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November21

wv

Ohio I.,ottery

Browns,
Bengals .
lose again

..,.

Pick 3:
509
Pick 4:

1865
Super Lotto:
1-8-13-33-37-41
Kicker:
191849

PageS

•

•

a1
'1111. 44, NO. 147
llulll.,.....lno.

TEMPO

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

•Air Conditioning

•Powe r Mi rrors •Overd rive
•Ciearcoat Paint
•AM/FM Stereo

Rapist
receives

--Remembering JFK__.;...-

10 to 25
TERCEL

&lt;

-

strike.

Those hopes have run high ever
since Thursday night, when a
spokeswoman for Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said the UMW
, was finalizing contract language
with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association.
" We're 1f¥ing to teD people not
to get to excned about it, because
anything can happen," John
Spinks, chairman of the mine committee at the Hobet No. 21 mine
near Danville in Boone County,
IBid Sunday.
The quiet surrounding the talks
has left many striking miners ·lorn
between hope and caution.
·
"I think it's like the night
before Christmas for a lot of people," said striking miner John
Lucas of Danville.
Such tensions require delicate
handling, Spinks said
"I've gone down 1o the picket
lines ever since Rockefeller
announced. and everybody's being
pretty good," he said SWlday.
Nothing but silence has emerged
from the talks since Friday, when
special mcdialor Bill Usery said an
annoWlCCiliCilt of a tentative agreement was irnminenL
"It could be several days"
- · .before both sides.are .usfled.with
the written versions of what they
have already agreed 1o verbally, a
source close 1o the talks told The
Associated Pless on Satwday.
The two sides are taking their
time drsfting the agreement, said
the soun:e, who agreed to speak
only if he would not be identified.
"They don't want any misunderstandinss." said the source ..
"They are going over everything
very, very carefull y. ..
·
Legal disputes arising from the

served.
Milia- was found guilty on Oct.
22 on ihree cotmts of rape which
occurred between June 1 and Aug.
31, 1988.
Judge Dan W. Favreau,
McConellsville, hearing the case
by assignment from Morgan Count'/, ordered Miller io pay prosecuuon costs but did not levy a fmc. In
addition, Favreau released a
$25,000 bond, less costs.
Present at the hearing were Special Proseculor Mark Sheets, Gallipolis, and Millez's atlomCy, Harry
Reinhart, Columbus.
A notice of appeal will be filed
in the case, accoiding to court documents. Attorneys representing
Miller have already flied a motion
seeking a new trial for. their cUent
aU~g that jurors were prejudiced
agamst Millet.
Miller remains in the Meigs
County Jail pending transport

?"· ·· -,~-

-

----UL__

..,Wi.tness ..,..

•

ii '

•.

CritiCIZeS

funding
formula
NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP)

J I

94 Ford F-150 4x2
You Can Lease h For Only

\

Automa.tic. au .
3 to choose trom

Automatic. air. AMIFM
stereo . loaded

93 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

93 FORO MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE

AM /FM casselle
an tHock brakes

AM I FM cassette .
au tomatic. air

999

93 CAIIILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

93 FORD TAURUS GL

Leather. alloy wheels.
to&gt;ded

Driver side air bag .
AM /FM cassette. air

'

-

.

9

•AM/FM Cassette

6 cylinder . automatic. air .
trlt crUise. loaded

tAu tomatic •Air Conditioning

l S model. all power
optrons . ~w mrleage

Republicans
.target major
gains in '94

•Bed Liner

Air. V6 .
loaded

• 0

6 cylinder o~_erdrive .
AMIFM cassene . air

9

Air. low miles

84 CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

88 DODGE CARAVAN

One owner.

Automatic . low

low m1tes . loaded

mil%. sharp

V6 . 7 passenger.
power windows &amp; tacks

FORD F·150

99

86 FORD E·150 CONVERSION

.

Loaded

VB . automatic . air

one owner

AM/FM cassette

0\(ER: ~4i
USED VEHICLES

IN SfOCKf
•Units subject to prior sale and
cr!cfit apProval. All . rebates &amp;
incentives are retletfed in pric·.
lng or vehicles.

tery Monday. Kennedy was assassinated 30
yean ago 1n· Dallal.. Cemetery Superintendent
Jack Metzlar Blanda at lett (AP)

Attendants' strike enters fifth
day; airline takes large losses
FORT WORlH, Texas (AP) A flight auendants' strike has cost
American Airlines at least $50 million so far and up 1o two-thirds of
its flights will not carry passengers
during the boliday week, the airUne
said.
The walkout by the Association
of Professiol)al Flight Attendants
0

entered its fifth day today, frusllating thousands of travelers trying 1o
get home or elsewhere for ThankSgiving.
"I think it's a pretty selfish
thing to do at this time of year,''
said.Eiizabeth Moser, 23, whose
flight from Los An~eles 1o a honeymoon in Hawait was delayed

• Presidenl Ointon.
,._ •.•, •• . 24 tool11hs Rea Carpet Lea.se MSF!d on MSRP of $12..866. Option to purchJst at tease """"·"'· fOt.1t ~Olei:IS $599. 76. Fi rS! payment 11Ce115e. Iitie. dOCUAI!!I'II·Iees iiS wall as securllv
le~ Signing. I!j 000 lliles ~~ yiw .
r

.

'

EVELYN LINCOLN, Fonner secretary to
the late PresldenfJohn F. Kennedy, stands
bef11re his grave In Arlington National. Ceme·

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - With
their two 1993 winntls on hand to
offrz advice, Republican governors
are plotting 1994 campaign strategy and predicting voters will tom
on Democrats·and give the GOP a
statehouse majoity next year.
"While we celebrate our Victories, we will' not lest on our laurels
because the job is not done," Ohio
Gov. George Voinovich said Sunday in opening a Republican Governors Association meeting•
With a heavy emphasis on cutting spending and fighting crime,
the GOP governors are spending
today and Tuesday in Phoenix
sharing ideas for next year's campaign. which features 36 gubemalorial electioris.
RepubliCan National Chainnan
Haley Bll;bour also iiJ on hand, aild
wasted little lime liking a poke at

one owner

92 OLOS 88

88 BUICK RIVIERA

...
' '
•comll,1 leol!e - 313 rnonm lease through TMCC . bo:ts&amp;d on MSRP of$)!) 863 01'!ion !o purcllilse
at ~a~ end S8294 13 Total ot payrnrents 57884 1 tax, licenSe, SIC\irttY
&amp; dotUf'(ltnl INS eiltr,l

oepos-

94 Toyota T-100 Pickup

•Ai r Conditioning •Cloth Seat
•Full Carpet •Chrome Package
•Rear Step Bumper

leather. loaded

.

.

94 Toyota 4x2 Pickup

I

- Schoolchildren in more affluent
areas receive more opportunities
than ~oor students, under the
state's system of financing schools,
a scholar said.
Kern Alexander, a professor at
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
University, testified Friday in the
case of five schobl districts trying
to ovettum the system.
A coalition of southeast Ohio
school districts hired Alexandtz in
1990 to analyze public school
financing. Alexander said he did a
more detailed study for the trial imd
·
Continued on Page 3

;

.

CELLULAR.PHdNE .

• ·. ·Free·· Use Of .

Celular.PJJone'

•• lonD as yt~ fP iiletr
nrvlce. Phone i'im.allls
property of Cellular ~"''

Silence surrounding.
strike talks keeps
miners in suspense
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
-United Mine Workers officials
say they are urging members 1o
contain their hopes of an imminent
settlement of the six-month coal

· A Middleport man found J(Uilty
last month of three counts of~
was sentenced Friday in the Mei8S
County. Court of Common Pleas.
George William Miller Jr., 52,
Will! senienced to 10-to-25 years on
each count. The sentences are 1o be
served concurrently and Miller
must KZVt 10 years of aclllal incarceration, with credit for time

94 TOYi

1, llon,10 . . . . . . _ . .
Allulln uln Ina. Na111ap J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 22, 1993

, He said tbe GOP governors
have "proven records of being
honest and not renegina on their
pledges 10 cut speniling and cut
taxeS" in contrail to "an administiatlon ~~ government

Sunday.
American Chairman Roben L.
Crandall said travelers who can't
be rescheduled at an acceptable
time will get a $100 credit on top
of refunds, even on non-refundable
tickets.
"Our losses are very large.
They are certainly more than $10
million a day ," Crandall said.
"They may be substantially more
than lbat."
The union, meanwhile, hqlcd 1o
get a decision sometime IDday on a
request for a special presidential
parielto help referee the dispute. If
one were created, strikrzs would
retnm 1o work immediately.
At a news conference at American headquarters in Fort Wonh,
Crandall said 4,(XX) fight attendants
would not have jobs after the
strike, scheduled to end next Monday. Sut the union says American
would have 1o offer workers other
options, such as part-time jobs.
An undetermined number of
other American employees also
would be laid off because the strike
has damaged the public's confi·
dence in the carrier and cost it busi·
ness, C!anda1l said.
•'No inalla' what we do, no mat·
ter how agressively we advenise,
some ~sen are gone," Cran·
da11 said.
The 21,000-member union
walked out Thllflday in a conuact
dispute over pay, medical benefits,
staffmg and wut rules. The strike.
the first by flight attendants at
American. Ia the bigest against a
airline since 1989.
Many of American's flights
have flown without passengers
since the strike ~...,they
have not had the
mandai·
ed minimum number of flight

u.s.

:C~ I!O,,;'~tdjust17

by
of
the SO tqJ swehou.ee ,iol1s. but the
number Will pow to 19 in January

When Oe&lt;xllt Allen of Vqinia lnd
'Christie Whitman of New Jersey
take office. Both are 6n bind for
the meetlna and wore sharlna
advice from their campaigns 1ft a
ICssioniDday.

attendants.
011

The airline plans Ill COIICiillllllf,
flights at its main hubs at Dill·

However, the companies have
contended that the language in
1988 contract extends only 1o those
companies that actually siped the
agreemenL They point Ill Janpage .
in the coverage clause that outlines
who is oblipted by the agreement
The umon claims that ,s ome
operators set up nonunion subsidiaries as an intentional pWI 1o
cin:umvent the contract !an~.
In the absence of bani infomac
lion, rumors circulated through the
coalfields throughout the wecbad
as to what might have been lgRed
lo during the talks in Washingtm.
''And rumors tend 11101e towaad
the neplive," said Danny Meaer
of Danville, another striking coal
mmer.
"I'm in no hurry to settle for
anything less than our demands."
he said.
The suspense is palpable on
both sides of the picket line.
"It's bothering people a lot,"
said Frank
Johnson
of
Moundsville, who has been working as a security guard at a strikebound mine since August

me

U.S. EPA testing
Ironton landfill site
IRON'ION, Oliio (AP) -Federal environmental regulators are
collecting air and Willet samples at
the site of a landfill fire that has
been burning about two mooths.
The officials will help the testing that began Saturday wiD determine whether the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will help
put out the fii'C at G&amp;B Auto Pans
and Landfill, near this city 100
miles south of Columbus.
Local and state agencies have
been trying since September to find

money to fight the ·fire. Residents
have complained of headache&amp; IDd
respiratory problems they blamed
on smoke from the fire.
"We're trying to evaluate lite
conditions, get a feeling for the history and get a good handle of what
air impacts could be from the site, ••
said Ralph Dollhopf, coordinator
for the U.S. EPA's Eastern
Response Unit in Detroit.
"We've brought contractors to
get a feel for what it will take to get
this nrc out"

Local briefs-Alani~uredin

wreck

A Racine man MS listed in serious condition at Grant Medical
Centel'.lhis I1ICll'lliq following an apparent one-vehicle wreck near
the junction of Mcming Star and Pine Grove roads in Sutton Township late Sunday afvauoon or early evening.
James H. AndencD, 20, of31320 Roy Jones Road was lranSpnrted via Lif~t be1icoptu to Grant Medical Center where, according to a hasp1tal spokeswoman, he was admitted for treaunent of
multiple injuries llld head trauma.
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department arc investigating but have yetlo determine the time or cause of the accident.
Damage 1o Anderson's Ford F-150 pickup truck was listed as
heavy.

Girl hit by car returns to school
A Middlepln girl run over by her families' car nearly two weeks
ago while delivering newspapers retnmed to school last Monday,
officials said IDday•
Jessica Barnhart. 360 S. Fourth St. fell out of the front passenger
seat at3:1S p.m. Nov. 10 at the intersection of Asb and Page Slleels
while helping her mother, Patricia, said Middleport Police Chief
Sidney Little.
.
"The story's been going around thal she was riding on the hood,
but we checked itoutlfld that wun't true." Little said
The car was moving about 4 miles per hour as the back lire rode
over the 7-year-old, Liule added.
The girl suffered facial almlsions and chest injuries and was
treated and released from Children's Hospiral in Columbus.

Man cited for DUI
A Midd1cport ~ wu cited early Sunday mcming for his \ICC·
ond charge 11 dri~ 1mder the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the Statellighway Pail\lh!'I'OI*L
.• •
• ~

. COIItbiued liD Pace 3

Contlued on Paae 3

I~

1988 agreement have not yet been
fully resolved, even though thil
conlraet expired in Febrwuy.
·
One point has been a partieu18r
sore spot and led 1o UMW Prelident Richard Trumka's demand
that union members receive 100
percent of all new jobs ctealed by
companies signing the agreemeol,
as well those aearcd at their relaled
subsidiaries and liister operatiolls. ·
Union officials say they believe
the expired 1988 agreement enti;
tied them to 60 pen:ent of newly
created jobs at minea operated bY
members of the coal operators
association and their subsidilnes.
The agreement included a sec.
tion headlined "non-siCt=
OperaiOrs" that the WJion
'
.
covered those opera10n that didn't
actually sign the contract.

.

�•

Commentary

Monct.y, November~ 1883

'
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 22, 1~

Democrat~_prevail

Weather

111 Court Street
PollleiOJ, Oblo
D&amp;VOIW TO TIIB JN'I'Z1UI81'8 OP TIIB IBIOS-IIAaON AJtBA

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
l...l!'l'I'I3RS OF OPINION are

MARGARET LEHEW
· Controller
weloome. They shOuld be less 1ban 300

words. AU lellers are subject to editing llld mllll be ligned with 011110,
oddreU and tolepbone number. No unsigned lett&lt;n will be pul&gt;U.bed. Letters
lhuuld be in good taste, sddre11iDg iuues, oot penooalities.

Letters to the editor
Minister voices opinion
Dear Editor,

I am a minister in the local area.
Recendy; I was at a Maralhon station and DOiiced a little sign in their
window.""lbis little sign said that
the ~thoo would be renting Xrated movies. If you ask the cashier
you can rent the video of your
choice.
It's bad enough that you have to
tum off the television because of
all this lj.lth. Now, it's even easier
to get since Marathon is renting X rated movies. One question - we

don't have to put uP with it on our
television set, why do we bave to
now?
You know, it used to be that
when a company did something
that the consumer dido 't like, the
people, got together and refused to
buy any of that company's products. My point is if you disagree
with the movies being rented out,
stand up and voice your opinion.
Er.~h. 6:ll-l2
Rev. Margaret . Robinson
Pomeroy

~

surJ:e Trlnsportation
Act of 1991. Auac:hed to ibis $151

WASHINGTON A new bill-'
board is erected every 30 minutes
in the United States. The barons of
the outdoor advertising industry
know who to thank: Rep. Bud
Shuster, R-Pa.
A seemingly routine congressional "reauthorization" - in
which Congress renews funding for
existing ~grams - is an example
of the billboard industry's clout.
This story can be told through a
war of words between two old enemies; environmentalists and the
billboard indus •
Although b~ comprise a
tiny fraction of the advertising
industry, they have been the subject
of heated congressional debate over
the years. Despite many attempts to
settle the issue, such as the Highway Beautification Act of 1965,
which banned new billboard construction on federal highwars
except in commercial and industrial
areas, some memliers of Congress
stiU insist on fiddling with the law
every time a highway bill comes
up. This time, billboard proponents
didn't even wait for a highway bill.
Congress last thought it settled
the issue with the passage of the

Intmnodal

billiorl highway bill was a provision that banned aU billboilrds on

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
the federal portions of 15,000 miles
of stale-designated scenic byways.
The intent, many claim, was to provide these off1cially designated
scenic roads with an extra level of
protection against the proliferation
of unsighdy billboards. ·
The ban didn't sit well with
Shuster, the top Republican on the
House Public Works and Trans·
portatioq Committee. Shuster
believes tlie Transportation ~art­
men! didn't foUow the "intent ' of
Congress when it implemented the
billboard restriction. So Shuster,
along with Rep. Nick Ioe RahaU,
D-W.Va., decided to intervene
when the Hazardous Materials
Transportation Act came up for
reauthorization earlier this month.

.

