not to
cially nthey are not under any obligation read negative things into whet others say
: to help you. Ingratitude will leave a bad loday: They might converse along one
line while you listen along another.
1and lasting Impression.
' ARIES .(lllrch 21-Aprll II) Th!r• is a UBRA (lepl. 23-()ct. 23) This ~ be
j P.ossibillly today you might be unduly one ol those days when small expendi·
possessive of somaone you love. This . turas total up to more than you intended
could craale problems: Let this person 1o spand. Keep an aye on tha nickels and
have the same lreadom you expect to dimes.
SCORPIO (Ool. 24·Nov. 221 Clearly
possess.
.TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Do not oe11ne your olljet:tives today. H you don't,
maka binding agreements today tor lhe you might go oW orr a tangent arid lail to
like ol expediency. Commitments you ac;comptieh your initial intentions.
r

PRINt NUMBERED lETTERS IN
lHESE SQUARES
..

u~~R~B~N;~~E tEllERS

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SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Lichen • Razor· Sworn - Uplift - TWO CAR
My husband stood in the midst of the boxes piled in the
garage of our new home. "How come,' he mused, 'the
stuff that filled our one car garage fills a lWO CAR
garage?'
·

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P1ge-:1o-The Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

PICTURE YOUR .CHILD
AMONG THE...

Ohio Lottery

River Valley
girls down
Meigs 47-41

PickJ:
696
Pick 4:

1100
BuckeyeS:

Page4

8-14-~-28-34

•

en tine
VoL 45, NO. 145
Copyrlght1994

"Patter of Lltde Feet'', won tbe best of show award for Betty Dean.
It featund live alouy black v - of varylll&amp; he!Ptl lllled wttb
holly, nd aad wllllte carnations, aad white ntsun.ta vtne. Held at
Carleton Sc:Hol, the Chrlltmalftower sbow Is an annnal event for
tbe Melp Cetmty Garden au.. Association.

Evelyn Hollon, Ben Crane win sweepstake
honors; Betty Dean captur~s best ·ot show
fourth respectively, were as follows:
Artistic Arrangements
Tbe creative .talents of Meigs
"I bear tbe patter of little feet", a
County Garden Qub memben was synergistic design: Betty Dean, Pat
well displayed iD artistic arrange- Holler, Shclia Curtis. and Evelyn
mcnts, wreaths and swags, crafts Hollon.
and gift wrappings, at the "On
"Breakfast first", a Christmas
Christmas Day in the Morning" breakfast table: Marge Fetty, Betty
flower show staged over lbe week· Milhoan, Debbie Miller, and
end at tbe Carleton School, Syra- Pauline Atkins.
cuse.
"We'll now bave morning
Berried branches and blooming prayer", religious aura: .Alice
houseplants were featured in the Thompson, Peggy Crane, Karlita
specimen categories where the Stump, and Evelyn Hollon.
sweepstake award winners were
"See the sunrise on the snow",
Evelyn Hollon in the senior divi- usin$ lots of glitter. Peggy Crane,
sion, and Ben·CI3De in the junior Sbelia Taylor, Pal Holler, and Judy
division.
Bunger.
.
Gilded and glittered pine cones,
"Look thirty-two deer tracks in
bells and baubles, all nicely the snow", featuring tbe use of artilrimmed in red and green, accenled ficial snow: Evelyn Hollon. Sbelia
the numerous wreaths and swags Taylor, Heidi Elberfeld, and
on display, and tbe use of plant Gladys Cummins.
material for gift wrappings and
"Ooh!, The tree!", an illuminary
crafty things was shown by the design: Shelia Curtis, Kathryn
euibitors.
Mora, Peggy Crane and Janet
The holiday arrangement class- . Bolin.
es ranged from modernistic designs
"The reason for it all", with
called "illuminaries" featuring a modern Madonna, Melanie Slethcombination of flowers and lights em, Betty Dean, Sbelia Taylor, and
thl!! bli~~ an~ !l!Wicd. to tbnse . Janet Bolin;-'With tradilionat
with a religious aura.
Madonna, Alice Thompson, Peggy
Betty Dean captured best of Crane, Gladys Cummins, and
show in artistic design with her Sharon JewelL
arran~ement in "Patter of Little
"And now 1 can rest", featuring
Feet", a "synergistic" using five tteasured wood: Melanie Stetbem,
glossy black vases in a patb filled _ _Ann Holler Mienefe, Evelyn Hoiwith holly, red and white carna- lon,lllld Gladys Cummins.
tioDs and wbite mitsumata.
In tbe junior division, blue ribHer daugbter, Melanie Sletbem, boos went to Holley Loper and
took reserve best of show with a Kyle Loper. ·
desip f~g a modem MadonHoliday Decorations
na with carved palm spathe, holly
Outdoor wreaths: Betty MilBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

and two
large
spiderfor
mums,
in tbe
class,
"The
Reason
It All".
In
the junior division, best of show
went to Kyle Loper.
Sheila Taylor received the ribbon for the most creative design
made with lotus pods, dried bolly
witb gold mesh intenwined, all in a
modem ceramic vase.
Faye Collins of Minford, an
accrediled judge of tbe Ohio Association of Garden Clubs, judged lhe
show. The special euibits were by
Obio River Herbs, Mei~s County
Liller Control, and Franc1s florists.
Winners in the various classes
of the show, listed first through

Our special page(s)

BEST OF SHOW - This artistic arranae-t Ia the clau

NOVEL GJiiT WRAPPED- Here Juon Mora looks over the
novel way Betty Dean pl't wnpped a shoveL The blue ribbon winner created a snowman's head complete with tobogan for her
entry In tbe boUday decontiOIU cateaoey at the weekend's flower
show held at Carleton School, Syracuse.

. boan, Sbelia Taylor, Alice Thomp- liuits: Ben Crane, blue ribbon.
son, Karen Werry.
Christmas cactu~: Alice ThompIndoor wreaths: Connie Hill, son.
Sbelia Curtis, Karen Werry, and
African violets; Evelyn Hollon,
Evelyn HoUon.
Karen Werry, and Alice ThompSwags or wall banging, outdoor: son.
Alice Thompson, Juanita ·wm.
Blooming houseplants: Alice
Thompson and Karen Werry.•
Karen Werry, Shelia Taylor.
Swag or wall banging, indoor:
Foliage houseplants" Evelyn
Gladys Cummins, Connie Hill, Hollon and Karen Werry.
Berried bi3Dcbes, Gladys Cum·Evelyn Hollon, Neva Nicholson.
PacJcase decorations for a child: · mins.
Broadleaf evergreen: Evelyn
Carrie Elbelfeld, Evelyn Hollon, no
tblrd, no fourth.
Hollon Betty Dean, Heidi Elbelfeld
Adult package decorations: and Alice Thompson.
Narrow leaf evergreen: Karen
Betty Dean, Evelyn Hollon, Sbelia
Curtis, and Karen Werry.
. Werry, Juanita Will. Betty Dean,
Horticulture/Specimens
tbird and fourtb.
Dried roadside malerial, junior . · Spruce: Evelyn HoUon, flfSt and
tbird, Karen Werry, second.
division: Ben CI3De, all four places
Otber evergreen: Alice ThompEvergreen branches: Ben Crane,
all four places.
son, Heidi Elberfeld and Betty
Animal or cbaracler made from Dean.

"For Children Only"

Middleport invests in computer system

(16 years of age or younger)

Will be published
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23RD
in the

The·Daily Sentinel

season

$1000

tbe

tbe

in·Oh•n-- Brutal end meets serial killer

whose crimes repulsed nation

....... tncloMIIIf ldd lllld,
.-...ped emzlopl IDntum your

,_

MONDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will bold its regular
meeting Monday at the home of
MarillricRiu. New Lima Road.
LONG BOTTOM -The Long
Bottom Community Association
will host a dinner for bunters
beginning at 4 p.m. Monday
lhrough Wednesday al the COIIIIDU·
nity building.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission
meeting Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the
Veterans Service office.