What does a hazardous material
bill bave to do with billboards?
Absolutely nothing. But this didn't
st.op Shuster and Rahal! from
attachi11g a "policy clarification"
to the legislation. In reality, this
"clarificalion" would Slrip pro!A!CIion for
paV!Dg the
way for new bi~ consttuction
, on these roads. A proposal lo
remove the measure was struck
down by a 50-IS vote.
A Shuster spokesman told our
associale Jan MoDer that the clarification would simply mum 10 the
states the power to decide on new
billboard construction on their
byways.
·But a spokesman for the group
Scen~c America, which has been
fighting the billboard lobby for
years, believes allowin~ billboard
construction in commercial areas of
scenic highways would make a
mockery of Congress' intent.
Almost anything can be classified a
commercial or industrial area. A
small, isolated warehouse, or a
roadside inn, for example, can be
ased as an.excuse m put up several
sight-polluting billboards.
Shuster has l~g been the bill-

'scenic,= ·

Fed up with system, abusers
Editor,

To Martha Hall or anyone else
who .didn't understand Donnie
Earl's letter. I, too, bad written a
lei1U in. suppon of what he wrote.
We didn't say a thing about getting
·rid of the system. It is needed by
those that have to have help, but
the srstem doesn't do enough
invesugation.
How does one
know they are going to stay on
medication and not have to go on
illsulin? With di* illes not even the
doctor can predict this. The way
you aeat;our body helps control
diabetes. don 'I know how much
insulin you take or what kind. •I
know I bou.C! a bottle at Fruth's
for $14.11,
is with a senior discounL I just wish my wife took
insntin all the time and no medicalion. It is a Jot cheaper. I am sure if
you have a doctor's ~for
Speciallhoes they will help you.
· I don't know what type of work
you do, but being from around here
wottldn 't make any "difference. If
you know your job, are steady and
bones&amp;, that is what businesses ·
want in their employees, not where

to do with assistance. I wiU continue to watch these people buy
ribeyes while I buy hamburger.
Yes, I have seen these people get
into new cars and vans, while I put
my groceries, oh yes, I got the
hamburger into my 1975 Lincoln.
Did you ever put in for the
assistance program on your heating
biU? The state pays part acc!Wing
to your income. You can pick up
the form at the post office, court
house and several other places.
You have to pick up the form, it
won't come to you. As for your
underpinning, there is an office in
Middfeport Village Hall that assists
people who need their homes

u~er read where Donnie said

,.1

anything about all people on welfare being deatlbea•s. He said there
was a lot of them. They will do
anything to keep from wortin,.
Got to keep that rocking chau
money. The mile you are talking
about walking, I have been there
several times with a wife and son.
Try sleeping three in a car in winter. Wash your face in a creek or
use
snow. Count .the change, see .if
. they came floln,
you
h:Bve enough for tmee slices of
I had a burBled ear drum in my
baloney.
No, I didn't go to welfare,
right- in 19S2. I can't remember
but
got
a
job and we lived in the
losin8,won: over it, but, of course,
I JilrtJd nite pay checb. You dido 't car until I got paid. Now walk a
say wb• your part time job pays, mile in mine. I have never seen
but tbe wr) I ldd and what figures Donnie.when .he couldn't handle
you put in the paper, iliOtals $85. 1 tl!ings. He is like me, fed up with
know there has-10 he circumstances the system and the abusers.
roe Bowland,
you - ~n't list that has something
Middlepon

I

~----------------------~

Berry•s World

It's democracy
Washington is agog and aghast.
One of the home industry's favorite
strategists and spin doctors, Republican Edward Rollins, somehow
switched himself into super-spincycle - and spewed out a mess of
dirty laundry that his Grand Old
Party pals had kept carefully hidden:
Rollins explained, in great
specifiCity, how he'd won the New
Iersey ~ubematorial election by
countenng traditional Democratic
get-out-the-vote efforts with a.
Republican suppress-the-vote
effort He said, as cam~gn manager for Republican Christine Todd
Whitman, that his side had spread
$500,000 among black preachers
and others to sit on their hands and
do nothing to get-out-lhe-vote. The
Democrats traditionally band out
what is known as "wallrin' around
money" to people who agree to
help get out the vote.
Rollins' remarks triggered the
requisite investigations over
whelher crime, or just politics, had
been committed. So far, the pols
and pundits .in our nation's manufacturing center of conventional
wisdom prefer to ponder why a
smart guy like Rollins could be so

t

board industry's ben friend dn
capi!Ol Hill, for which.he has ~n
handsomely rewarded m campmgn
contributions. In the first six
months of this year alone, Shus~
coUected more than $17,000 from
the biUboard industry and its lob·byists. Rahall has garnered more
than $6,000 from the billboard
industry during that span.
•
Though he lost the fight over
biUboards in the 1991 highway biU,
Shuster has becotne legendary for
his ability to deliver pork for his
constituents. Among other items,
Shuster's district is hop~e to the
Bud Shuster Highway, a $30 million moving sidewalk (for the cil)'
of Altoona, population SO,OOO),and
a 535 million monorail demonstration Jroject, also for Altoom.
•
Shuster's attempt to slip in ·a
fava- for his billboard friends halle
hit a roadblock. While his propossl
passed the Public Works Committee, it touched off a turf fight wiQ:t
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., the
powerful chairman of the Houie
Energy and Commerce Commi~.
Dingell's committee hns primBI)'
jurisdiction over the hazardo~s
materials bill, and he is repottedly
unhappy with Shuster's interlopilig
ways.
:
GAMING THE SYSTEM ..,..
It's perhaps as close to a confess!O)l
as you will hear a government off!cial make about votes and deal
making.
:
Budget Director Leon PanetLa
recently told us he doesn't "like
clo~ votes." He was referring 1p
the toll on the U.S. Treasury.
Panetta dcesn 't believe the govenlment can afford man~ more
cliffhangers like last week s North
American Free Trade Agreement
vote or last August's budget vote. ·
"Every close vote involves die
same kind of gamesmanshi)&gt;
because members - when they
know you're in for a close vote ~
are going to game the systent.
You're struggling to get theII' vOles
and you're going to work with
them," Panetta said
:
. Jack Anderson and Michael
Biasteln are writers ror Uniteil
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

vs~anti-democracy

stupid ns· to tell a roomful of journaliSts precisely what he'd done and why.
But eventually, even they wiU

Martin Schram
get around to putting the RoUins
Recitation into contemporary historical perspective. Sadly, the
descendants of the Party of Lincoln
have descended to the point where
they have chiseled themselves a
pathetic new party mantra: Money
talks, democracy walks.
. Republican strategists and
numerologists calculated long ago
that iheir party candidates are
unlikely to win in an Election Day
climate of total democracy - with
all of those who are eligt'ble to vote
bein~ duly registered and voting.
Desp1tc its rhetoric, the Republican
Party nationally has had little de
facto enthusiasm for registering all
eligible Americans and getting
them out to vote, reckoning that it
would increase the numbers of
poor und less-educated voters who
would likely be voting for
Democrats.
Consider the Republicans of

.
' ,
the90s: Nationally, they did all they
But Whitman's
brother, Webster
could to block "motor voter" leg· B. "Danny" Todd Ir., seemed~
islationto enable Americans to reg· undo his sister's denial. lri 'I
ister as VOICrs at the same time they euphoria of victory, he was IDI8b
were obtaining their driving licens- to totally suppress uttering t
es.
word "suppress." He boast~
Meanwhile, in New Iersey, in before cameras that their campaig)i
1991, Republicans devised a spe- had been successful in "getting out
cial ploy that cotnbined the baldest the vote on one side and voter
intimidation techniques of the·Old supr ..." - he paused- "anll
.Segregation South with the coldest keeping the vote light in othe;r
J
political calculus of the urban are..aJ,
Now into the fray comes anothcir
North. The GOP hired off.duty
cops, put them in uniforms, com· old friend - it's Bill Saflre, con·plete with pns, and 'placed them fessin~ all, sort of. Back in 1960,
near the voang precincts in minori- today s grand New York Times
ty neighborhoods -near signs that pundit was just a caUow Grand Old
warned people that they could be ·Party flack. Saflre wrote the other
jailed for voter fraud. It took a fed- day that he helped Richard Nixon's
eral judge to order the Grand Old first C~l!lpaign . for president by
Party operalives to cease and desist spreading walkin' aroun!l money
on the grotmds that this voter - to counter the millions Joe
intimidation had no place in our Kennedy was ~pm~ding to get out
democracy.
the vote for son Jack. Saf'ue calls it
Coll!es now New Iersey93. merely a "bipartisan system."
But teU him you're not so easUy
RoUins' claim to defame was followed by a categorical- and non- fooled.
There is a world of difference
sensical- ''it-never-happened''
denial by Whitman, who of course between spending money to ·get out
would have no way of knowing lhe vote and to suppress the vote.
that it did not happen. (The most It's the difference between democaccurate denial she could have racy and anti-democracy.
Mirt!D Sebrlllllsa, S}'IId~ted
uttered wns that she knew nothing
writer ror NeWspaper Enterprise
about it; if, in fact, she did not.)
Association
II

The Libra.r,y ,of Co.ngress surren.ders
...
&lt;• •

.

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~h~:;~ar;:;·~

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Political correctness has not yet
The Library of Congress has
•ubsided on American coUege cam- been ~ a S4·film festival of
puBes. In~. it is ge'::n&amp; worse. the most sianificant-ly American
Professors, as well as s nts, are movies. Tlie most significant and
being brqu~ht up on charges of
·
·
"insensitive • language, ideas and
71..7iWr#
curriculum material.
l ~ w. n'
•• 'JJ
.At Vanderbilt University in

'
·THE THREE STRONGEST HUMAN DRIVES

.
••

;Woday in history
.;;l-,.:;4.

.....

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=s::: rJ:r~:r:.~ ~ff.~~~f a

not existed. So' too, with "Birth of whether it's salvageable or not
a Nation." ·It is a profoundly racist This is now a common way of
moyie, with a view of the Recon· dealing with "sensitive subjects'~
stroction period lhat reduces blacks - ·surround them with a wall oi
to ~g ~· However, academic ~ialists who will so
as tn Armslrong-s case, the history bleach the life out of the movie or
of American movies would have the play or !he book as to make ~
been grqtly ~ed had it not · as bloodless as lheyilre.
•

::~~~~&amp;:th showed of

Nation"- has been censored liut
As Ken -Ringle haS pointed out
of the series.
·in the Washington POst, ''Birth of a
It is as if the Smilhaonian's jazz Nation.. for the first time "lntedepartment were to JnSCDt a histo- grated in~ ill narrative technique
ry of cady jazz and decide to omit · such cinem.Uc device' as closeLouis Armstron~ because aome up1, flashbacks, _multiple camera
blacb consider hlin to bave been angl.ea and. parallel s~ liiles. It
an Uncle Tom. Yet without LOuis lhlped 10 a moltumental deg~ee the
ArmitrOni, jazz wottld have been very concept of the motion picdeeply impoverished. And he was ~"
not an Uncle Tom. It was Arm- . . Yet William Gibson, chalnilan
strong· who publicly excoriated of lbe NAACP's national board,
Pres~t Dwight _Eisenhower. for says, the film is "an iasaltto 30
not IIIOVJI1I .into Little Rock, Art., mllhon African Americans. To
to protect black children lrying to holior this film and its fl1nunllir is
go to school despite ~ing s~r- to pay tribute 10 Arneric:aluhlme, roun~ by bowling wh1te rac11it · fu1 racial hisjmy. and m encour11.ge
mobs.
uep~~t of lh.llt bislllry.'' ·
But oven if Louis Armstrong · .,The men wbo surrendei'Od the
.had •
ail Uncle Tom, it would
=arne of the Library of
}: :m~=
~
m~ Jnllt:~il!e 111m
·
shown IS. Pat L-JP.IICY· He
is in ·charge of the L1brary of
Today.'I Birtb4&amp;ya: Rhode llili!d Senasor Oaibome Pel! il "· Came- Conp;es•' film diviaion. "Qhi.te
dian ~~T~"Dau&amp;erfleld , I• 12. ACtor R,oben v~:;:: 61 • .Actor cwhc!Jy," he says In llll!laawae
Michael ·
iJ SB. COID!ICIY writer-animator Terry
' . ' ia 53,,Ac1ot of the polldcally COmc:t,-:,oft is-a
, TOlD Coali 'i l 52. Aalnlnalit Ou1on S. Blufdrd ii.S1. Tem!J pJayer Billie ICilliliVC! .Illl!jclct."
.
Iean Kiag is 50. Forlller ~bell player Greg·Luzinati ia 43. Ac~
Sometime, maybe, po11ibly,
ramie Lee Curtia is 3S. Actress Marie! Hemingway ia 32. Tennis nlover Lou~~·· he may
the
Boris Beclret ia 26. .
.
r -{
film . .
up in a aemlnar on
tory class for years. Suddenly,
however, a swdent filed charges of
sexual harassment against him. He
did not know her. It was a very
large class. But she oll!imed !)!at
the reproduction of a painting he
had shown sexuaJir harsssed her.
The university ~tilled a probe
of the professor, que~tiol!ing pre.
sent and past studenllto see if any
of them liad.felt aexually harasseiJ
by any an he bad shown. After four
months, he was cleared. His pleasure in - and enthusiasm for teac:hing Iulve gone.
·
Political correctness, moreover,
has ~ Ar be}'Oild. ins_titutions
of alleged ~iller Jc::irnlg: Consid·er how thO Library of Congr-ess, of
all places, has~ the integrjty ~!~!,'!l:vedi.·.~ sb as 110t to
be

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IMansfield !58" I•
IND.

• IColumbus lsoo I

W.VA.

Pl.
011183 Aoou-W..lhor. Inc:.

Cold front pushin'g in
cloudy skies tonight
By The Associated Pre&amp;ll
Cloud cover associated with a 30s to lower40s.Wednesday ,achance
cold front to our northwest will be of rain or snow showers and turning
on the increase tonight Clouds will cooler. Early highs mid-40s to midmo\leintothenorthemthirdofOhio 50s falling during the day. ·
after midnight Lows tonight will · ThanksgivingDay,fairandcolder.
range from the lower to mid-30s. Lows 25 to 30. Highs mid-30s to midThis is within .a few degrees of 40s. Fair Friday. Lows iii the 20s.
normal for most locations.
Highs in the 40s.
The cloudiness wiU continue to Around tbe nation
sink slowly southward ahead of the
Cold air lingered along the Canacold front on Tuesday. It should ·dian border, poised to blast the northreach the central counties by mid- em United States with arctic tempera·. day. Even with limited sun in the tures and snow in some areas.
north ralher mild temperatures in
Mild air continued today over the
the mid· and upper 50s range can be central Plains, ahead of the cold front
expected. Over the south highs will that was to sweep the area during lhe
climb to the lower 60s.
Thanksgiving holiday.
The cold front is expected 10
The cold front was to bring snow
move south through Ohio during to South Dakota, parts of Colorado,
Wednesday. It wiU trigger .a few and much of Wyoming today. The
showers and falling temperatures as snow was to spread across Nebraska
it makes it way acq&gt;ss the state. by tonight
Cold Canadian air will replace the
Clouds blanketed every region
mild conditions.
except the Southeast today. Fair skies
TheThanksgivingDayoutlook predominated from eastern Texas to
will be cold and dry. Highs wiU Virginia•.Fiorida was cloudy.
range from the mid-30s to the midHigh temperatures were not to
1~:;tlh~· .;;
reach twenty degrees·,today· in the
1 ·" Ohio
'i
northernmost Plains, along the CanaCiear tonight Low in the mid- diait border. Highs were to be only in
30s. Light south winds. Tuesday, the 30s from the Pacific Northwest
mostly suMy. High 60 to 65. Fair · east to Michigan.
.
·
for the Thanksgiving Day outlook.
Across New Eng~d and the
Low 25 to 30. High 35 to 40.
Midwest, high temperalllreS were to
Extended forecast
·
be in the 40s ad 50s. 11\C Southeast,
A chance of showers Tues4&amp;y loweiMidwestandpansi&gt;ftheSouthnight,mainlynonhhalf. Lowsmid- west were to enjoy highs in the 60s.

-

·-

·las, Miami and Sail Juan, Puerto
' Rico. The airline also will focus on
':flights from New York and Los
:Angeles. American will put passen'i!ers on 12 percent of its flights
•
·r.om
Chicago, the airline's second' largest hub, executive vice president Bob Baker said.
· Crandall said between a half and
.two-thirds of the flights would not
carry passengers.
' Also Sunday, Denise Hedges,
·president of the flight attendants'
Union, suggested that Crandall join
her in asking the National Mediaiion Board to recommend tbat Pres·
·ident Clinton create a presidential
emergency ·board to referee the dispute.
The National Mediation Board
had been overseeing conlract negotiations between the flight atten·
llants and American.
'
•, "Right now .the parties are
clearly deadlocked. The only
mechanism that we can see that
jlOUid conceivably break that dead-

"·

Units of the Meigs County
; Emergency Medical Service
! answered seven calls fer assistance
during the weekend Units respond' ing included:
j · Saturday - 4:49 p.m. Rutland
Ito Mulhoons Run Road for Harry
Varian who was~ to Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital; 8:2A p.m.
Sryacuse to Fourth Street for
E.mest Triplett who was transported
to VMH; 11:21 p.m. Middleport to
, Overbrook Center for Eber l.ewis
who was treated at the scene.
Sunday - 8:26 a.m. Pomeroy
and Middleport volunteer fire
departments to State Route 143 for
a structure fire at the Bailey residence, Christine BaUey was treated
at the scene; 1112 p.m. Racine to
Mile Hill Road for Eric Roush who
was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Monday - I 02 a.m. Middleport to Hysell Street for Colleen
Dunsee who was uansported to
Holzer Medical Center; 7:25 a.m.
Syracuse m State Route 124 for
Mary Wingett who was transported
toVMH.

list were three . bills already
approved b~ the House that were
passed in different versions Saturday by the Sen-·
.-Extending unemployment
benefits for lbe long-term joblelll.
-AUocating S18.3 billion to

Announcements
TUIIksllYiq aerrice lllated
ThaJiksgiving service will be
held Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
Long Bottom United Methodist
Chtuth. Public invired.
Christmas committee to meet
The Racice Christmas in the
Park Committee will meet tonight
at 7 at Star Mill Park.
Bloodmobile to visit EHS
The bloodmobile will visit the
Esstem High School gymnasium
Nov. 30 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Flu vaccine avaDable
A limited amount of flu vaccine
is stiU available at the Meigs Coun·
ty Health Department. Shots will
be given Wednesday from 9-11
a.m. at the health department One
dollar for seniors and $2 for the
general public.

i

Stocks
Am Ele Power......................... .36
Ashland Oil... ..................... 33 3/4
AT&amp;T ................................55 7/8
Bank One ...........................36 111.
Bob Evans......................... .19 IH
Charming Shop .................. 13 114
Champion Ind....................15 314
City Holding .................... .. 29 111.
Federal Mog_ul ...................25 314
GoodyearT&amp;R ..................41111.
Lands End ..........................42 1/8
Limited Inc........................22 518
Multimedia Inc ....................... .36
Point Bancorp ......................... .15
Relialce Electric................ 16 314
Robbins&amp;Myers ................16 111.
Shoncy's Inc......................:W 7/8
Star Bank ...........................33 1/4
Wendy Int'l.. ...................... l5 314
Worthington Ind................ I? 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

.....-----Briefs...- - -.....

lOCk and right now would end the
strike is a presidential emergency
board,'' Slid Rob Clayman, union
negotiations counsel.
However, Crandall rejected the
offer, saying the buard would put
the airline's future in the hands of
people under political pressure who
have no .long-term interest in the
company.
Hedges said it doesn't take both
parties to request the emergency
board's creation. A presidential
emergency board involving an airline has not been created since the
mid-1960s.
"Once again the union has
offered compromise, and once
again the union is being told, 'It's
my way or not al all,"' Hedges
Slid
.
.

Continued from Page 1
Dennis J. Ault, 42, 405 S. F'll'St Street, was also cited for driving
left of center.

The Meigs County Boord of Commissioners wiU meet Tuesday
at 2:45 'Ii·l!l· in the Meigs County Courthouse due to lhe upcoming
Thanksgiving holiday.

..
Police examine accident

No injuries or citations were reported foUowing a minor accident
on Second Street in Pomeroy Friday around 2 p.m.
According to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Helen McCumer, 67, Gallipolis, was backing from a parking place
and struck a parked car owned by I ack Carsey of Middleport.
Carsey's 1992 Oldsmobile sustained light damage to lhe driver's
door. McCumer's 1992 Chrysler was not damaged.

Theft, vandalism reported
Officers of the Pomeroy Police Department are investigating two
incidents reported during the weekend.
A bench-mounted vise was reportedly stolen from an Ann Street
residence. The property owner, who asked to remain unidentified,
reported the theft Friday morning.
Virginia Hoyt, 102 Union Ave., reported Friday a sunporch window was broken at her residence,

Officers probe B &amp; E
Officers of the Pomeroy Police Department are investigating the
reported breaking and entering of the Super 10 store on East Main
Street
The crime was reported at 8:38 this morning.
No details were available as of press time.

Mlllbod o•wy ...._, Moll4ay .......
Friday, , u Court s... ...,...,.,. Olilo brliiO
ado Valle)' PubiWiila Cnipii)'Mrlt!-s!•'
lie., l'o"*"Y· Olllo 45769, I'll. !IP%-2156.
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IJCanilt•--.
o.w.ot......".................. .•-..;........$181 .