PORTLAND Lebanon
Township Trustees, Monday, 7
p.m. at tbe townsbip·building.
MIDDLii~ORT ~ Tho OH
KAN Coin Qub will meet Monday
at Burkett barber shop in Middlepon. Social bour and trading session at 7 p.m. prior to meeting.
Refreshments. New members welcome.

Official Entry
Form

~!~~!~~~~l~tbe

were on state game lands in
easlem
Crawford County when
OJ!Cning day
~
s deer bunting ·• ()DC of their rifles accidentally
selison
at least two hunten · dischatgedl according to John
dead, several others injured and
A. M):Kelii!V· ~ Pennsylvll,Jia .
Game COIIIIiliSaiori'OffiGCr•• :.- ·
a father and son missing.
The commission toolc both ·
James R. Palmer, 50, of ·
and wm ·exainine them.
1 .. ' Sp~~gl}oro was fatally s_hot in
Mcl{elllop
did not
. , . ·the P4• apparently by his~:
WKifl!lftyjWJ.; . ' afthe pair were loading thC~i·
rifles, autborities said.
·. ·
He was pronounced dead just
fOr
At
accidenbefore noon Monday. A bullet .
bad enlered his neck and cxi~
tally shot
in southfrom his chest, according to
western Pennsylvania, said Matt
Crawford County coroner G.
Hough, a Pennsylvania Game
Arden Hughes.
~ommission supervisor. Neither
Palmer and his son, Bri~. . Injury was life threatening, he
. S8ld. .

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day, Tuesday, 9 a.m. to noon at
Cheshire.
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·t'o\iersial trade treaty heads for House ~howdown
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Food Fresh Not

re11rvea the right to reject
any or all bide or to remove
any unit from the 1111 11

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oGallo&lt;1 Sto&lt;age
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Per Picture :. .
Prepaid

When You Know Exactly
What You Want.

In ordllr to lnepact 1ny of
the above property prior to
the Hie errtngamanll may
be made by ceiling 94112210.

. Comp~lerS will save tbe village SVGA monitor and an LQ-S70
In other business, council .-iume - smce many forms must be prillla'.
mously
accepted the second of
filled out in triplicale for the state
Middleport resident Bob F'uber three readings to give the villap
and federal authOOties, he added.
will donate his lime to write the employees annual Cbriltlllas
Council unanimously bought
computer propam needed to link bonus. But, council rescinded a
system at $1,377 from MicroCenter tbe different departtilents together. previous motion that would ~e
in Columbus. It will include a The slrength of
system will be paid for
bolllllel fnJm ooipdl
Value Series Computer with 420 its ability to expand in the future, members' llllariea.
megabyte hard drive, 14-inch Fisher said.
(CmtiDDed oa Pqe 3)

Community calendar·-

s.turdlly, December 17,
1994, et 10:00 e.m., the
Home National Bank, Third
Street, Recine, Ohio, will
offer for etle at public
auction, on the Bank
.,.king lot, the following:
1991 Ford AlroS1ar Van
Serial Number

1FMDA31X8MAB01957

By GEORGE ABATE
system to streamline and sj,eed time tbe council can see these outSentinel News Staff
along its budget process, Mayor lays, Horton said.
Middleport Village Council Dewev Horton said.
"One of tbe things the audita's
agreed Monday to purchase a com"ltrs no SCCJet The village bu office is upset witb is, we're buyputer system b the village finance had financial difficulty," Horton ing things on faith tbat we'll have
department
said. "However; the auditors have the money," Horton said. To comThe Ohio Auditor's office, recommended we need more up-10- bat tbis, Hllrton said be has shifted
which u currently auditing the ~­ dale infmnation."
· responsibility for p.urchases to
lage, suggested the villagC buy the
Expenses are a month old by the depar1ment beads.