,OM Mcalb......................... _..........!t-...... .16:95

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wmiJd
~bill would~

overall political action COIDIIlilp

~~ooatlona to $200,000 pc:a- eb:tiqp,

but would not bring.dowa ~ ClirreJit $5,000 limit for eaich l'A;C
contribution . synar'l prpposal
would limit it 10 $1,000.
The Democratic bill calls for
voluntary spenll!::.f limits pf
$600,000 pc:a- race, . would !JJ::IO
get candidaiCI 10 abide by gJVIIII
them incentives - tax·financ¢
communications "vouchers" for
TV buys, bumper stickers aiad
,

~e.

.

But there •s no way to f'mance
the vouchers; Congress would have
to address that lata'. The Jl!Ovisiotll
would take effect in 1996.

.
State reviews selection process
·cOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state's method of seeking construction mansgers for Slate-tlmded
projects will be examined by the
state attorney general's off'ICC, .The
Columbus Dispatch reported.
The newspsper has reported that
the Department of Administrative
Services' division of public works

Area death
Bamsel Fife
Damsel (Bud) Edward Fife, g9,
3762·Statc Route SS4, Kyger Community, Cheshire, died Sunday,
November 21, 1993 in Kyger. He
was a retired New York Central
Railroad employee and a member
of the Old Kyger Baptist Church.
Born rune 15, 1904 in Mason
County, he was the son of the lale
William H. and Amanda Ester
Rose Fife.
Survivors include three sisters,
Pauline Shaver of Bulaville,
Lucille Mayes of Gallipolis and
Bonnie Henry of Temecula, Calif:,
and several nieces and nephews.
He was ~ed in death by his
parents; hiS wife, Helen Sisson
Fife; two sislerl, Lorena Houck and
Frances Church, and three brotben,
Joseph, Wade and Paul Fife.
Friends may call 6 to 9 p.m .
Tuesday at Cremeans Funeral
Chapel m GaUipolis. Services will
be held 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church
with the Revs. Bob Thompson and
Miles Trout officiating. Burial will
foUow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery
in Cheshire.
Pallbearers will be Bill Shaver,
Bob Shaver, Charles Lee Hively,
Delbert Chiy, Marie Darst and Dale
Darst

Continued from Page 1
arrived at the same conclusion
about disparities in the distribution
of money.
''Ohio is one of the most poorly
equalized states in the United
States, It's one of the states with
the greatest disparities,'' Alexander
said in Perry County Common
Pleas Court.
For example, in lhe 1990·91 , the
top 20 percent of the richest school
districts received $547 million
more in state and local funding
than the poorest 20 percent of
school districts.
Much of lhe disparity stems
from the property ta&gt;&lt; system,
Alexander said. There is little difference belween rich and poor districts when it comes to local property tax effort, he said.
·
The state average for rich
schools is 29.6 mills, compared
with 26.8 mills for poor districts.
But what one mill of pcopeity tax
generates in each district differs
widely.
Alexander also noted:
- Teachers from the richest 10
percent of the school districts
received an average of $35,846
annually, compared with $27,521
yearly from the 10 percent at the
bottom, according to 1990-91
statistics.
- A cotnparative study of the
curricula of 55 rich districts compared with 59 poor districts showed
that snulents in richer districts can
choose from more courses. Alexander said students from richer districts also have more opportunities
for advanced-placement courses.
- Poorer school dislricts have a
greater percentage of handicapped
students than ricli districts. A study
of 1992 statislics showed that 10.07
of the swdents in rich districts had
special needs, compared with a
12.16 percent at poor school districts.

I

~ llle -11107

l2 -

lion clinic• w{lliid ~'w~ ~
gate. The llouse ~~IOl; 1t4P.
Cbarlt.a Sebumer, ~Y.. 1114, it
likely be filii~ by MJ:t

apparently violatiiJ. notifjca~on
laws for some projects, 'including
the new building fer the Centa" d
Science and Industry in Columbus.
"We intend to bave a di.scuasion
with the client on some of these
issues," Dan Malkotr, an assiilimt
attorney general in the ·busjness and
government regulations seciion,
told the newspaper iD i auty· published Saturday.
Under Ohio law, the st8te mUst
advertise its intent ID employ COnstruction managers. The ad l!lust~be
published at least 30 days befcn
the date proposals are 10 be aCcqJced.
'.
The newspaper said an ad fur a
$67 million building for t!le"COIIege of Business at Ohio Slili'University had a deft!)linc of 16 cla)'l.
A revised ad had a dedlinc ol 29
days.
., _,,.J
In other cases, 4ncll!di!ll the
COSI project, there were 11!1 ~paper ads.
.·~ ~" ' '·~ . ·'
The Le . lature has
iJt
ed SIB
I!&gt;
cate to a new buildinJ.
-.10
cost S I-I 0 million. C.~.I,pf.Ac;ials
hoped to receive $~ miJljoa ~
the state.
. . .,. · ....-.
'I)ie department ,said jp a, ~·
mCI!t Friday that it. had ',':!KlJ!:.
anything IBliPJIIIJPI1811: •Oil ·the .QIII·
tracts -where we ha.vf! ,.employ~
co~truction mana~ Ill! Al'~­
sultants·to the arch•teclllru -and
engineering fums...
. n . . . ~-·

L

·~el!rt:

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions - Harl)Id
SeUers, POJtland.
Saturday dischages - Milfred
Bowens, Portland.
Sunday admissions - Chilton
Cadle, Bidwell; Franldin Varian,
Cheshire; WiUiam Kennedy, Long
80110111.

Sunday discharges - -Beatrice
Williamson, Pomeroy~
.
-

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Ion Ia
,..

'

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'

"1.-.r.-

IDOl• uct preteilied a llkle .._ •
tloa Strate1le1 ror Healtll Care Pr.o•lden".

Wldl tile 1p lAker are 8catt L-,llllaallllstrat
It V....... M1morlal; aad Mn. Rlloacll DlllleJ,
. RN, BSN, dlrldor otn11i11111.
.

Coaaty.

•.

John I.

,-

.

,,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTI!iR
Discharges, Nov. 19 -Lloyd
Dugan, Krystal Waugh, Nancy
Freeman, Wilma Smith, Mn. Brian
Atchison and daughter, J.aniee
Queen, Ryan King, Lizze Bonlers
Ralph Robinson, Dell~: Vititoe:
Crystal Lester, Mary Crabtree and
Richard Nelson.
Birtb, Nov. 19 - Mr1 and Mrs.
Christopher Brown, daughter,
Wellston.
Discharees, Nov. 10 - Tracy
Beaver, Cheryl Tilley, Earl Wallis,
Ella Hollingshead, Vanessa Howell, Clarence Messer, Mildred
Gindlesberger, Cheryl Bostic and
Evereu Hall.
Births, Nov. 20- Mr. and Mrs.

!~~\!.ii~:Mr~'!f~te~~::
daughter, Mason.
Discharges, Nov. 11 • Mrs.
Chrismpher Brown and daughter,
Gladys Patton, Sandra Walsh, Mrs.
Timothy King and dsughtec, Mmlyn Ewing and David Michael

SPRING VALLEY CINEMII
446·4524

Co•plete MecllcaVSurglcal'
For Ear,..Nos.t &amp; r•roat

t

~

finiab lhe clcenup ol failed llvinp
and loan inllibllions.
-IJJipolina a five-day w~g
period f« handgun purcllases, the
so-called Brady &amp;ill.
The Senate also passed the
North American Free Trade Agreement during the busy Saturday
evening aeuion. But NAFTA
~ no further action since the
House approved the identical bill
last Wednesday.
The Senate - while not anticipating any more roll calls for the
year - kept a skeleton crew of
lawmakers in Wuhiogton for an
afternoon session so Senate Minority I eader Bob Dole, R-Kan., and
Senate Majority Leader George
Mitchell, D-Maine, could whip
through last-minute compromises.
In other action Sunday, it
appeared that a bill to ClliCk down
on violence during procau at abor·

Witness ...