-ONLY-

PubliC Notice

Term• of ihe eale are

1 Section, 10 Pagla H oenlll
A Multimedtlllnc. Nawapllpar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 29, 1994

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"I think it's important we pass it relatively handily to send that message to the Senate,'' said Rep. Sleny Hoyer of Maryland, the fourtb-ranlcing Democrat m the House.
·
: .
At a crowded pep ~y in the East Room on M~nday. the admaustration produced a letter Signed by two fof!DCC Republican ~•dents, G:raJd
Ford and George Bush, and DemocratJunmy Caner. urgmg congressional
approval
·
"It is 'not a Republican agreenicnt or a Democratic one," Cli~ton.Sllid
"It is an Amcn.can agrtei!!CDt. des•gned to benefit all ~.~encan peopie m every r.egton of our country, from every wall of life.
.
The pact slashes tariffs by an average of 38 percent ~ld~de !Uid
e•pands the rules of world trade. into new areas such as agnculture, services and the protecuon of copynghts and patents. It creates .a more now. .
~
trad ";_,
d el' ..-erful World Trade Organ•?-3Don to re eree
e ......,..tcs. an , unmates
the·power of any one country to block an adverse trade "'ling; . ·. ·
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sco~ tiic piesident's message ala meeting coday of business e•ecutives in
the.Cajjit.QI.• .,. &gt;.,
.
Rep :Sam GibbOns D-Fia toll! reponers he expected about 270 of the
434 memberS of the House,;,· Vote in favor of ratifying the lateSt round of
the General ~ton TarifTs and Trade.
.
GibbOns as acting ·chaiiman of the House Ways and Means Commit·n ...~ ~riATT f,
· the 11
debate hed led to last just
~u'r h~wt~·:,
orcea m
oor
' sc u
·
Tbe agreeirllnt is suppoiled by House leaders of both parties, with th.e
exception pf the tbird-ranting Democrat, Whip David Bonior of Michl·
an Even·ali 0 ' · nt, Re Duncan Hunler R-Calif conceded his side
~o~ld be)llrmv":h a
of ISO to 180•voleS. ·•
Pro
,.15,.{. cl de ..
. S-•" .N
G' . h R "a outgoing
(!Onen m u IIICommg ~"""'er ewt mgnc , "' ., .
Speaker Thomas Foley, D-Wash outgoing Majority Leader R1chard
and
Mino.,. Leader R bert M. h 1 R·lll
.
0 ep,bardt, "M
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nty
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Assoclated Prtts Wr~i'"'
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WASHINO:WN- ~Wiba1tm SUJlPC;lrttng a htS~O~C 124-natton trade
~ll'd;_are hopmg a ~led 100-vole VICtory margm ilftb~ H'?'J&amp;e today
wtU buill! mornenlU!D JDihe Senare where~ outcome n;m8111S m doubt
Even as, House leallers prepared. to begm Congress first lame-duck
session in f2 yWa; two presumed Sena1e supporters of the ~t- Ma_x
::~cus1 D Mont., iiftd.Hallt B!Own, R-Colo.- announced tbe11 oppoSI.· .
·
,
.
·
.
.
~~~an eye toward 'rblasday s crucial Senate vole, Pres1~nt CHn100
tele~honed waveri~g lliwll!~c-.1 on ~~ndar aft~r assembling tbe ~onomtc stars from eJgbt P,t~Yi~MJ~adrmmstraDons m a rally at the Wh11e
House
,
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Sl nt A.! 9&lt;?re; accompanied bY, U.S. Trade Representauve
Mickey Kantor and Agnculturc Secretary Mike Espy, planned to under-

10-I.Mio
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·SIIongWw~

Deadbne: Friday, Dec. 16 at 3 P.~
Mail or bring the entry fQrm to:

&amp;JEWELRY, INC.

The Daily Sentinel
,
.

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111 Court St
Po~eroy, Ohio 45769

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