Commission to meet Tuesday

The Daily Sentinel

~·

~

·EMS answers
seven calls ·

;Strike... Conlioued from Page 1

~~~~'!;~=~~ :sm~=

io
director Iohn Singleton, whose
movie, ''Boyz N the Hood,'' got
much deeper into the reality of
blacl!: urban life than anything
Spike Lee bas done.
,
"Birth of a Nation," says Sin;
gleton, "is a hisll&gt;ry lesaon. Blaek4
should see !he film today,'' -be tol4
the lloll~wood ~eporter, "and
make an analogy between thd
nation \ben and the nation thai
exists now .... It'• like lbe Holo~
caust. We should ncvet forF,l.'J. '
The NMCP has done .0 mDg~;
amid many dangers, to chanae die!
history ofb~ in America tTiat 1111
calffor ,cenSorship of ihia fllni''iB II
denial of its role in maklna !he alii 1
tud~s expr~saed in ':Blrt~ of. ~
Nation'~ so contemptible among
many, though certsioly not all~
Americans. •
.
,
A110~er classic film is Davi~
Lean•a "Oliver Twjst." Faai!l iJ ~
it. Does tho ~ib,ary.·of Co~
dale·lhow that 111m? . • .
_,Nat HeatoU I• il aatloullyl
reao"'*' aatllorl17 oa tilt~
. A.-eadmeat ud. the r-. ot tiMJ•
Bll otRJabll.
·
- .

blicmu who c:alled it "fraud"
than reform.
Hurrying mcomplete as much
as possible before Congress
adjourns this week for the relit of
the yelt, the House rejected, ~
207, a move to block the Democratic leadership bill on election
. spending fronl coming up.
Maverick Democrats, with the
help of most Republicans, wanted
to offer a bipartisan altanalivc the)'
said accomplished true teform. If
they had Wllll, the House campaign
finance biU effectively would have
been dead for the year.
Debate on the leaderahip's biU
was to resume today, as the House
hoped to plod throUJh a whole list
of other hanging 1ssues before
adjourning late tonight or Tuesday.
One is a proposed $90 billion
plan in additional deficit redoction
that many lawmakers insiBled they
get a chance to address when Presf.
dent Clinton's budget passed earlier this year. The White House and
Democratic leaders oppose this

MICH.

'

on campaign fihance

plan, authored by Itep1. Tim
OHIO Wedthet
Democratic leaders narrowly woo a Penny, D-Milln., .00 Joba Kuk:h,
-.a.. N
··
to get their campoign finance R-Ohio, but - y reform-ll!inded
Tu-y,
ov. ....
....,
, , · blttle
prJ&lt;agevoced an lhil year,~- lawmaten and 6ahmen IUJIPOil it.
I_~Accu~~-~~~:!!fc.~ec~aa!.~~or~~~~~~~~~~~~q1 1• mg ovCI' diJsident DemocRII and
Among the other items on the

.Shuster still billboard's best friend
'

-

WASHINGTON (AP)- Houle

'

The Daily Sentinel

3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

7

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Mo~:tday, November 2:l, 1~·

D-aily 'S entine·-

FoUr division !eaders· st~mble in NFL play .SUnday ·

Moilday, November 22, 1993
, Pege-4

-

'.

II

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Although somewhat methodical,
Federal Hocking looked good early
into the game, however, a pair of
Amber Staton three-pointers
drained Federal's gauntlets and
pushed the Raiders from a 4-4
advalnage to 10-4.
Dama Twyman added six more
for the Raiders, who led 12-8 at the
end of the farst period. Both teams
substituted freely, however, the
Raiders front-runners and bench
pushed the score to 30-12 after an
18-4 second period.
Staton led with nine, Twyman
had six, and Nickle Meade five.
Mariah McAfee and Gretchen
Linscott each had four for Federal
Gam polis· Eastern
Despite a good start, Eastern's
Eagles fell to the much larger
SEOAL contender Gallipolis Blue
Devils of Coach Renee Barnes, 4024.
Gallipolis bri!'ging back the
· same team that fm1shed 14-7 a year
ago, then adding Jackson ttansfer
and starter Brandi Muon, utilized
its size and quickness to overcome
the Lady Eagles.
Eastern went up 2-0 on two free
throws bv senior Penny Aeiker,
then blitzed to a 7·5 lead on a goals
by Tara Congo and Jaime Wilson.
Eastern did well.in the half coun
game, but Gallia's speed in the
lanes put most of therr points on
the board. GAHS rolled to a 20-10
lead as Eastern substituted freely
throughout both quarters in the
contest

Mindy Pope had five in the first
quarter.
'
Gallia duplicated its feat with
twenty second-period point$,
enroute to a40-24 win.
·
For Eastern, Jessica Karr had
eleven, Wilson six, Aeiker five,
and Congo four.
Whitney Hastwell had nine for
GAHS, Misty Coleman and Kim
Brown each had eight, and Mindy
Popesevea.
·
. Melp·Alexander
·Both reams started out sluggish,
but Meigs finished strong as they
rolled to a 32-17 win over Alexander.
Tied at 2·2 after nearly four
minutes of play, the game's compleltion changed wbeo Meigs
added ten points during the second
half of the frame to lead 12-S.
Meigs picked up the second half
tempo, putting tWenty points on. the
board and thus claiming the 32-17
win.

Joy O'Brien led with ten', while
Vanessa Compston added five, and
four each from Lee Henderson,
Kristen Dassylva, and Cynthia Cotterill.
Jenny Merckle had six for
Alexander, while Jamie Rolston
was timited to three.
Most sc~ools open up with their
gitls' schedules December 2, however, River Valley goes to Chesapeake November 29.
Box Scores:
Warren 41 - Megan Clark 1-02, Jennifer Reichart 0-0-0, Lisa

Spence 3-0-6, Jamie Tabler 2-0-4,
Jamie Pierte, 1-0-2, Stepb Elder 10-2, Jodi McGraw 1-0-2, Angie
Reeder 5-0-10, Trisha Alloway 3·
0-6, and Julie Wagner . 3-2~8 .
Totals 20.(2.5).42.

Nelson 0-0-0, Beth Bay 0-0-0,

Rebecca Evans 0-0-0, Patsy Aeiker

0-q-0, Tracy White 0-0-0. Totals
5·04·19)-24.
Gallipolis 40 - Kim Brown 4-08,
Amy
Morris 0-0-0, BlliDdi Munn
•
3-0-6, Megan Cohun 1-0-2, Misty
Southern 15 - Aimee Mills 1-0-· Coleman 3·2·8, Kim Tackett 0-0-0,
2, Amber Ohlinger 0-1-1, Christie Mindy Pope 1-S-7, Sara Walker 0Cooper 0-0-0, Jess Codner 1-0-2, 0' 0. Whitney Hastwell 3-3-9.
Jonna Manilel 0-0-0, Sammi Sisson Totals 15-(10-14)-40.
1·0·2, Becky Moore·o-0-0, Beal
Lisle 0-0-0, Briane Proffitt 1-1-3,
Melp 31 • Anne Brown 0-0-0,
Renee Turley 1-1-0-5. Totals 6·1· Lee Henderson 0-4-4, Joy O'Brien
(1·8)15.
3-4-10. Amber Blackwell 0-1-0·3,
River VaHey 30 - Erica -Mollohan 0-0-Q, Dama Tw)'man 3-0-6;
Alicia Ward 2-0-4, Cindy Armstead 1-0-2, Heidi Hash 0-1·1,
Rachel Polcyn 0-0-0, Nickie
Meade 1-3-S, Erin Conley 0-1-0-3,
Amber Staton 1-2-1-9. Totals 8·3·
(5·7}-30.

..·

Lady Buckeyes are
c·r ushed ao.. 45 by Vols
s

..

r~:d~i~·~no~~a~~le):J
(iv• La~yrt.'id-ln' doul!le 'figlltes

:::~~~also grab~ ~I

Hunter, a rookie from Jackson
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
State, scored 23 points Sunday and
AP Sports Writer
The Philadelphia 76crs learned played the entire game at point
what Kansas and Illinois learned . guard in the Detroit Pistons' 103last y,e ar: Lindsay Hunter can 89 victory over the 76crs.
He set the tone early with three
shoot

• • STIFFARM- New York Jets running back Brad Baxter, rlgbt,
:. ~tlrrarms. Clacinnatl's Steve Tovar Ia Fourth quarter action at
:·· Giants Stadium In EIISt RutherFord, N. J., Sunday. Tbe Jets woo,
;~,:17·11. (AP)

Our feast includes oven-roasted Iarkey breast, cornbread dressing, giblet gravy, mashed potatoes,
green beans, corn, yams, green peas, glazed ham,
and cranberry sauce, plus a trip lo our AU-YouCare-To-Eat Soup , Salnd &amp; Fruit Bar and a fl:tt
siice of pumpkin pie. Buffet slarts at 11 :00 a.m .
JJreakfast Bar served until noon .

spot to sixth, followed by Florida
(9·1), Texas A&amp;.M (9·1), Miami
(8-2) and Wisconsin (8-1-1).
In the coaches· poll, Nebraska
was No. I with 43 first-place votes
and 1,528 jl?ints. Florida State was
second w1th 11 firsts and 1,444
points.
West Virginia was third with
seven first-place votes and 1,433
points, followed by Nol!e Dame
with one first and 1,342 points.
Auburn is ineligible for votes in the
coaches' poll because of the
NCAA sanctions.
Nebmska was No. 1·in the bowl
coalition poll, a combination of the
media and coaches' rankings that is
used to determine the maJor bowl
mau:hups. The Combuskers hold a
68-point lead over Florida State.

.•••.

.. . .

'
••
•••

ALL-YOU-CARE-TO-EAT
THANKSGIVING BUFFET

$6:!9

Mlomi
N.Y.Jeu

' ..

Houlcaa

COLUMBUS, OlUo (AP) - Rot,~ linat
and llmifmal KOft!l Sablnlly iD the
11mual
Ofdo Hip Sc:hool A~ ANociation 1&amp;&amp;\0 fo«·

••• 6 4 0 .600233 1T1
... 6 4 0 .600228173
... 5 s 0 .500 118 201

'
Cleveland.
• : . Ciotioaati
:

PlayoiT results

Ceotnl

; • PitlltNrab

Offer valid at.pWticipating loGations.

7&lt;J0p.m.
U Lak• at Aslantl, 7:30p.m.
Golden State at Oriando,l p.m.
LA~ at Dallu, 1:30 p.m.
Oliclao •t Hourton, 1:30 p.m.
Denver at Pu\land, I0:30 p.m.

.... 1 2 0
.... 6 4 0

bllliOU.miiiUI'II:

... 0 10 0 .000112241
W11t
....... City
. 1 3 0 .700 tBl t63
. DeaWir
.... 6 4 0 .600266111

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R....... Finak
DIVISION I

Cincinnlti Moeller 18, Cincinnati Princeton

IS

LA IWdm
. 6 4 0 .600 tl4 !IS
Seaule
.... ~ 5 . 5 ·0 .500165169
S111 Dieao
_ 4 t!i 0 .400164195

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W L T Pci.PFPA
Dollu
...... 7 J 0 .700 Z20 ! SJ
N.Y.CJiant1 .. 7 J 0 .700117121
Phillddphill .. 4 6 0 .400151198
Pbocii.
.... 3 7 0 .300183176

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Badin 14
ltonton27, McAnhur VmtonCmlrny ll, OT

Waueoon 31, Woa~C«Tdway 19
Y""""""'" U....tine 21 W""" Ownpion 0

w......,u.. ... . . 2

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Cenlnl.
...... 1 J 0 .700204166

Dcuoir.
GreenBay

.. 6 •

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Bay
Cb;ooao

NewOdunJ

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DIVISfON I

Mow!.t Van1111. 21, Linul S.U.or 20

PlayoiY pairin!ll ·

JOOI61141
J0016Sl00

.nal

, COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP) - be Mmifirlal
and
fmal pairinp for tho 22nd annual
Ohio HiiJl Sehqol Athledc Aaoeildoil 1t1tc foor.ball toumanmt:

3 7 0 .300143 261
West
6 3 0 .661200113

~

LA Rami

R'IIGnll Semlllnal '

0 .60022:5178

.... 5 S 0
.. S S 0

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........

DIVISION I

. 3 7 . 0 .300141211

s.....,.•• Glmel

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LOIAnpe~ Rai6eni 12, San Diq;o 7

At D•11on Welcome Sladlum
C~t~cinnatl Moeller (12-0) w:. llilliard·Mrunt
Vernon wi.Mir, 1 p.m.
At C•nton Ftwc:tll StacUum
C\lylhoa• F.U. Wahh Ja.uit (11.0) vs. Oe:voland. St. l&amp;n•tiut (12-0), II a.m.
DIVISION D

Opal Dole: .......... s..w.

Smlfln.all
All Pmft Frkla7

Nnt Yort Gianu f:~ddphia 3

Don.., 37. PllubutF IJ
1.01 AnaclCI RII)U 10, Wuhinf«! 6
Tam~ B'iy 23. Miaaelota 10

:C .,..-1-UNK

W~'L-1--- -(AKC: IT

•:

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M*•b;,o~e

Al Dayton Wetcome sa.dlum
S&lt; Muyo Mun..W (12.0) n . !'!quo (II· I),
7:30p.m.

• San J'rulcia.co. 9 p.m.

New

• ThufldtJ, Now.15

~08lDcadt,t2:JOp.m.

•

At Parma &amp;Jen Field

'Miami at n.Du. 4 pm .

Uniontown Lake (10-2) n:. Chudon (9-3),
7&lt;30pm.

Sund.a;r, No.. 21
CiiMila:nd atAilanta,l P:.ril.
1.01......-R.iden at CinciMati, 1

DIVISIONW
SemlnuJt

p.m.

•

Al!pm~~SaiUrdaf

Now Odoiw a1 Minncllotl, 1 p.m.
Now Yod leu at New &amp;&amp;ltnd, I p.m.
Tw~ Bay at Green Bay, I p.m.

AI OaJ'Oft Wtkclme S&amp;adlum
Ocarnantown Valley View (12-0) w . ltonton
(1:1-0), 1 ~ ...
At B.,. F1aale SbdJum
WauteOD (12-0) v1. Youn11town Umilltle
(10.2), 7 p.m.
DIVISION IV

o.n-~·-4p.m.

•

Buffalo• Kwu City, 4 p.m.
AUiode!phlo .. wuhln-. 4
PfKMniJ: at New Yodr: GWna, p.m.
San Pral\ciaoo at Laa Aapltla lliml, 4

1, .

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• p.m.
•
Pillabutlh It HIIUtOII.,I p.m.
• McN.a..J.r ~m. 2f
Z San Dicio at lndianapolit, 9 p.m.

••

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ByTheA.IoodalodrrEASTERN CONFERENCE

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9 0 1.000
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............ 7 '
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By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Writer
North Carolina, which cruised
to two victories in the Preseason
NIT, easily held its No. I ranking
today in The Associated Press college basketball poll.
The defending national champion, which beat Western Kentocky
101-87 and Cincinnati 90-63,
received frrst-place votes from all
but four of the 65 members of the
nationwide media panel. Kentucky,
which bas yet to play this season,
remained second in the poll, but
lost one of the three No. I votes it
received in the preseason balloting.
Arkansas, which picked up ~t
rrist-place vote despite not playmg,
held third 111d agam was foUowed

AU-Friday
At Fl. . .y DonMII Sladl11111
SWoq-!Amon (9-J) n . Ulmy C.... (10.
2), 7:30p.m.
At7.&amp;Miml.. Sulal aer M•crlal Sta.. 1111111
Nawulr: CathaUc (12:-0) va. Steubeaville
Calho&amp; (10.2~ 7:30p.m•

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Kwu69,w--..,o

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Me·· b = • • OtveLaDd State 60
Clocqjii9,AiabunaSune67
TOWill! S~ 6f., St. Jalm '• 65
u;
Dli'JO.IUae 61

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nected on 13 of 21 attempts for
61.9 percent and Pittser hit on all
two of the Buffaloes' foul shot
tries .
In addition to Stephens, the AUTournament team consisted of
Powell and Hoeppner, and Milligao's Wilburn and Piuser.
.
Now 3-0 on the season, the Red·
men travel to Findlay Tuesday.
Milligan (4-1) is at Bryan (Tenn.)
Tuesday.
In the consolation game, Montclair State (NJ.) knocked out Daemen 88-7 4 on a balanced scoring
effon led by Dean Spinogatti with
25 points. The Warriors were led
by Mario Torres with 18.
The Red Hawks (I- I) host
RamaJ!O (NJ.) Tuesday and Dacmen (0-3) is at the University of
Buffalo Friday.
Box scores:
RIO GRANDE (89) -Jeff
H~. S-4·l·23;. Brett Corm~,
5-0-10; Eric Burris, 2-1-5; Matt
Powell, 3-2-5-17; Jason Curtis, 10-2; Larry Caudill, 2-1-4-11;
Shawn
Snyder,
5-3-2-21.
TOTALS 23-10-13-89.
MILLIGAN (73) - Jeff
Lyons, 3-1-0-9; Trey Wilburn, 9-10-21; Jason Pittser, 0-3-2-11 ; Eric
Richardsqn, 1-0-2; Kevin Smith, 50-10; Jason Otter, 1-0-2; Gilben
. Charles, 4-0-8; Matt Young, 5-010. TOTALS 28-5-1-73.
Halrtime score: Milliean 39,
Rio Grande 37.
MONTCLAIR STATE (88)Keith Roberts , 3-1-5- 14; Chris
Jackson, 5-3-13; Keith Hines, 6-113 ; Greg Fowler, 5-0-10; Dean
Spinogaui, 5-3-6-25; Chris Smith,
3-5-11; Todd Ordino, 1-0-2.
TOTALS 28-4-20-88.
DAEMEN (74)- Travis Carrow, 1-0-2; Rob Lange, 5-5-15;
Mario Torres, 5-8-18; Adonis
Smith, 4-1-5-16; Carlton Holder, 21-3-10; Dennis Schimpf, 1-2-4;
Tim Foley, 0-1-1; Mike Skolen, 32-8. TOTALS 21·2·26·74.
Halftime score: Montclair
State 41, Daemen ·~-

Huriter proved be could Jboot
last year when be averaged )6.7
points - fifth belt In the WDDily.
He had 48 points
Xwu .
He had 43 against . . wilh 39
in the second half.
"During the c.xbibitico - ·
everyone got excited about biJ oneon-one showiiiiDShip, but !bat's Dill:
w.hat you want from a_point
guard," Pistcns coach Don a-y
said. "Ri~ht now, be's gcttias
everyone tnvolved, and he bas
court vision, which he bad been
lacking."
Hunter, subbing for I~iah
Thomas while the AII-SIIIr ICCIIhCII
from a broken band, also had five
assists and only one turnover. He
was 9 of 20 fr!lin t!fc fidd and 3 of
7 from 3-point range.
"They didn't tell me to ~
48 minutes, but it happened and I
really didn't mind," -Aunter said.
"I was feeling really relaxed, and it
really didn't bother me."
The Pistons, up by II 11 halftime, pulled ahead 75-53 as the ·
76ers hit just three of their rrq~ 14 .
shots in the third quarter.
Bill Laimbeer led the. Pistons
with 25 points, 13 in lb" lonrtb
quarter, while Scan Ellioct acJded
22. Tim Peny led the 7&amp;D with 17
points and ·nine rebounds. Detroit
shot 55 percent to 42 percent for
Philadelphia.
"That's the difference in the
game right there," 76ers coach
Fred .Garter said. ~ 'YDil can't let
any team slroot SS perccnL"
In other games. New Jersey
defeated Los Angeles I 05-102,
Chicago beat Sacramenro 103-101
and Portland downed Dallas 10390.
Nets 105, Laken 102
At East Rutherford, N.J., the
Nets snapped a tllree-game losing
strcalc and kept the I.akers winless
on the road.
Kevin Edwards scored 23 poincs
and Derrick Coleman and Kenny
Anderson each added 21. The Nets,
wbo had lost fi~~e of their pmiou
six games, went into the fourth
quarter uailing 84-71, but reeled
orr the rrrst 10 points.

m:::.

Kings 103, Bulls 101
At Sacramento, Calif., WaJt
Wrlhams was back in the Kings
lineup after missing the f1tst few
weeks of the season with a stress
fracture in his left leg.
"It felt pretty good. I worked
really hard on it while I was on the
injured list and I wasn't very tired
out there. It felt ~ood to $et out
there and run," W1lliams sard after
scoring 17 points.

night's semifinal against North
Carolina with victories over Cleveland State and Towson State.
The frnal five spots went to Purdue, Cincinnati (which had been
19th), George Washington, Vanderbilt and Wisconsin.
Wisconsin was 26th in the preseason voting, but jumped over
Florida State to take the last spot in
the poll. Neither team has played a
game. Preliminary research showed
this to be Wisconsin's frrst ranking
since at least the 1978· 79 season.
The Badgers' entrance to the
Top 25 breaks the tie between the
Big Ten and Atlantic Coast Confer·
ence for most ranked teams. The
Big Ten bas six - Michigan, Min-

nesota, Indiana, Illinois, Purdue
and Wisconsin. Florida State's
departure leaves the ACC with
North Carolina, Duke, Georgia
Tech and Virginia.

DOWIIING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE
Ill Sectld St,. '-Y
YOIIIIIDEPEIIDIIII
IGEIIrS IEIVII&amp;
.I&amp;SCOim
SIIICIII61

Massachusetts, which had been
22nd, advanced to Wednesday

Donnan said he, didn't know
much
Ho.ward (11-0), which plays
Delendinl Division I·AA chamin
the
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conpion Marshall enters the playoffs
next week hoping for a t:epeat, but ference.
"I was more concerned about
. c'*" Iitn .DOnnan said Sunday it
Western
C.Olina yesterday (than
wollldil't be ~· .
.
Manhal1 (8-3J .~ns its quest for Howard) lllld about what we ~ to
a second sinught championship do," Dorulan said. "We're working
ind
' against Howard Uni~~ersity on on film exchanF·"
Mlrshl1l
cane
from
beb
Saturdav in HuntinJton.
SaturdaY 1D belt Western Carolina
. "We're · glliil · to be in the
playoffs, (but) we feel like it's . 20-16 for tho Thundering Herd's
final Soulhem Con£~ game. '
going 10 be difficult to win the
Howad belt~ SIBle 53-.
whole deal," Marsha1I caach Jim
33
sltuniaY .ID Clinch the Bisons'
. ~ slid Sliridly. "But 01tce
lint
Mlll-Bastan Albletic Con'you ,get into die fil'llll '16 teams,
ference
fOOiblll title.
there ln:n't really any easy JlliiiiCS."

.....

~--·;.;.·:;.:•:.;,·.;.·..;~::...-~--------------

1

by Duke and Michigan. Kansas,
which advanced to the Preseason
NIT semifinals with victories over
Western Michigan and California,
moved from ninth to sixth and kept
its one frrs1-place vote.
LouiSville and Temple stayed
seventh and eighth, but Minnesota
moved up one spot after Preseason
NIT victories over Rice and Georgia. Oldahoma State moved up one
place to fill out the Top Ten.
The Second Ten was Indiana,
California (which dropped from
ninth), Georgia Tech, UCLA,
Georgetown, Virginia, Illinois,
Massachusetts (the fourth NIT
semifinalist), Arizona and Syra·

Marshall to battle Howard in playoffs

lllobl6,1'le!!Yodt72

,. -lot,L\a.-16
'.! ..,.....,..1op.111...._,.,
4

,

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........ ,..

VI.

J o..... 9 0 , - 1 9

•

I

IWtGrt, (10.2)

7:30p.m.
DlvllloR V

3-pointers in the fust three minutes
to put Dettoit ahead 14-4.
"I was wide open," Hunter
said. "I guess they thought I
couldn't shoot"
They were wrong.

Tar Heels hold No. 1 ranking in AP cage poll

7&lt;30

~~ ~,~=.:..,15
W-104, t.tiamll02
,) Allon~ 96, Cl!ldano 91
, r..u.a 100,8-94

' ~•.

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N... lcnoy ....... 4
PIUlodolphia ....... 3

•

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p.m.
At a.,.. JlnnM Sladhna

WLPrt.t::B
....... 1 2 .171
6 3 .fliT
I

BoeUII\
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.....

At Xena. Cm: Field
V....W.. (tH) n . CroWville

N•donal Dubtball AtaacltUon
. AlA GlaftCII

,
·· New YOlk

s~~:m1n

•n.....,r.k!.o1

,.

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Saturdar.
At Dubl n Stadium
HiliWd (10-1) "'· Mount Vernon {9-2), 7:00

.

Chicaao 19, Kanan Cily 17
New YM JIIU 17, Cincinnali 12
Allmu27,llollul4
a.- Boy 26. J:loloGl t1
HOUitm 21, Qcvwland 20
Botrolo :13, lndionopolia 9
MWni 17, NcwEn&amp;Und tJ

•

Cle:vdand. St. knlliu&amp; ·U,I!uclid 7
Cuyahosa Falli WaiJb JORJil JO, Mutillon

wuhin&amp;1oo 21l

NA110NALCONI'ERENCE

Trey Wilburn, a 24-year-old senior
forward who played Class AA
baseball for Cincinnati last summer, then went in for two conseculive baskets to hand the game back
to his ream.
Dominating the first half
rebounding 28-17, Milligan stayed
ahead but found its lead narrowed
after treys from Powell (1 :27) and
Snyder (:59) put the Redmen to
within two.
Coreno opened the second half
with a pair of field ~oats ID put Rio
Grande ahead withm two minutes,
and Jeff Hoeppner's three-pointer
at 16:22 put Rio Grande back in
charge for tbe remainder of the
game. Between Coreno, Powell,
Hoeppner and Snyder on scoring,
and the contributions of Stephens
(who had 13 assists), Lawhorn's
club wentabead 65-52 at the end of
the first 10 minutes after Larry
Caudill landed a three.
Milligan sliced the lead to seven
(80-73)at2:18onaGilbertCharles
field goal, but from there the Buffaloes never got another chance to

The University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team, backed by
balanced scoring and strong outside
shooting, fought back in the second
half Saturday at Lyne Center to
defeat Milligan (Tenn.) 89· 73 for
the men's championship of the
11th Bevo Franc~ Classic.
. "Our bench was very good in
this tournament." Redmen Coach
John Lawhorn noted after the
~arne, which marked his 600th win
m a 32-year career spanning 18
seasons in high school and 14 at
Rio Grand~. "Milligan is a very
working class-kind of team that
plays hard all the way, and that's
the way we had Ill play them."
The bench contributions and the
work of Rio GtliDde forward Walter Stepl\ens - wbich earned bim
the most valuable player award for
tlte tournament - made all the difference after the lnlense first half
saw Tony Wallingfol:d's Buffaloes, score.
"Milligan is a very impressive
undefeated in four starts entering
the game, lead most of the way and club- they do what they must to
hold a two-point advantage at the get the job done," Lawhorn
remarked. "Again, the overall
half.
While Stephens, a 6-4 junior effort from our end was good. Jeff
from Akron, did not score in the Hoeppner had a very sound tournagame, he made his mark ·in the ment, both offensively and defcnpoint guard slot in relief of regular sively "
starter Jack Morgan, who was
High scorers for Rio Grande
injured in Friday's opening round were Hoeppner with 23 points,
contest with Daemen (N.Y.).
Snyderwith2l,Powellwith 17, II
"Walter did an excellent job at by Caudill and 10 from Coreno,
the post, a position he basically who dominated Rio Grande 's
hasn't played," Lawhorn said. "The rebounding total of 41 with 13
second half saw Brett Coreno come boards.
alive and Shawn Snyder gave us a
Wilburn led Milligan with 21
great tift off the bench. The bench points and 13 of the team's 43
did very well in this tournament, rebounds,whileJasonPiuseradded
scoring 38 points on Friday and 33 II markers, and Kevin Smitlt and
tonight"
. .
Matt Young contributed 10 each.
Milligan took the lead wllhm
Rio Grande was 45.2 percent on
the first 10 minutes and lost il shooting (33-73, 10-25 from the
briefly when Matt Powell's three- three for 40 per:tent) to Milligan's
pointer at 7:28 handed the Redmen 41.8 (33-79, five of 23 on treys for
a 26-23 advantage. The Buffaloes' .21.7). At the line, the Redmen con·

~IIWubiz!pn,

lndianapalil .. 3 7 0 ·~gg~~
New Enaland
I 9 0 .H

•

0

TUIIIIa;r'iG-

NPL
AMEIUCAN CONJI!IIENCE
Eut
..... w. L T
Bulfalo
..... I 2 0

'

Children 5-12, $2.99. Children under 5 eat free.

Lawhorn collects
600th career win ·

Scoreboard

•

'"r-;__--.---,--..,..--.

. the Lild'y' V'ols took conttol m
~lopenins ntilitUCS of the 'second.
half and-ifed'-:W-27
· 53.""' ·

bier as th~ NFL's career passin1 •
At $p Dicco,1elf ~~·~ Cour
leader among left-handed· quarter- field goals were tliouJb ID send
backs, and led New Yorlc over his Lol An~lcl Pill die~ Jle
former ream.
bad a parr fl20-)aden m the &amp;II
Beanl9, ChieFs 17
half, a 37-yard klc.k in ~ ~ird
At ~nsas City, Mo. , Jeremy quarter and a 27-yarder 10th~
Lincoln's inter:teption led to Neal fourth period.
Anderson's !-yard touchdown run llula 10, Re'
with 3:09left as Chicago beat the
At Anaheim, Cal,if., TJ. Rllblcy
Chiefs.
~ over far Jim Evm:u lite in die
Dave Krieg's pass was bobbled third quartet and led Lol Angeles
by Jonathan Hayes, and Lincoln ovcr.Washington. Rubley threw a
intercepted . Three plays later, touchdown pass an~ cuided lbe
Anderson scored.
Rams on IIIOiher drive to a field
Packel'll 26, Li011117
goal
At Milwaukee, Chris Iacke Buecanem 23, V~ 10
kicked rout field goals and Edgar
At Tampa, Fla. ~mce Wodanan
Bennett scored on two shan runs, more than doubled II .ICUOII rush·.
leading Green Bay over Detroi~
ins total with 58 yardl and abo
Oilers 27, Browns10
caughueve~ puses for 65 yards.
At Cleveland, Marcus Raben·
Cra1g Erickson threw 27 yards
son made three of HousiDn's four to Horace Copeland to set up
inter:teptions as the Oilers matChed Workman's !·yard, fourth-q~
the longest winning streak in ream touchdown run and Milton Maclt
history with their ruth straight vic- returned an intei'ception 27 yarda
tory.
.
for a touchdown on the second play .
after halftime for Tampa Bay.
Raiders 11, Cbar&amp;ers 7

Bench leads Rio Grande
to tourney championship

\

"'

. Ward , an Ohio native who
picked Tennessee over Ohio State,
said the Lady Vols were determined not to lose.
''There was a lot of emotion and
adrenillin for Pat's SOOth .•. We just
weren't going to let anyone stop
us," Ward said.
·
Summitt's victory came in the
first game of her 20th season.
against Ohio State coach Nancy
Darscb, her farst full-time assistant.
Summitt now is 18·2 in season
openers.
"We came here for an education
and sure got one in tbe second
half," Darsch said.
Texas Tech coach Marsha Sharp
believes her Lady Raiders
answered the question of whether
they can play without player of the
year Sheryl Swoopes by beating ·
Vanderbil.t. She said the victory
also should help her team gain
more respect

,ACKSON, Tenn. (AP) .- Ten~
nessee coach Pat Summ1tt .gave
organizers of the Women's Hall of
Fame ber SOOth victory, but she has
o~ plw:f% the game ball. : .. , ,
-·~l . may..put that ball at-home,
sh~ .~4, ul\d-y af~ ber J:olo, I
Lady Vols downed etghthrr.rnked
Ohio-State 80-45 in the ,second
gaiM,ot $: Hall of Fame Tip-Off
Cljj$sjc. .\'' might let (son) Tyler
play,,'fith iL ".
NO. 14''texas Tech, the. defending NCA~ champion, upset second:ranked' Vanderbilt 74-67 in
Sawrday 's game.
The classic fearured the earliest
tip-off to .women's baSketball in
NCAA bistory at Oman Arena,
home to the NAIA Division I
women's championship and the
annual Kodak All-American high
school gitJs. game.
· ; ·..
Organizers bmlcc ground,Silttitday for the planned Women' s .~
of Fame, which is due to open .10
November 19.9 5; and ·pr.oc:~cds
"We·ialkedasagroupabotttnot
from the classic will belp' pay con- . paying attention to the early polls,
struetion costs.
: . ..
thopgb I thou~ht it was a pretty
Sumiil,r~
, , '4,ber ~VICIOry . legitirilateranking," Sharp said. "I
coutd n;t. ll,l.-it' pome at\!,l'l!ore hope we move up a little bit, but
approJmlllefP.~·, . "'e~~··· at we pia&gt;: Stanford next Saturday at
"Frrst
.,.-'.:...··
11 s .m
•' ·iS'·h;.,nrv
L '"'"""'k ...
· "
" "'' ;o 11'
hicb
...,,ore we vote agam.
~e· ~ ~f "''~· w
'hibiS u.,.,.,..
Tlie first Associaled Press poll
rn.l~~~~~,to~-=n~~ sure· oft~ regular season will be
milfj.~?;n e -~':.:--" .~. he said .
re~ Nov. 29 following the farst
tJuil J,'"rl11 cno;"'"''' ~
·
full weekend of play.
, Ohio ~~ kept tho prne ~l!JSC . ~st Vanderbilt, TC)t!IS Tecb
:WII[r"'Teeitlt&amp;U~':thro~h ~c ~~~t , us¢ its quickness to tie thQ game
'~~,Hf,!i~ ~~g~ ~t!:~' ~ ~t6J-67with57 ~on~ to goon a
~1'-!'M:C J8y 'witlli iit,'s&amp;~ . Jlll!'per by. Connre .Robmson, who
~~"' " t ~i"" r , ..
, , .; ·
· l"lllisl1ed With 18 pomts.
~ ennesiQ~ned thc,·~ond ; .

:M,

week, 16 more than Nebraslca.
One voter, Loren Tate of the
Champaign (Ill.)' News-Gazette,
resigned from the poll .Sunday for
personal reasons.
· Auburn (11-0), ineligible for
postseason play because of NCAA
sanctions, rose from sixth lo third
in the AP poll with six frrst-place
votes and I ,369 points. The T1¥ers'
season concluded Saturday w1th a
22-14 victory ovet Alabama.
Notre Dame was fourth with one
first-place vote and 1,334 points,
and West Virginia (10-0) moved up
from ninth to fifth following a 1714 victory over Miami, which had
been No. 4. The Mountaineers got
one first-place vote and 1,320
points.
Tennessee (8-1-1) moved up a

At Denver, John ·Eiway found
holes. in the NFL's No. I defense,
pass1ng for 276 yards and one
touchdown.
Dolpbl~ 17,_ Patriotll13
At Miamt, Steve ~erg , the
oldest player in the NFL at 39,
threw two touchdown passes in the
fourth quarter that rallied the Dolphins over New England.
DeBerg completed 16 of 27
passes for 252 yards and no interceptions. He signed u a free agent
after an injury to Scott Mitchell
who took over when Dan Marin~
was lost for the season.
Bills lJ, Colts 9
At Orchard Park, N.y ., Jim
Kelly came back from last week's
concussion and guided Buffalo past
Indianapolis. Kelly was injured in a
23-0 loss to Pittsburgh on Monday
night.
Jets 17, Beogals 12
At East RutJrerford, N.J.,
Boomer Esiason passed Ken Sta·

Pistons romp over 76ers; Lakers beaten

~BB

Eastera 14 - Jaime Wilson 2-26, Penny Aeiker 1-3-5, Michelle
Murphy 0-0-0, Tara Congo 1-2-4,
Amy Redovian 0-0-0, Melissa
Guess 0-0-0, Jessica KArr 1·7-911, Jessica Radford 0-0-0, Nicole

Florida State regains top spot in AP poll
opponent if both teams win their
remaining games.
Florida Slate (I 0-1) got 33 of 61 ·
fii'St-place votes in the AP poll after
routing North Carolina State 62•3
Saturday night. Nebraska (10-0),
which was off, got 20 first-place
votes.
Notre Dame (10-1), which bad
taken over the top spot last week
after a 31-24 victory over Florida
Slate, tumbled to fourth following
Saturday's 41-39 loss to Boston
College.
·
Florida Slate, which had led the
AP poJI ·all season before losing to
the Irish, got 1,471 points this

VanesSa Compston 2-1-5, Jaclyn'
Swartz 0-0-0, Heather Hudson 0-0-:·
0 Kristen Dassylva 2-0-4, Melissa&lt;
ciifford 0-0-0, Cynthia Cotterill 2-'
0-4, and Alicia Haggy 0-2-2.Totals 9·1·(11·15)-31.
AleXBDder 17 • Misty Carsey 0-·
0-0 Jamie Rolston 1·1-3; JennY:
M~kle 3-0-6, Joanni Blair Q-0-0,.
Carrie McLain 0-1-1, Collen .Mor-'
gan 1-0-2, J~ie Andrews 1 -0-2~
Misty Markrns 1-0·2·, Lynn ·
L'Heureux 0-0-0. Aerlane Srarling·
0-1-1, and Jocelyn Wilson 0-0-0.
Totals 7-(3·9)·17
.

_BB
_fiB

Federal Hocking 11 - Kristen
Lydy 0-0-0, Mariah McAfee 1-2-4,
Erin Snedden 0-0-0, Allison Pierson 1-0-2, Tracey Bentley 1-0,2,
Lisa Mahorny 0-0-0, Debbie Buck
0-0-0, Missy Bennett 0-0-0,
Gretchen Linscott 2-0-4. Totals 5(2·4)·12.

J .'

By Tlie Associated Press
Two top-~anked teams could
meet for the.national championship
iri tb&amp;Oriillg'e'Bowl.
Florida''State regained the top
spot' in 'The- Associaled Press media
poll on Sunday, while Nebraska
became No. I in the USA TodayCNN co~hes1 . poll.
Nebraska,' which plays No. 16
oklahoma ori .Friday, already has
clinche4.th\\ '!lig, Eight title an~ a
spot -in · the ·0range Bowl. Flonda
Slate, whiCii ~loSes its regular season 'S~)I post No. 7 Florida:
fi$u!eS"tO b,~ .the Cornhuskers

nati 17·12, Houston stoppedC~v~
land 2 7-20, . the ·Los Angeles
Ralj[ers beat San Diego 12-7,_tire
Los Angeles Rams took Washington 10-6 and Tampa Bay beat Minnesota 23-10.
Falcons 27, Cowboys 14
At Atlanta, the Falcons held
Emmitt Smith to 1 yard on one
c_arry and 9 yards on four recepoons before he got hurt
Defensive back Deion Sanders
also helped Atlanta ' s offense,
catching a 70-yard touchdown pass
from Bobby Hebert with 3:51 left
and high-stepping to the end zone.
The Falcons, who shut out the
Rams la!t week 1 blanked Dallas
until late m lhe third quarter.
Giants 7~ Eagles 3
At Philadelphia, New York got
the only offense it needed wben
Phil Simms threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to Mark Jackson on the
farst P~Y of the fourth quartet.
BI'OIIcos 37; Steelen 13

ByTb.e Associated Preu
the last weekend.
The -~su Ci~ Chiefs could
Kansas City leads the AFC
:lwt h~ld..a lead. ~ctther could the West by one game over De~v~r.
'fleb'Oll Ii.ioos. '
The Cb1efs. lost 19-17 ID Cb1caj0
• Dallas ~d ?ittsburs!' .~so stum- while the Broncos beat Pittsburgh
'bled, nlttldng II four div"'on lead- 37-13.
ers that lost Sunday. T~t. NFC
Dallas, meanwhile, lost Emmitt
West co-leaders San FranciSCO and Smith to a bruised right quadricep
New Orleans play at Candlestick in a 27·14 Joss to Atlanta. The
Par~.
,
. . . .
.C_owboys, whose seven-game_ win·
That s the way th1s diVISIOn rung streak was stopped, fell mto a
j,;i," Green Bay coach Mike Holm- fJtst-place tie with the New York
!SfCII sak!,after a :z6:17 yic~ over Giants in theNFC East
::Deb'01L It looks like II w11l come
In other games, the New York
:llown to the fmal week."
Giants downe1) Philadelphia i-3,
:- Gr~~ Bay(~) moved closer Miami defealed New England 17·
:to Detroit (7-3). m the NFCCef!tral. 13, Buffalo beat Indianapolis 23·9,
:The PI!Ckers Will play at Dettoll on the New York Jets topped Cincin•
•

W~rreri, ·River Valley, GAHS, Meigs girls ;post preview wi.ns ~
Wilfcn, River Valley, Gallipolis; and·Meigs posted wins during a
big night of. gitls basketball in the
seasQJI OJ!Sil)ing pt:eview at Meigs
Hlgh•School Saturday evening.
·,. · Wal+en·Southero
The openipg game, limited to
just· one half or two quarters per
gat,rre; saw Warren Local's Lady
Warriors of Coach Don Eichinger
defeal Southern 42-15.
Warren blitzed to a 6-2 advantage, utilizing its rebounding
strlll)'gilt in tl)e post, then unleas!'ed
a 'torrid· fast-breaking attack agamst
the 1'otnadoes of Coach Jenny
Roush. Most of Warren's points
came in the transition game.
' Af the 'end of the first frame,
Warren led 22-6. Warren, despite
slib~tituiing freely, continued its
rage • in'to the second quarter.
Meanwhile, Southern played hard
and showed much spirit, but had
several costfy turnovers in the passing tanes &amp;rld ·some missed ~hots
inSide.. • •
Claiming a 20-9 blitz in the
second canto, Warren went on to
the 42-15 win.
Angie Reeder led Warren with
ten.·and Julie Wagner bad eight,
while Renee Turley had five for
Southern.
· •·" Rlnr Valley-FHHS
Coach David Moore's River
Valley. Raiders looked sharp in
their,new warm-ups, and played a
similar style of basketball en route
to. a 3().:12 win over Federal Hocking.

The Dlllly SentiCWI • PIJI 6

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

FREE 1\SPE( 'lH )\

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CAlla,..••,

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Same Day Service
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Includes; Cleaning, Oiling,
Adjustments, Greasing.

•

TUESDAY, NOVEMB 23, 11:30 AM-1:30PM

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786 N. 2ND lvt Ml

.-OHIO-.._

_.

�P~~

'1.

Dally Sentln•l
t

"'

Mdnday, Nove~!!er 22, 1993

Pomeroy-Middlepqrt, Ohio

MEIGS COUNTY DELINQUE~T LAND TAX
NOTICE
.
.

'

Theodore P., 830 W PI of
13,•00705.•000 , Swan,
18•02072.000, Onlo,
NW 114 Ex 40A SE I NW Cor Uncle K•., Lot 28 Langalrelh Ste..., W. Elal, Lot 10 N'(ES
Of NW 114 EX 12.03A 13.03A, Add., lt.77.
Add 10' N Side, 122.18.
$31.21 .
8AUSBURYTowNsHIP
-18•02073 .000', Oovla,
MEIGS LSD
Steven W. E!al, Lot 11 Nyee
11·0008$ .000, Hayu ,
Theodore P., Sect 38 E port
14~483.000, Boley, Judy Acid, flt0.27.
of NW 114 Ex 40A SE &amp; NW &amp;lal, Sect 32 8 par! of SE 114
ili·OZ074.000, Davia,
of NW 114 Ex 18.32A 28.88A, 1.38A, 111.13.
Steven W. Elal, Lot 12 Nyee
$73.73.
14· 00228.000, Colllne, AddS 5', $11.01. ·
18·00534.000, Fleher,
11·00427.000, Heyao, Glenn R. Jr, llor Connie,
Theodora P., Lot Sect. 14-8 Sftt t8 iiW port of 72A w Theodore, Lot 48 0. Add.
1.50 out of 33.38 1.50A, P.nofNW11411A.S270.st. Sub. 2ex. Tri . S~ onNEaldl,
$4U8.
i4·0025S.OOO, Dolley, 1209.87.
.
111·00535.000, Flo her,
11·00137.000, Jenklna, 1Jom111 Jr liar Bonnie, 81111
InN Par! E of Rd Ex Theodora, Lat70' x 20' beck
Robert E., S..,t. 20 SW ·cor
...,1.28 NW cor Sect. 1 4-28
of oub 415. ol lot 148
NE of NW 114 43.033A,
Dolley, Dtbney odd..015f!, $8.70.
$103.22.
.
Sect
18-00844.0GO, Goldberg,
11-D1144.000, John eon, 33 (640) llld of s line ol SE Jeromo Fimlly Truot, etol,
Lyne B l/or Lindt S.; Sect 1/4 of SW 114 .SOA, $3.83.
lot 257 23.22A E Porte1 lo18
30 NW 1/4 Ex t4 Vein Coal
14·00484.000, Goldberg 23.22A, $45.40.
160A, $544.30,
Jerome Fomlly Truot, Etol,
16·0084~.000, Goldberg,
11-D1145.000, John eon, Sect. 1 (840) School lot N of Jero!lla Fimlly Truat, etol,
Lyne B. &amp;/or Lindo S., Sect. 11 Oovle .12A, $2.31 .
Lot 257 Neor mid on W line,
2
30 7A on N Line of SW 114
14·00880.000, Hyoell,
64 •v .ooo, Goldberg,
Ex 14 Vein Cooi7A, $42.11. Herold E Sect 8 (••o) NE
·• NW •114 on
- Willie Jerome Family TNat, Etal,
11-D1148.000, Johnaon, of W 112 of
Lot
257 1..,
D' •o
otrlp on W line
Lyne B. lo/,or Undo$., Sect. Hll 1.13A, $80.7.7.
'
1 pLot
• _..v ·
30 NE 1/4 Ex BOA NE of Rd
14-D1018.000, JO!MI, Gary 0
100A, $218.07.
.
A. lolor Sandre K., Sect. 35 J 18-00847.000,TGoldbEerg,
11-D1147 000 J h
erqllla Family Nat, 181,
. , o neon, (540) at mouth of Wolf Pen LatS4 ,sa tl54 to 5,8, $11.78.
Lyno .B. &amp;lor Undo S., Secl Run Ex .!ltiA .81A, $358.55.
1• o0•48 000 G tdberg
0
•
30 Se 114 Ex 33A SW 120A,
14-D13!l!I.OOO, p.,.nlngton,
v• v
·
•
$380.13. ,
Charleo, Seo. 21 12621 llaar Jero!llt Family TNat, Elal,
11,.01U8;000, Johnaon, Mid In s Prt of s "ol Rd ax Loq4 112 Horton Add Sub
1f2.ooo, . . ..
Lyno B.'&amp;lor Undo s ., Secl .776A o.t107A (New Sur), 34 11
11
.
B I A E
36 NE cor 221.75A Ex 14 $89.23.
Vein Coal, 20A, $84.04.
14-D1168.000,
Price,
ern co ·• . ta.!l_ !-Dt 20-21·
11-D1141.00D, Johnaon, Marjorie, Soct 8 (840) 26 22 Ex.15' Oil N·IRGI, 125.37.
Lyne·B. &amp;/or Undo S., Secl RadlordSurv.. 25A,S115.tO.
16.00883.000,. 11 . . ,
11 on S. Uno of SE 1/4 Ex
t4-o 11 n .000,
Price, Bernice A., Etel, Lot 23
14 Vein CO.i1.40A, $2.37.
Normon Jr., Sect. a In NW Noyora Run 15' N Side,
11-D1f58.000,
Co 0 I W 112 0·r N 112 2 70A, S1o.tiz.
' .
·.
18·00814 . 00~, Ilea,
•
Moodlopough, Robert W. Sr $15r.80
Julia A., Sect. 1 SE ol
14-oi 169 . 000 , Price, Bernice A., Etal, Lot 24
. •42AC, $51.88.
Norman L Jr., Sect 8 aH lot SNiadylos" Run Ex. 15' owN
, 27 • 1 I0 11 I t Z ••A
Oi' 187.75 •.
nc • '"" '
11."0257a.001.J _Jenklni,
$158.38.
,Rober! E, E!al, Pel'54 t .25A
14.01170 .000, . Prloa·, outoiU4A1.25A,S125.33. •
Norman L. Jr., S..,t 8 of N
18·02578.002, Jenklne ;
prt of 4.28A 1.44A, $230.43.
14·01403.000, Storoher, Rol!erl E., Etol, I&gt;QI 3 Pom
Ada A., Sect 8 (840) In· NW . Bronc.~ ' Rl"'r lA!!ding ICerra
1/4 of Sect a .37A, $4.33.
R (For•Nulo) .812A of"1,413A
14·01878.000, Stole of .75A,$75.28.
'Ohio, Sec. 26 (840) PI'! of 1A
18,0257t.D03J. Jenklna,
Solda E 112 oiSW 114 of SW Roblot E.1iEloloi'Oi 55 1.50A
114 .50A, $15,27.
Po!!: Branch land lor track
14·01861.000,. Stoto , of to ~umeroy Soli Aoooc. eoo,
Ohio, Sect. 15 (282) Ntar S1~i eo.oo'' o, 11
· 1.1.c' h.111••
Mid of N 112 4.75A, $43.11.
14·00804.000, Yonower, Gertrud• •~ lot 422 50' E
Ariella, Sect, 13·21 (640) end, $245.55.
Neor mid. W 112 of SE 114 N
1i·D1133.000, Spencer,
of Rd .740A. $57.77.
Don no RH, Lot 431 Trl Lot
14-00838.000, Wallar,
Hlldo I Swlehor lllno, SICI.
30 (1 00) . E Port 123 Penny
Surv. ZA; $11.81.
14·00831.000, Waller,
Hilde I lfwloher lllno, Sect. .
.,_ .••_..~,,.,
28 (840) NW of 34.75A BE pi
of NW 114;UOA, $11.26;
14·008~0.000,
Woller,
Hlldo ·&amp; Swloher Mini, SICI.
35 (100420) 2/S lA Strip 30'
Wlda .SIA, $3.30.
I AGO,, ·''14.0~.
IIIOOLEPOR'T VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
15·00031.000, Armotrong,
LA Jean, lqtji5) Riverview
Acreo Subdlvlalon, $372.51.
15•00888.000, Baohom, 115.23.
Jalfery E.; Lot 15 Sub 2 In
18-D0122.000, Teaford, G.
lot IS 44' all E. eldo of oub
lot21n totes, $208.80.
15-oo888.000, Birchfield
Tereu K. &amp;lor Rober! L. Lot
Pl of LOt 1477 40x70.3 oil
SW Pt. of 477 Pomeroy
"
Add., $143.13.
15.00400.000, Corponter,
EI!Stem Local 'School District
Lorry, Dlv. Joneo Eot 2!Jtx
otrlp Joining Cem 2A Ell, has rei~ its honor roll for the
fii'St nine week grading period.
$13.40.
15·00388.000, Chey,
Making the nonor roll were the
Jamea W. JR l/or Rhonda foUowing students:
L., Lot 80, Booworth Add.
12th grad11; Penny Aeiker,
Ex. 20' Prt Lo~ $403.54;
Kathy
Bernard, Charlene Dailey,
15·01800.000, O.itlvalla,
Mlchoel, Lot 128 P Jonea Shelly Hendricks, Michelle May3rd Add S Side, $18&amp;:84.
nard, Tyson Ros.e, .Jaime Wilson,
15·00458.000, Eblrabooh; Andy Wolf, Wes Arbaugh, Aman·
Jerenna II &amp;/or Timothy R., da Barringer, ,Anita Calllway; JenLot Prt lot 110 30x120 Prt nifer Cremeans, O.wn FoJer. Adria
Lot 111 30~120 Booworth
Frecker, Scon Golden, Christy
Add., $400.15.
15·0G428.000, Elllo Oron . Hawkins, .Terri Jacbon, Qebbie
L. 1/or Peggy L, Lot 15 Johnson, Randy Kaylor, Marilyn
Horton &amp; Boeworth Add, Ki~ble, •. V .• lerie McGinnis,
$48.28.
Micbelle Murphy, Pat Newland,
15·01532.000, Landere,
Jared.
Ridq1&lt;\ur and Paul Viney3!ll.
Rober! E. &amp;lor lllrgarot A.,
11th
grade: .Riiger Arix, Charles
Lot 82 Behan Add. W 112
Bissell, Matt Bowen, Ryan Buck·
56'x!ltl', $411.35.
15·001104.000, llcOonlel, ley, Randy B ilr!Ce, Ryan Hollon,
Thelme, Lot 88 Coalport Janet McDonaic!; Hei~i , Nelson,
.15A E Side Prt of 114A, David Toundas, Jarrod Vaninwa$12.28.
gen and Vic VanMeter.
15-D1154 : 0~0,
Roach,
.1Oth grade: 'cimnie Pooler,
Catherine II &amp;lor Jamee F
D, Lot 411 Coolport 30' E Brandi Reeves, Brian Bowen,
Marissa · Broo~over, !'4elissa
End, $158.78.
15-D1182.000, Roush, Dempsey\' RebCcca Evans, Jessica
Thom.. R llor Dorothy Karr,. Jenrlifer .Mora, Crystal MorMia, Lot4,1133.37.
ris, Rober! Murphy, Nicole Nelson,
' 1&amp;•0.1085.001,. Smith,
Lor,Y II. 91111 .20 TIN R13W
·• ·

L Jr, Sect. 3 2.37A S ol Rd
out of lA E and ox. coal
2.37 A; 518.25. ' •
18·00474.000,. Goldberg
Jerome Fomlly Trull, Etal,
Sect. I (180·122~) Mid ol Lot
1223 N ol Rd .12A, $87.31.
18·00475.000, Goldberg
Jaromo FomiiY, Truot, Elll,
Sect. 1 ·1223 {100) S pr! 47A
OK 1.877A 45.12A, $183.541.
18-D0478.000, Goldberg
Jerome Fomlly Truat, Etal,
Sect. 31 SW corner 60A ,
$182.87.
18-00477.0_00, Goldberg
Jerome FamilY Truat, Etol,
Sac't. 1 bank end of 49.90A
28.40A; $115.42.
18-01382.000 Goldberg
Jerome Famlly' ~Truat, Etal,
St 1 T.2!'1.13,1101\ Lot1223
Ex 8.1'48A Ex 245A •Ex. 320A
24.330A, $107.02. , .
18·01384,000, Goldberg
Jerome Fomlly Truot, Etol,
Sect 1.60 ·1223 3.5.A out of
S1A NE cor. 1: 'of Rd 3.24A,
$47.27.
.
'
18·01450.000, Goldberg
Jerome Fali)lly Trilot, Elll,
Sect 31 Cool 501\, $38.n .
11·0145t.OOP, Goldberg
Jerome F•"!IIY True!, Etat,
-Sect ' 1 Cool .!1 ,112 60A,
.. .,.91.
.

17-D0143.000, H.lckmln,
Hoi"" M., Lot Sect ·25 Und
112 lnt In' cool und 82.54A

*;':Go

-

bl

AMIIICAN GENEUL. UFE and
.ACCIDENT INSUUIICE COMPANY

I~

"',,

'.

To place an ad

~~

~DEAQLINE

Call992-2156

c

Mo.N. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12
~.

Tueodoy Paper
Wodneoday Paper
Tlnanday Paper

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • agent

Frid,ay Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

p

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Momdoy Popor

loK 119

Sunday Popor

·"'

Middleport, Olllio 45760
(614, 143·5264.

•'

II

.A'•

....,•• ,

..

."' ''It\"' olfering

2112/112ftfn
.
"
..,

Drink with each purcllue of ,

DEER HEADS
'MOUNTED

.CHRISTMAS
TREES
$1 0.00 aach .

ShoUlder Mo111L .... '155 "

79~

Hom Mourit................'22
Sqllnel .....~ ................'55

1lomin9's
'992-2124

Open 9to6 .

PIERSON
·
- ..

3dlll.....,tldndo:
Scotch, White ..
.Au!'Irion Plnea, &amp;'to I'.
Harley ttonlng real·

~~

· BROTHERS
SPORTING GOOOS

done" 3&amp;175 FlotWood'
: 'Rd., Pom•oy, Ohio
''' 11/11111 mo. pd.

.

I

~·NEW- REPAIR

r

il

'·
t9-D0411.00Gi Walker, Don
Lae &amp;lor Iva llarlo, 16 116,
$27.24.
' '
.
19-D0412.00G, Walker, Don
L11 ,1 /or Iva Marie, 17 111,
$489.99.

,JI

ji

':.&lt;
(

•
..

"•

~

'""'M,•

. . ..

'Gutters ·

·

-~~~~~·

Commardal
lnalalloll- of u ...
Jocko • Plion• • FAX

Keylpllm

Off·Pr•lnw EJlt. • 0...
FREE EBniiATES
J.rt llorrll- 15 Yr. &amp;p.
TrJ.CounlyNM

Spectal Occasions ·. ~ ·

THE
I

II I

( ,t 1I

I

'

I

I

" '1 Il

•,

'

,. PHOTO·= P~~
109 H\~ · Stn1Jr,1 .

Pomeroy.:,::·,:~,::

.;

'"

.... Bob ,and Charlene

."

I,

·'

. ·Middlafiorl, Ohio
GREAT SELECnON AND
VARIETY OF QtiAUTY
. 'METAl TOYS.
'092-3314 1:3Q.411on.-Frl.
. 742-3020 ~n.r 5:00
Padll Tracloro

. t Gutter CINnlng
Painting

"·
•

FRJE .ESTIMATES

•'

3-iw:J.Ifn ·

•

...,_o~~;.,..

Kevin Keaton, Julie Bliiley, Kristen
Chevalier,Wes Crow, Tiffany Hollon, John Cooke, Amber Balcer,
Renee Barringer', Amber. Church
and Nathan Marcinko. ~ ·
Fourth grade: 1'4ic~l Bennett,
BradleY' Brannon, Lindliey Cross,
Tina DeLaCruz, Tiffany )C:idder,
Chris Lyons, Kimberly Marcinko,
AShley Hager, Garreu Karr, Anthony Bcarhs, Tammy Bis~ll, Holly ·
Broderick, Jonathan .Durfy., Ben
Holter, )VhilnCy Karr, Sll!ll Mans·
field, Charlie Young, Amber Ellis,
Jonathan Will, Nick BarbCt, Jessica
McGinnis 111d DaniellC Rucker.
Third grade: LeAnh MlUcinko,
Jeremy Shanks, ThomQS ~.im)nons,
Tyler Simmons, Daniell~ ·ThOmas,
Michelle Thomas, Carrie Wiggins,
Carrie Crow·, Brent Buckley, Adam
Chevalier, Amanda Fefty, Sonya
Frederick, Matthew O' Brien, Jennifer Thoma, Br;~~ndoil Werry,
Chelsey Wood, 'Krystal Baker • ..,
Joshua Eagle, Nichol Honaker,
Brandy Jude, Cyrus ~notts i.
Heather Smith, Abbi' Thompson.;
Ryan Wachter and C~ Wilson. :

1·9
ACADEMY

·

'

·

•

~

1
man Carolyn Snowden read "I 'G amma . .The society signed a get.f
Fllillld a Note on the·Floor, Father,» well card for Rita Hartley. 1 . •
•
and First Vi.ce-Presid
, ent Fern
1)le next meetin .. will be at th5"
Grimm
.. gave prayer. FavQrs w
, ere 'ul'f'asonic Temple "tn Ji,a.md,en on.
•~·'a1
dars
and
candi
Dec.llatllam.
....... c en
,pens
es.
·
,'
During the business meeting .
A~ilding from Meigs County;.
President Sandt!l Nodruff thanked were Susie Carpenter, Twila
the hlistess committee and cooks. Childs, Fern Grimm, JoAnn Hays.~
Grimm suggested doing a newslet·
Pauline Honon, Donna J,cnkins.~
ter to complet~ items needed for Lee Lee, Nellie Parker, Milrgaret~
the Golden Key award. The society Parsons; Gay Perrin, Carolynn
voted 10 have a new~r. Viola
Snow~. Rosalie SIOl'y, Dorothy..
Getlles told of an upcommg trip 10 W oodatd, Becky ZUrcher itnd Ann'.1 1
Ru.ssia through Delta · Kappa
Webster.
·"
'
'

· 18-D1264.000, Chapmon,
B~ Tbe Aaaodated Pr~ . .Chicago MayO!' Richard J!)aley Jr.
~=~\,~.::~~ s~,'l'! s, Lot
. While many ,people .~1. night,.., scilffed at th1s idea, paying JlOQPie
. 1 1285,009 , Chapmln, owls ,glgglecl, t:hot~le~ and. guf· ; not io vote. He. •aid 1n CbJcaao
Crola T. 1/or Sherry B, Lot . fJ!wed to the joke~ .~ oo late· · tl)eir voters mal(ce money the old
118,l271.lt.
.
.mghttalk shows. For ttiose who . fashioned . way. When ·y,ou buy a
11-00114.DOG, !:Milham, · would radler har from ~ Sand- vote jn Chicaso the voter bas t,o
I 1711 Chill)lr man lnllald of l.eacmiiD, hele are . vote two or three time to m.ke his.
R~i-ooa;ro'.'::·~· ~~I:i 10111o'HIP.I!~ta ~ ~t ~- · tqOliCy;-·NOJIC' of this slailig around
·• 1... Lo
Iogue~: ·
·' .
,
·.Ihe house collectinf dough for
D ~r.
Lor• t 8-0
8112 ohub. 11;
84.10.
..
.
I
. . nothin$. In Cbicago, i )'011 want to
18·00187.000, 1 Davia,
.,rom Th~ Tonight Show g~t pa1d you have to vote a half
SltWn
Etal,' Lat2558ub. with Jay Leao"
dozen limes."
a112,12.!i!J•• ·
·
·,
·
.
·
1I·OOIII.ooo, Davia,.
"That Jhing over ·tlte ~ew Jer: , · , ···And the all-ilmokers'·airllnc\
· Sloven w. 1!1111, Lot ·t Nyoe sey),ll!lvetnpr ' s campa~gn j~st ' 'Freedom Air.:' Remember that
· ~~.:=-:J~"tovl~~ won.,t , go ay.oay. That. s the one dopey operauon~ Well, ,theyJ
Steven w. Elll. 1.01 26$, lot where p&amp;lple we~ allepcily paid announi:ed dw they ~ c:litcding
not to vote. Well, the other da)' operatiol)s because of low" passcn·
·to; Ex. 10' N Side, $4.45.

, g~f.~n,erest, LO~ passena~:in~
'.y.hen you run an _aU-sm~l\"8 .u~~ ·
lme aren't your JIBS~~ngcts JUStc.; ,
gqpna start ~lsappearmg ,one by ~
one anyway?
"1
'·
"'
'·'Puerto Rico · voted ·m;lt . to
liecome a state ... ' Can ,y'9u 6~pe_~
them? Look. the United Swea' Ia at,
trilli
. deb t. '"'"
. on doUan 1D
uoy ~ 'I
my_ls in a huge slump; ,wo've . got ~
no idea whore the new jobs are~~
comina from. You 'kqow ' now is
!1robab1y not· llie best lime 'to .be' ·
holdii\g a bi( m~nlbersliip drive.
Huh· ... •ure, we· want yo\1 to
become state. You can cltip in for : 1
health care ... Hello, hello."

0

a

EW!i:

,. Public NOI.Ice

;:.

WANT

A'DS
WORK!
Public Notice

_......,..,
PARTS

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

f92·70Uer ·
p;~t)•ISA, ,
ortOU n11 &lt;.
1400441-0070
\

:1::
'p:
lad: ~·1111' 11, , . ..

=·

:,*lou".:\Jtidga

. .r

.

nty

I -GoJIIer Work
Plumbing
&amp; Exterior
Painting
(FREE !'STIMATE$)

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
.

FURNACES

e-10.112-1111

FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

UMESTONE-TRUCKING

FllCtory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

DRI~~~}~n_ED

915·4473

FREE ESTIMATES

992·3838

llnonclng IIVIilaible. ··

1111011 mo.

L&amp;L nRE lAIN

33151 Pt.. Groni.H
lldtta, OIH 45771
614·992·5344
t-100-714-nRE

~

Come by and register
for free Battery to be
given away December
24, 1993. No purchase
required to register and
don' have to be present
to win.

wa.wloo. . .

~

105.&amp;1ttamutA..,, Pomeroy
Como one! .,.,.."..'""

...... Food and
Something lor

Fi•sonable.Rales
J&lt;* N. Sayre

aoo.....,

eo~vltlce

446·9515
CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLWIIH
We give carpel end
upholetery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they denrvell
*drapery (on aile)
"flnelabrlca .
l'114tne1ral eiHnlng
l'odor treatment .

Now has beautfful Cocker Spaniel Puppies. Also
featuring a 2 ft . common Black Tequ. layaways are
now available lor Christmas. Sale on our entire stock
of large aquariums.
new ~ems.

61~742·2138
. • • 314/IIG 1 mo.

EVERY THURsDAY
I~NIJ.OH.

L~

a

Up

I II

•

,."""'at. In

I 1•811 · .....~A~

H!IIIMgroWri-Cirefu~

Sh•rtcl Scotch l ,
Wliha Plna 1/ l
wlh
great HlecliOn of,
treee.
'
CaH .. .,,~"' 43 or

,.,o..,;

. FOI SALE
•

EAGLES

iot,.

flneid rii'd, Wlllldrig

' Tnl!lM'i..lone
'; $Ia Ea!lt Mlln' St,

PayoW . '

l

ad good lor 1
FREE oanl.

ltotnerOYr Ohio

Lie. No•

112'41321 ' .

dletllnca to llChool or
:!~~~r::~~h. Ideal lor
tamlly.
•

14&amp;-2244

· •fter6 p.m.
. 1tV28/1 mo.

Our Business is Security
· .Aiann Sys&amp;ems

· · Newilaveri
w.v. 25265
'

..
•.;

, " . "·

auiil~n·~ ~~~~~"'
Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

We apeclalla In:
RRElWATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hour
Emergency Service

Gary Berry, OWnarmm Faulk, Manager
Certified technicians on every job,
customers
Satlslaction

1.1.1 PETUHD

Book your
lila no'(&lt;

SAYRE ,TRUCKING

lor
I

•

"

'

RACINE

'FREE ESTIMATES

(11)221ft,ltz)t, II, 20,27
'

304·773-5533

-Room Addition•

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WOI!K
AVAILABLE ..
SEPnC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES one!
TRAILER SITES,

•••

e

91"":_ ._,.._

CALL

GUN SHOOT

EXCAVATING

I oNiew Homes

au. .... a...IU

~

sPecl8i'RIWt\. Dliylon
TrucldOI!It SALE'PriCia
•
·
• Jt/.\ ,

lllltlllled DDRDJitk . .~-»

ROBERT IIS$Ell
COHnRUCTION

7131191/lln

21
·Av-.
Park. .burg, ~et VlrJII!IIIi
26101, you are hereby
notified that you hove blln
nomad ;.O,.,I•I!dltnto •. In , 1
legal acl'!!lenllllld u..vtn
L Kelly,·!Siainllll w. Homer
H. c.oeo, Et .,.. O.lindonf!o.
Thla .. actlqn hoe ba•n
oaalgned ,Coao· Nulilber
27830 ond '' 1'1'!•"11 In .the
Courl' of Comnloil Ple81,
Probate Dllililon of llelge
County, Pomeroy, .Ohio
45760.c, l
·The obloOJ of the
Comp)olntlo tor Mllhorlty to
aall docado~ra rllil ttalale
In or~ Ia pay ~Ia of the
ea18to,'Wtiloh rllil •tala lo
mora p.lrllcur.Jy dl-..rlbld
In Vohi"'e ·1111· Prilll 1131
Malga[. • ,Cotll!tY Deea ,
Recordl, raloNnoo to which
.. harabylnide.
You ora required to
anawor ·' ' the • Compl~lnl
within .21 '!i'JI l!llor lh* tat.
publlcollon . of thlo nolle•
whlc~ wi.J.I . ~• -pulillohad
cine• - h week leu elx
ouc-llve ........ ·n;e tat
pUbllclilcin ·*!I be m.pi on .
11127, 1"' oriel the 21 dlyo
lor Anowar wiN oilalmenoe . ·
onth.. dltt.
In • ._. of ,your r.uura 10
~no.,er ,pr otherwl.u ,
pol\d aa ....,lred trv lie
lo Rille• of Civil
ooe..,.r., Judfllll-.,f by · '
fault will be t..,dltad
g~lnot you for the ieltel ·
on~ 111
Corroplllnt

YOUNG'S
. CARPENTER SERVICE

.11112Wt mo.

Spec:llinzlng In CUstom
. Frame Repali'

tt

Pomeroy, Ohio

614-667-PETS

tAIWI~ OliO

..
I

TUPPt:Rl$ PLAINS
obedience,
lew enforcement,
pericinal protaetlon,
kennel 11rvlc:e, pupa l
young doga for aale.
By eppt. only

' . f

I

Low, wide eo and 70 • Sa~aa
,perfonnance prolla.
• Two •trona fil;wgl=o belli'
• Aggreaslve tl1ted ~
• Smooth ltdlng polyeoter cord
boct,'.

Limestone
· Dirt
'
Gravel
992-7878
..... . - -..'!""--:"7frl1in0.

TRI~STATE

L

Heather Wetland Lauren ¥oung.
Ninth grade: Candace Bunting,
Meredith Crow, William Francis,
Maria Frecll:er,·Lisa Frigiola, Traci
Heines, Martha Holter and Jason
Mays.
Eighth grade: Kellie Bailey,
Stephanie Bearhs, Christopher
Buchanan, Michelle Caldwell,
Jeremiah Kehl, Billie Pooler and
Michael Weeks.
Seventh grade: Stephanie Evans,
Jacque Hall Valerie Kalr,. Jessie's
Brannon, Jeremy Coleman, Jamie
Drake, Wesley Karr, Jennifer
Starcher, Mary Styer, Angela Taylor and Apn Wiggins.
Sixth ' grade: Meghan Avis,
Matthew Caldwell, Molly Heines,
Mauhew Boyles. Jessica Grueset;
Andrew Rollms and Steven WeeksJessica. Pore, Stephanie Young,
Joshua Broderick, Alison Rose,
Joshua Will, Jason Barber, Jessi(;l
Barringer, Cassie Rose, Barbara
Smith and Wendy Smith.
Fifth grade: Dean Alexander,
Joe· Brown Matthew Grubb,
Joshua Kehi. Justin Robertson,
Wesley Shafer, Gary Vierling,

·Daytooa Radial 60 and;70

.HAULING

.QUAL!llPRINlSHOP

' ' DoWnipoufS "

"

.AT THE

'949·2168.

·

I .

'Mates- PortraitS
.Memo,.Y' .w
\
' ' ·.,.

SYRACUSE, OH.
618-982-6186·

GENEUL

.-:}·

w.

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UWMO)f&amp;1

. . MODIS
CO-UIICAIIOIIS

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Meatball &amp; Phllly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips t 1 Free

a-a

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11 Truat, Etil,
of 'lsw 1/4

Delta ;Kappa Gamma holds auctiop.

I

S.R. 143 and 7

v1

Eastern Local honor roll announced

''
·
Alpha Omicron Chaeter. Delta
Kappa Gamma, held 1ts annual
silent auction ,when members met
~ tl
· ·
Ch urc h ,
recen
Y' at .' T nmty
Pomero·Y·
·
Scholarship Committee Chair"'811 Cindy:. Bateman conducted the
auctio11 llllsistcd by commhtee
member Margltret Benson and .offi.
cers of the chapter. Benson auctioned the iiems which received no
bidsTh
. e •·•'·s of the ch•~h ~ed
·
-~ - •
dinner. Hos~ess. Committee Chair-

Loc~ at the comer of

),
.J\

.:----------L---------L--------.J________

John L Eut, Lot 24 Behan
:lnd odd, 145.11!1.
., ts-q10ee.ooo, Wendling,.
Lonclfl K. &amp;lpr Agneo, Secl
20
on N Una of$1e
Sect 20 Ex
1· ·315A 5 ·a•••
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·25 · ·
. 15·Cl0887;000, Wlnnlngl,
Graoo jl/or 1111~, Un«!o, Lot
88 Bwn Add., ssus.
u-oou'7. ooo,
WI..,
ChoriH A/or Billy, Lot 413
Pom~l~~~ J~l1'::~2.
MEIGS LSD
18·00031.000, Arnott,
John L I/or Wanda Sue,
Lat452 Sub. 3112 40' x 150',
$872.38.
.
'
16·00032.000, Amot~

lenow~al . . . . . . . . . .
lncludli)g: tin, cnt lron , ·long Wid ehCIIt Iron. ·
Mu.t be smell .. . . . tO b!JmoW.Cf~ .W
Short IrOn (~a tMn 3ft.) 1.75 per ..........
Motor eut. .. ..2.00 per hllndNd ''&lt; ,.
cr-, ~ .aum. e.na .23 pound
Prl!=eeaubject to c=hlnge ~· ~

c,,,

--i'ii:Oi!Siei.OO

40

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TRI-&lt;OUNTY RECJOJNG

(304) 882-3336

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABli PlKHI
RESIDEIIW..
CONCRETE

WORk.··
Porches,
· Pa~loat ·
Sidewalks
" 992·7878 '
7rr 1 mo.

�'

Monday, November22, 1993

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

The Oaily &amp;entlnel Page

e

BIUDOE
ACIGII

UP
-PHIL
ALDER
1NI Plvmolh

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-nt.

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1N7 Dodge

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For

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Tlroo. ow- ' 4 Non-Smour.
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.
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.·-...:· EEK AND MEEK

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ALl ~~ GIWT MEDIA
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Vulnerable: North-8outb
Dealer: South
-... To luy: tlndul: Dog
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Coa--0111.

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Re ntals

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THAT WILD BUNCH
OF ROWDY DOWDIES

n.

RUN OVIRH

n~-'~4~4!17.

Pokf: Aa Old u.s.

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Paa
AUpua

Opening lead: • K

IT WAS

TH' SCHOOl;

MA'RM II

Dive into the pool
of team play
By PWlltp Alder

.......

MOlt lourllament playen prefer

team eventa to fairs .. In teame, it II

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&amp;

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_ PEANUTS.

,Yegetables ,

WANTED: onglno tot Fonl
·
;
u
lllor,
ASAP, ... N-112-2155.1:I:GIIpft. ., 111,1-111:14421 oltor

1 DIDN'T FIND IT

5:1111pn.

•
Employment Scrv1ces

TODA'f. BUT MA'IBE.
i'.LL FIND IT
TOMORROW ..

· jUit a matter o maklnfl or breakilll
the contract; overtricks are almolt lr·

\
IF VOU REALL'I WANT
SOMETI-IIN6 IN TI-llS
LIFE, 'fOU I-lAVE TO

BE

DETERMINED~

r------,1
IF I DON'T FIND
IT TOMORROW.
1 TIIINK I'LL
QUIT LOOKIN6..

Help Wanted

All.,.._- oxtro
money ot ..m 1 ca,..r. .ather
AWNI

0111 llo~lvn. 3N:i-214t
or 1.00 1121351.

~Ow

GI.OSt 1)11&gt;. 1 G.OM~
MAICING Tt4e GuT 1

Yard Sill

7

DI&gt;l
et

til&gt;•

QolnO, Gold
Colno,
Gold Colne. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
111 ~A_,.._ Golllpollo.

11

.

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WHEN TH' SCHOOL
BELL RANG l GOT

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2 I daoom Ranch. 21 Evana
Helglllo, 8300111o.
Oopooll,

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41 Houses lor Rent

-IIIII

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WHAt HAPPENT
TO YOU? ·

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lat...,
,,_,~lloonl provlilod, 1 - - - - - - - - tl,112.10
, _ _ ''

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JUGHAID II

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relevant. In pairs, however, every l.r+-J-..4-trick II vital.
.The moet popular form of tea.!llay lo.+-4-ii-is Swisa Teams. A reference
oa
is Harold Feldbeim's [I...I....J...,.jJ...
Swisa Team Tactiei," re-

'rklc~~!rld,~;:

Street New York, NY lOOZS.
71%4). It covers all aspects of Swiss
Teama, includinl strateay; and ends
with a 50-questloa quiz.
Today's deal comes from the book.
You are shown only the Nortb..SOUth
bands and asked to plan the play in six
diamonds, West bavinl o~rcalled
lour clubs. West leads the club klllc.
It Isn't euy to reach six dlamoads
alter West's annoyln1 overcall. El&lt;·
~rts play North's double as sbowinl
converllble values.• Tbll meaJIII that
North is promising sufficient hip· .
card values to act at the lour-level. U
the opeoer bas a balanced band, be
will paa. But U it is unbalaDeed, be
can bid and expect to lind some useful
goodies iD the dummy.
Did you play dummy's club ace,
draw trumps, take the bear! finetR
and win all IS tricks? Wroog!
You have 12 · lop tricks: three

lsps.des, one bearl, .even diamonds and
To ensure these tricks, you

should play low from the dummy al
trick one. In real Ule, East wu void in
..,. clubs ind West bad the -heart kiniPlaylna the club ace at trick oae coet
the contract East ruffed, and South
an unavoidable heart IQ!Ief.

BORN LOSER
B

-~. ,.~ [ ~ [)'.WoRKING. 'U.'f

Public Sale

a. Auction

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CELEBRITY
CIPHER
crwpl...,..,.
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frOm quot liA •

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HIOIIOO lolgo ,or 100-. 10iU
buy OM . liiOM or Ooonpiolo
hoU11hDIII. .a. ..nlld-· old
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F J R S

IMNOGZSI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm a hlalooy buft: maybe lhal'o pert of lila .
reuon 1 enjoy epic mmo." - (Director) Millin s - -.

....
· ~;;;:~· s~~.4ll!-"t.~s· won
1411o4 loy CU.Y I.

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R.arrange Mln.ra of
0 four
Kramblod -cis

low 10 form four simple WO&lt;·ds \

I

TllRIME

I

SNABI

3

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IIII

I;

"Did anyone see you catch
such a big fish?" the woman
15 I I ~ asked her bragging husband.
'VVhy sure,· he answered, ' oth. . • . . . - - - - - - - - - . erwise that fish would be even

r. I I I I

2

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the chuckle quoled
by filling in the missing words
you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

PtiNI NUMBUfO LETIUS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

SCIAM-UTS ANSWERS
Virile- Maker - Orbit - Gyrate - BRA VERY
My son was afraid to start a new sport but had been
reading many articles about the sport and how it was
. played . Gramps told him that "curiosity would conquer
fear t;,ster than BRAVERY."

11100 . . . . . . - -•.- .
tull/plltoUIM, no ..,.....,.. .
n 1c 1 rr, will 11'11n, ~
polonllol
IIIP'

G-W::·J:.us5• ..,...,

pe11Wn.304.e

I MONDAY

NOVEMBER 22 I

Want to:

PIN down EXTRA•

CA6H~II
I

T1Wne

l'lli

$I ,wll not

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7bm your clutter in~ cash,
W iuhe eat)' ~y.. ;by pholf&amp;,

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..0 ~&amp;~~ed to leave your horne.

Ploce your cltuajfied ~d 'to®yl
15
or le11, 3 oo,.,, ',

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. a ,,zq,pen.,6.00

Call tH41'

.-1.-w-'hk:h.Signs-arilr"omantl· ' anYthing you dO fOr yourseH.

i'-'rista'. :..nl-ly-ral...
vea-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

cally perfect for you. Mail $2 and a long.
self-addressed, stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. r:lo this newspapar, P.O. Box
4-465, New York. N.Y. 10163.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22......n. II) Thi~ i&amp; a
gOod day 10 focus your efforts. energies
and abilities on a secret ambttlon you've
bean nurturing. Go all out, without reveal·
lng- you're trying to accomplish.
AQUARIUS (...... :ZO.Fab. 18) 811 hopelul
In all ol your. ,ndoavora lodsy, eapeclally
lhOSI whare you're tied In wtth a parsons
w!lh wh6tn you've been lucky previously.
This Is ·• day when goocllhlngo •might be

repeallld.

•/ilu f.r paid Ia a if ..;,.,. nueol
'

A I B

FYIOIII .

I' I

Wanted to Buy ·

D-"

JNLZB

GE T H 1

·9

VA I

KRX

WIIXZWIIJJ .•

JRVVYD

flmoul ~ 1*1 end ~.
t:Ne: F -ouM P.

a

'

Attrlgiratlon' : .

. ....

' PieCES LFeb. 20-March 20) The reason
you failed 10 fChlavaallf&gt;eclflc obfecllve up
~.Nov. 23, 11113
Unlil
ri01 l)ecauoe n·s teo tough, ft'a
.More 8f!1J)haais then usual might be placad beca"" ·you heven't triod hard enough.
,i..l:on your OCVOr1zllllonal and leadership eblll· You'll parfolm ~I under JIIHSUAI, so go
i"' tiel In tho year ahead . Over the coming all out today.
·"':tnonlho you could build quite a reputation ARIES (M8rah 21-APflltt) Pe110na with
' tor yOUrMH.
;
• whom you're Involved will believe In you
- -IACiiTTAAIUB (Nov. 23-oec:. 21) You've IOday once n - • evident 1o them you
hHrd that Old edego. "II you wanl soma· tnJiy believe In yourHif and the ldeu you
. thing dono ~ . II'a bslt to dO n yourii!H." •elpOUt!l·. To lhlno own aal be Jrue,
T'roy to ~eop this In ll'!nd ~y, lnaioad of TAUAU* (April 20-May 20) Today 11
- Jooldnll for pa1101111 on whom you can loan. you're lucky •.and there are strong Indica·
;•jKnow ,where to 1o01&lt; fOr rom&amp;"'l'' and VO!J'II tkii)B you could be, your goocl·lortune mlghl
. , find It The Astro-Graph Matchmaker coma lhrouAh others rather than lhrough

nov{!a

GEMINI (May 21·JuM 20) Today evan
when you·r~ dealing with groups. you'll
have the dehghtfullacully lor making each
person feel he/she is the ta rgel ol your
apecial attention.
CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) Two inter·
twined objectives you presenlly have can
be achiaved tO{IIy it they are !&gt;Oth given
top prlorily. It's not too important as 10
which you do first.
LEO (July .23-Aug. 22) Even though you
might not deliberately court compalit1011, 11
looks like n might soak you out today.- Don~
Ieithia Intimidate you , because Challenge
slmulal&amp;'l your courege.
VIAQO (Aug. 23-Bapl. 22) Something
you've been wanting 10 change, but aa yel
haven't, ohould ·be attempted lodey. You
might not dO nparfeclly, bul the , _ will
be an lmpiOIIament.
UBAA (Bept. 23-Qcl. 23) II will be up to
you to tska the lnllatlve IOday In a partner·
ohlp anwogemant. II you wan on your coon·
hlrpart, what you want dono might be pest·
paned for qull8 awhile .
ICOIIPIO (Qol. ~v. 22) 811 alert for
opportunllltl tOI!ay lhal could enhance
your molorlal aacurlty or add to your ,
roaourcaa In some significant manner. If ;
you're sharp enough, you'll apot n.

•
r

."

'

'·'

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_.,.••'",. .

By
The
Bend
.

The Daily SentineJ
-

Monday, Nove~ber 22, 1 ~ :

49ers

Page-:~-

Star Grange holds meeting
Christine Napier and Pa uline
Rife, delegates to the Ohio State
Grange Session, gave their repon
to Star· Grange #778 at a rece nt
meeting. They reported that delegates at the recent State Session in
Hudson voted to keep th e State
Grange offtce and home in Columbus at its present location.
Lecturer Vicki Smith had everyone tell things for which they are

thankful.
Jan Macomber, deaf chairman,
asked for ideas for money mak:ing
projects for the that comminee.
Legislative Cha irma n Eldon
Barrows reported on Petition 2493
B!ld the smoking ban.
County Grange Officers Conference was.annouilced for Dec. 5 at 2
p.m. at the ~ock Sprin!;S Grange

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

thump

·~

455
Pick 4:
4533

Saints

HalL All otllcers and tnterestetl
persons from all granges in t~
county are asked to attend.
,.
Members were reminded I:G
bring itemS for the food bank at tl!~
Christmas meeting in stead qf
exchanging gifts for adults.
•·
Twenty-eight members, guesli
and juniors enjoyed a potluck suP1
per follow ing the meeting.
&lt;~

Buckeye 5:

PageS

6-8-22-23-24

•

Harrisonville

FINAL-Accompanist Jennifer Sheets, seated; Paulette Harrisoa, choreographer, and Bob
Hoeflich, director, work out the rmal music reo-

dition on one or the numbers for the Meigs
County Showcase to be staged at 8:10p.m. Saturday in the Meigs Junior High School at Middleport.

Local dancing, singing to
culminate at talent showcase
With a cast of 80 and over 30
musical numbers, the Meigs County Talent Showcase will play a one
night stand at 8:10p.m. Saturday in
the' Meigs Junior High School at
Middleport.
Staged by the Big Bend Minsud Association, the show is being
sponsored by the Meigs Division of
the American Heart Association
and the Middleport Arts Council
which will share equally in the proceeds. Saturday night'S presentation, under the direction of Bob
Hoeflich, is the ftrSt musical staged
by the association, now 40 years
old, since 1989.
The Big Bend Dancers, under
the instruction of Paulette Harrison,
will open the show with Peggy
Bricldes, veteran association member, doing the vocal work on "Hey,
Look Us Over". Brickles will
make a second appearance later in
the show with her version of
"Embraceable You".
Making up the Big Bend
Dancers are Lauren Anderson,
Sarah Anderson , Abby Blake,
Danielle Crow, Tara Erwin, Kelly
Grueser, Heather Howard, Libby
King, Erin Krawsczyn, Amanda
Musser, Jeanie Newell, " Joy
O' Brien, Billee Pooler, Stacie
Reed, Jodie Sisson, and Crystal
Vaughan. For their second number
in the show the group will dance to
"Ragtime Cowboy Joe".
Veteran perfonner, AI Hanson,
will present his voc:al, "Getting to
Know You" and will appear as a
member of The Melody Men, a
quartet composed of Hartson, Mike
Wilfong, Denver Rice and Des JefferS. The quartet, accompanied by
Maryln Wilcox , durmg the
evening will do " Girl of My
Dreams" and "You Gatta Have
Heart". Another veteran of the
show, Laura Hawthorne Guthrie,
vocalist, will sing "Once in a
While" with a second number to be
"I'm in the Mood for Love".
Jnsnumentalist Bill Ward will
play an medley of Elvis favorites
on his tenor sax and a long time
veteran of the association, Jayne
Hoeflich Mann, will sing
"Cabaret". She will be joined later
in the show by her husband, Toby
Mann, for a duet on "People Will
Say We're in Love" from "Oklahoma".
· Returning to the show cast after
a few years of living in other local-

ities will be another veteran of the
show. Dick Nease, with "Birth of
the Blues". A dance trio, Paulene
Harri son, Kay Hem sley and
Danielle Crow, will be featured on
"Honey Bee", a selection from the
new album or Meigs native, Sheela
DeLayne, which is scheduled for
release in December.
Veteran performers of the association, Bob and Debi Buck, will
be featured on "Get Out Those Old
Records" with newcomer vocalists,
Sarah Anderson and Sam Cowan,
joining for a vocal duet, "Tonight
You Belong To Me". Cowan will
solo on "It Had to be You". Lauren Anderson. Sarah Anderson,
Abby Blake, Danielle Crow ,
Amanda Musser and Joy 0' Brien,
from the larger Big Bend Dancers
group, will step out to "When My
Sugar Walks Down the Street1' .
Jim Soulsby, a long-time participant in the Big Bend shows, will
present his vocal renditions of "I
Left My Heart in San Francisco"
and "He Stopped Loving Her
Today". Kathy Hood, another veteran, will sing "Everybody's Doin'
It" joined by dancers, Sarah Anderson and Abby Blake. ~dd i n~ to
the show's varieiy will be a p1ano
due~ Scott Joplan ' s, "Maple Leaf
Rag" by Jennifer Sheets, show
accompanist, and her son, Jared, a
medical srudent at Ohio State University. "Mobile" will be the number of Director Bob Hoeflich who
will be joined by Cindy Fields,
Paulette Harrison, and Dick Nease.
A newcomer to the nml&lt;s of the
association, Amy Rouse, a student
at Ohio University, will be doing
"Stormy Weather" and the Shady
River Shuffiers will do a production number, "Highway 40 Blues'!.
Making up the group are Joan
Anderson, Lauren Anderson, Jamie
Blaettnar, Jane B,nks, Daniellc
Crow, Cortney Cromlish, Ashley
Hannahs, Whitney Haptonstall ,
Paulette Harrison, Kay Hemsley,
Heather Howard, Kelly Kimmel,
Andrea
Krawsczyn,
Erin
Krawsczyn, Laura McCleary, Meggie McCleary, Stacie Reed, Peg~
Roush, Jodi Sisson, Paula Whitlatch, Linda Young and Julie
Zirkle.
For the fJTSt time in the long histo~ of the Big Bend Association,
an msnumental group represenung
the Meigs High School Band will
be lakin~ part in this year's show.

Band Director Toney Dingess has
organized the new jazz band wh ich
will do two presentations, "An Old
Fashioned Love Song" and "Put
Your Hand in the Hand". Members
of th e band are Chad DOtson ,
Susan Page, Mike Parker, · Kelly
Grueser, Jason Witherell, Dorothy
Leifheit, Tara Grueser, Joey
Ruchti, Phillip Edmonds, Susan
Cotterill, Daniel Russell, Jody Sisson, Adam White, Ryan Baker, and
Marlo White.
"The Committee" will again be
included in the show lineup and
will use a number from a show
some fiv e years ago, "Cigareets
and Whuskey and Wild, Wild
Women". Making up the group are
Carolyn Thomas, Dick Nease,
Kathy Hood, Jim and Susie Soulsby, Jayne and Toby Mann, B.ob and
Debi Buck, and Charlene and Bob
Hoeflich. Hal Kneen, Meigs _County Agricultural Agent, will h\' making his initial appearance in the
musical with his vocal, ''There Are
Such Things". Heidi Caruthers
Tucker, making her second appearance in an association show, will
do the vocal on "Love Letters in
the Sand". Appearing with his
"Appalachian guitar" will be Denver Rice on a medley, "Hello,
Dolly", "Baby Face", "Who" and
"Avalon". The entire cast will take
part in the finale. Special roles in
the finale will be taken by Orval
(Curly) Wiles, Joy O'Brien, Crystal
Vaughan , Amanda Mu sser and
Heather Howard.
Another innovation for this
year's musical will be the appearance of six women, all veterans of
the show in various capacities,
announcing the numbers. They
arc Susie Abbott, Becky Anderson,
Julie Buck, Annie Chapman, Kay
Hemsley and Maureen Hennessy. ,.
Making up the orchesua will be
Jennifer Sheets, show accompanist
and music director, on the keyboard: Tim Glaze, drummer: Jared
Sheets, bass guitar, and Denver
Rice, guitar. Roger Abbott, Pat
Thoma, and Scott and Jerri Walton
are the stage and lighting crew.
The cast will move into final
rehearsals this week with a full cast
run-through scheduled for 8 p.m .
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Village
Hall Auditorium and a dress
rehearsal at 7 p.m. Friday in the
Meigs Junior High Auditorium.

Social security statements used
to determine taxable benefits
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager in
Athens
Social Security beneficiaries
will receive statements in the mail
in January showing the benefits
they received in 1993.
The statement should be used to
determine if any benefits are subject to Federal income tax. To
ensure you receive the statement,
make sure Social Security has your
correct address. This is especially
important for individuals who
receive their benefits by direct
deposit.
Most of those who receive the
statement- Form SSA 1099- will
not have to pay taxes on their
Social Security benefits because
their total income is less than the
taxable ceiling. If you receive
Social Security benefits as your
onlY. source of income, you are
unlikely to owe Federal taxes on
the benefits.
·An Internal Revenue Services
(IRS) worksheet- IRS Notice
703- comes with the benefit state·
ment. The worksheet shows you
bow to determine if your Social
Security benefits ate subject 10 Wt.
If, after completing the worksheet,
you have questlMS about your Wt
liability, you should call the IRS
toll-free number, 1·800-829- I040

and ask for PubliCation 915, which
contain s tax information about
Social Security benefits.
Beneficiaries who file an individual tax return may owe taxes on
some of their benefits if their combined income exceeds $25 ,000.
Married couples who file joint tax
returns may have to pay taxes on
some of their benefits if their CQmbined income exceeds $32,000.

Married couples who live together
but file separate taX returns probably will pay taXes on part or their
benefits,
For income taX purposes, combined income is defined as the sum
of an individual ' s (or couple's)
adju$ted gross income plus onehalf of nontaxable interest plus
one-half of all Social Security ben- ·
efits received for the year.

The Willing Workers Club from
Zion Church held its November
meeting at the home of Hazel Stanley. The main business was plans
to make Thanksgiving trays for
elderly shut-ins and for residents of
County Home . Plans were also
made to clean the church on Dec.
John and Ann Williams made a
uip to Decatur, Ill. and Park Hill,

Mo. where they visited John's two
sisters and other relatives.
Nellie Lowe spent two weeks
visiting her sister Helen of Three
Mile, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Don Cotterill
spent several days in Wyoming
County, W.Va., where they attended the funeral of her brother, Walter Birchfield.
A potluck dinner was held on
Nov . 14 at the Zion Church to
honor Steven and Julie Stanley and
children who will soon be moving
to Zanesville where Steve will be
employed by Ohio Power.
Kenda Armstrong, Cincinnati,
spent a recent weekend at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue. .
Linda and Gerald Donohue
entertained at a party for their
daughter Rebecca on her second
birthday. Attending were grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Burbridge
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Haynes
and children and Rhea Lantz and
children.

TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - The November
meeting of the Gallia-JacksonMei~s Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction and Mental Health Services will be held at 6 p.m. at the
Holiday Irm.
.

RACINE - Racine Area Community Organiiation will meet at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park. New
members are welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
Coin Cllili will· meet at 7 p.m. at
Burkett Barller Shop. Social hour
and ll'ading ~ssion pi'eceed meeting. Refreshments will be served.
New members are weli:ome.
RACINE - Racine 'United
Methodist Women will m~et at
7:30 p.m;· at lhc church. The pro~ will be World Thank OfferIilg Service.

POMEROY- The 'Meigs Ministerial Association ~ts its annu. al Thanksgiving Service at 7:30
p.m. at St Paul Lutheran Church.
The,.theme for this year is, :'From
Whom All lJies_sings 'Flow. •
Preacher will tie Rev. Kenneth
Moller, pastor of RaCine Wesleyan
and Bast l:etar1 Uni!C!d ~thodist
Churches. The commtmily Is invited to attend For more inf011118tion
call Rev. Dawn Spalding at 9922010.

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Christmas
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---Edition
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. I

Friday,

Deeeinller"J4

Seatlnel New~ Starr
the women's auxiliary through
·
food sales. He said that all of the
The proposed smoking ban in money goes back iniO the departvillage owned buildings which ment for building' upkeep, equipsparked a debate with the Middle- ment, and insurance. The jaws of
port Fire -Department bas been · life purchased by the department
l!lOved into committee until further cost $13,000, Byers said. ·Insurance
study of the issue can be made.
runs about $1,600 a year and
Meeting Monday night, Middle- portable radios and pagers about
port Village Council which gave a $500 each. He al~ mentioned that
fust reading to the ordinance at its traininJI sessions are paid for, that
last regular meeting tabled the mat- educauon programs are taken care
ter and referred it to a committee of of, that fireworks ate in part paid
Judy Crooks and .Mick Childs, for with funds raised in the bmgo
council members, and Mayor games at the department
Dewey Horton.
Byer, one of 10 firemen who
It was Crooks who called for a attended in uniform, asked where
"compromise" even before Fire the money for those lhings will
Chief Kenny Byer read a statement come from if a no smoking ordifrom the fii'C department about how nance is passed and the department
the no smoking ordinance would is put out of its Monday night
affect fund raising projects of the games.
depanment
Bob Fisher also talked on behalf
Crooks said that she had talked of lhe firemen suggesting that the
with Village Solicitor Linda Warn- flow of money would be stopped if
er who said that it is pOssible to the ban goes· into effect and that
have different smoking regulations would be disastrous to the depru-tfor the work environment and the ment.
entertainment environment. The
One of the two auxiliary mern.council member also talked about hers also spoke briefly about their
the rights of smokers and non- food service at the games and how
smokers and how everyone needs the money raised is spent to assist
to be considered in making rules the fuemen. .
. ,
and regulations by which everyAt that pmnt Counc1l gave a
body has 10 abide.
unanimous vote to tabling the ordiThe F'lre Department's concern nance until further study can be
is about the effects a no-smoking made.
ordinance will have on its primary Water Source
fund raising program - Monday
the meeting ~'~!fi
night bingo. He said that about 85
of ~he.
percent of those who play smoke
Distnct
cigarettes.
~~c9ording :to·By~~ last !JWJf
aboUI $17,000 was r a1sed by the

Clinton taps _·
Withrow for -·
treasurer
WASHIN!)TON (AP)

Ohio's state beiSurer, ~Ellen
Withrow, is President Clinton's
pick to become the next treasurer
of the United States.
The $115,700-a-year job wollld
put Withrow in charge or currency
for tlie govmunent, overseeing lhe
U..s. Mint and the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing and heading the U.S. Savings Bond Proghun.

W'db wreaths ol baBy aad llllsllidoe. -llocldngs bang 1ly
the lire aad scae. bla•llld wllb saow, thrlslma .
8DCOIDPII881 wllllllll
lood cbe• 81 we cb...b Ole

a•

" I'm pretty excited right now,"
Withrow said in a telephone interview from Columbus, Ohio. "It
will be exciting to be at another
level of govenunent"
Withrow said:she's been reading
about the job in anticijllltion of her
nomination. But she s only seen
money being made once - on a
visit to Washington when she was
S yean old.
''I wanted 10 go back but I never
quite made it," the nominee said.
Withrow described the position
as a public reladQos job, piOllloting
savings .bonds and "whatever takes
place with the'moncy."
·
The. treasurer's. ~ignature also
appears on all _the paper money,
aild Withrow said she's already had

MARY ELLEN wrrHROW
requests for some of the fJTSt bills
with the new treasurer's name on
the left and the new treasury secretary's name on the righL
Withrow said she eX~JCCts the
Senate to take up ber nomwtion in
late January or early Februaty.
In the meantime, she'll keep her
581,445 joh as swe ueasurer.
Clinton did not make an official
announcement. He sent the nomination to Congress Saturday along
with 29 others. The nominations
became public when the Congressional Record was distributed Mon-

. bl-..la!• we've sbarad lids past year. For uslt mn.nt ··.
saylag l~anb" to pa; .., muy lrleadl, Gld aad aew, ·

wbon ~lad sapportwe'D ~aystr~re. 1111111·
busblen db you · II olar greatest plea•el

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas .
in our Christmas Gr~etings Edition
on December 24th.
.

I

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ASK FOR I Dave or Bob
.. 992-2156
'.

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A lluttlm.ct. Inc. "IWip pee

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 23, 1993

~2..!~k~~.P.2.!!~Y creates sparks at council meeting

2.

-Community calendar-MONDAY

VIII. 44, NO. 148
Mullllllldlo Inc.

THE . DAILY , S

A Ln'J'LE BQ9ST- Til belp read. lbe lll1h
spoCI, C"rtla ,J niell ·&amp;ell a Uttle
from hla'
motber, Mary JeweU, wllle decor 1 Christ·
mu treea Ia P-.eroy Mollllaj aftti'IIOOD, The
youaaer Jewell Is a eeeond-arader In Mrs. Cu

•::t;.

· ·..

SMOKING ORDINANCE TABLED - The ordinance to ban
smoking In vUlage bulldinga wu put Oil bold Moaday night in
r~p011se to.a p~ from the Mlddleporj ~e .DepU'tmenL Here
Coundlwomn :Judy ~roolii makes the·Jdolloil to refer tbe matter

·

to coiDbilttee for furtber considentloa before clviltelbe ordinance
a second readia&amp;. Tea flremeu In lllllfona ad two. aaxiliary members itteoded tbe meetin&amp; to qplain their concern about bow a
smoking1ln would a"ect fund raising projects carried out at the
lire department.

~EPA: Creeks recovering faster than expected
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
The creeks that flow from Meigs
Mine 31 should return to normal
much quicker than first expected,
according to preliminary reports
from top Ohio Environmental Protection Agency and other state officials who toured the region Oct 26.
Fish have already returned to the
streams but the recovery of the
streams' ecosystems - from fish
to microscopic plants - will not be
known for at least two years, said
Rob Berger, an Ohio Environmental Protection Agency spokesman.
"! think there was some ecological hardship on the life in the
streams but because it was so shortterm we expect it to be a quick
recovery," Berger said.
Today Southern Ohio Coal Co.
had to submit a comprehensive
stream restoration plan, which will
outline the company's plan for
keeping the area creeks clean ,
Smith said,
Nearly 800 million gallons of
water flooded into one of the county's two active mines July 11 from
an adjoining abandoned mine, said
SOCCO spokeswoman BJ. Smith,
"We are very pleased that the
streams with a little help ate naturally restoring themselves," she

said. "Water chemistry is back to
normal. The aquatic life is renun ing as well."
Mine workers have gradually reopened the mine while they set up
elecuical lines again, Smith said.
About half of the mine "that bad
been open before the disaster has
been reopened, she said.
Mter the incident, Mine 31 laid
off 300 underground workers out
of 460 total workers, while surface
workers continued, Smith said.
Only 100 of these workers still
have not renuned to their jobs, she
added.
Smith said she could not predict
when all the workers would return,
adding workers would continue to
renun as more areas are explored.
About half of the mine has been
explored since July.
Meigs Mine 2, also nearby, has
run at full capacity and all 360
workers have continued, Smilh
said. Laid-off mine workers have
been paid by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, she said.
In 1992, each Meigs mine produced 2.6 million tons of coal,
which then supplies Gavin Power

Plant. Total production of coal
should decline this year, but Smith
could not give specifics.
Smith was unable to say how
much profits will slip with the loss
of the mine, but Gavin has needed
less coal because one of the plant's
two generating units has been shut
down for maintenance.
SOCCO is uncertain what
caused the flood, partly because
water remains in some of the areas
and it can not be accessed Smith
said.
:
"We believe that the water
entered under the seal" at least 300400 feet underground, Smith said.
To avert this problem in th e
future, the coal company will not
hold water underground - it will
be pumped out and Ueated Smith
said.
'
Rescue workers removed the
iron sludge from the creeks Sugar Run, Strongs Run , Parker
Run and Leading Creek - which
have rejuvenated faster than
expected and should be back to
normal in less than two years,
Berger added.

The Ohio EPA will later stock
some fish and will ~ontinue to
mon itor the creek's clean-up to
ensure that after a fe w months
improvement the waters would not
worsen, ~er added.
Area res1dents should refrain
from catching the fish in the surrounding creeks for at least a year,
but not because or any health risks
from eating the fish, Berger said.
"If people want the fish to
recover quickly they should not be
disturbed," he said.
When the iron flooded the
streams from the mines the fish
we r~ not ~isoned , Berger said.
Tbe ITOn killed what the fish cat or
the fish suffocated because their
gills were covered, Berger said.
The iron was removed from the
stream fas t enough so the fi sh
could not build up toxic levels, he
added.
Keith Little, Environmental
Health director for the Meigs
County Health Department confirmed that the county h~d no
reports of contaminated water or
health problems since the accident

Handgun deadlock ·continues
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress gridlocked anew over
handgun control but sent President
Clinton a bill extending Jobless
benefits for 1 million Amencans ·as
lawmakCll neanxl the end of a year
they hope answered the voters'
calls for change.
Laboring into the wee hours .this
morning, the House approved, 238187, a compromise version of the
Brady bill, which would fon:e a
wait of five business days for hand·
gun purchases. But the compromise
ran aground in the Senate, blocked
by an$')' Republicans.
Chnton urged Congress to
resolve their differences on the
measure quickly , telling a news
conference Monday, "I would love
it if the Congress could give the
Brady bill 10 the American people
foi: Thanksgiving."
Amid chants, charts and a
clown's hat sported by Rep. Bob
Livingston, R-La., to mock one
Democratic measure, the House
nve fmall)lpiOVal to a bill providlii'g the final $18 billion installrnent
on the gigantic savings IUld loan
bailout
. Earlier it nanowly dealt conservatives a setback, voting 219-213
to till a $90 billion package of
spending cuts that relied heavily on

Medicare reductions.
"Yo• Can join the team that represents change," Rep. John Kasicb,
R-Ohio, wh9 helped write the cuts,
vainly beseeched his colleagues
before the fmal tally.
Instead of approving the conservative-backed spending cuts, representatives approved a measure containing $37 billion in reductions
written by Democratic leaders and
the White House.
As the end of a busy year
approached, most lawmakers were
ready to turn to other accomplishments to stake their claims as

agents of change.
For Democrats, it was the pattyline passage in Au~ of Clinton's
defiCit-reduction bill. For Republicans, it was the overwhelming support they gave just last week for thci'
North American Free Trade Agree.;
men~ which would pry open mar~
kets by gradually dropping tariffs
among the United States, Mexico
and Canada.
Unwilling the let go of Brady,
Senate Democrats were scheduledto return to the measure today. Sen~
ate Majority Leader Georg~
Continued on Pa2e 3
·

Stickland votes no on budget cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressman Ted Suickland (D-6th
Disuict) joined 218 other members
of the U.S. House of representatives in rejecting I $90 billion
spendin~ cut proposal offered by
Reps. Tim Penny and John Kasich
turned up the pressure as the measure neared a vote.
Tbe measure was defeated Monday night219·213.
To help stop the measure:, President Ointon and Democratic leaders offered a smaller )JICkage of
their own worth $37 billion, which

was approved 272-163. Most of its
savings came from eliminating
252,000 government jobs.
"A vote for Penny-Kasich will
not only eliminate funding for your
project this year, but could~­
dize any future funding," said a
p8111graph in lhe letter received by
many House members.
Penny, 1&gt;-Minn., llld Kasicb ROhio, were the major architecli of
the alternate plan. Among the
recipicDIS of the ~ letter WM
a freshmen from a distnct adjacent
to Kasich' s.
:

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