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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
543
Pick 4:
2076
BuckeyeS:
12-21-29-30-34

Low lollfPt In 4Gs, eloud,.
TbundaJ, dOudy, bJ&amp;)I Ill mid

50..

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~~

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·.

TO BEITER SERVE OUR CUSTOMERS~ THIS SALE
HAS BEEN EXPANDED FOR TWO BIG DAYS.
Saturday, November 27th and Sunday, Npve.mber 28th
Saturday 9:30A.M. TO 7:-otrP.M. Sunday 11 :00 TO 6:00 P.M.

OVER $1,000,000.00 IN GOLD &amp; DIAMONDS
MANUfACTURER'S COMPLETE LINE

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ONE

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DAY

DAY

Chains, Charms, Bracelets
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~

_

0 . OFF
0

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Earrings, Necklaces, Bracelets and More!

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR OUR .FREE GIVE

AWAYS. DRAWINGS WILL BE HELD EVERY
HOUR DURING THE BIG 2 DAY EXTRAVAGANZA!
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~dW
Joe and Susan Clark
•

COUIT n.
POMDOY
992·205.

Vol. 44, NO. ue
Multlmecl8lnc.

2 IICIIOftll1 20 p..,_ 35 0111111
A llulllnu dlalnc. New p•P•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 24, 1993

Coal

Eastern board OKs
bus garage projects

strike
nearslend
HUNTINGTON W.Va (AP)The United Mine Workers has settled lhe fmal issue holding up the
end 10 a six-month slrikc and has
told miners ui abandon their picket
lines later today, union offtcials
sad.
"The pickets are being pulled
off,lhe (company)~ are being
pulled off, and !here's amnesty for
everybody," said Mike Burdlss,
director of lhe UMW's political
ann in West Virginia.
-Jim Grossfeld, spokesman for
lhe UMW' s international headquarters in Washington, D.C., said the
final 'issue, amnesty for those
accused of picket line violence, bad
been reached "but il would be premature 10 comment beyond that at
this int ''
·~e·re slill meeting," he said.
Thomas Hoffman, spokesman for
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association. He cited a news blackout imposed by federal mediator
Bill Usery.
Pickel lines are 10 be withdrawn
a1 4 p.m. EST, said Larry Ward,
president of the union dislricl cov-·
ering parts of West Virginia and
Ohio.
The UMW has been on slrike
since May 10, when il began a
walkout against selected members
d'. ~ ~qal opera1m 81'0111! in what
It said was ll dispute•over Job

BRADY BILL - Sea. Howard Metzeabaum, D-Obio, and Rep. Charles Schumer,
D-N.Y ~ talk to reporters oa Capitol Hill Ia
Washington Tuesday on the ' Brady Bill,
wbldl bas stalled Ia the Senate. Metzenbaum

Patrol urges
safe driving
Lt. R. J. Woodford of lhe GalliaMeigs Post of the Highway Patrol
reminds area motorists 10 be especially careful during the Thanksgiving holidays.
"There are some things you can do
10 protect yourself while driving, "
Woodford said. "Drive defensively-and be alert to
some ofthe signs of drunk driving. Be
especially watchful for cars that are
weaving, constantly changing speeds
or narrowly escaping crashes with
vehicles and roadside objects.
"Drive at safe speeds and conslantly
check the roadside for an escape path
in case a drunk driver threalens 10
involve you in a collision.
"Defensive driving can help protect you in the event a crash should
occur, wearing your safety belt can
funher protect you and your family
from injury-or death. •
"All the troopers at the Gallipolis
Post will be working during the holi·
day 10 assist motorist and remove
unsafe drivers from the road.
"If you see an unsafe driver or need
assistance call the Gallipolis Post at
614-446-2433. We also monitor CB
channel 9 24-bours a day. Also you
can use a state wide phone number 1800-GRAB-OUI."

business
·
~4ill.i;.~~as~h~igh~C.school
end ot !he.
da~aof

w ASHING'I:o~: if.Pl With D~moctalloo-adii-conuol
advlJcaleillllri\ing up the politi-

cal be8! on cotiservative Republicans, negoliations .are stalled
over legislation establishing a
five-day waiting period for
handgun purchases.
In an unusual move, Senate
Majority Leader George
Mitchell summoned ilena10rsmany of whom have already left
for the holidays - ·IO return
Tuesday for a last-ditch attempt
to pass the Brady gun-control
bill:
Senate negotiators may 1ry
again IOday to reach agreement,

llius avoiding

the need for next
week's session. Bul lhC'otalks
· ~ew 'so acrimonious TUesday
night that it was wx:lear whether
they would resume. Each side
accused the other of intransigence.
"We've gone the 1as1 mile,"
said Nancy Coffey, spoteswoman for Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, the Senate's
chief sponsor of the bill. "If
they want to change their mind
overnight, we're still open to
it"
The bill, which takes its
name from fanner White HOUSII
press secretary James Brady,

WO''!f!"'i.in ihC 1981 .assassina-

lion att'etnpl on Ptl:sldent Reagan, would impose a five-day
waiting period and background
checks on handgun buyers.
Republicans, tired of raking
the blame for killing the bill
after blocking it three limes in
the past week, said they plan 10
keep negotiating.
"We're still aying to work it
oul," said Senate Minority
Leader Bob Dole's spolcesman,
Clarkson Hine. "We were within an eyelash·of an agreement"
Both sides agree that the
Democrats walked oul of the
Continued on Page 3

L------------;______________________,

Federal EPA to
cap Ironton landfill
ffiONTON, Ohio (AP) - The
U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency said il would cap a smoldering landfill within 10 days bul
would ask owners and users 10 pay
for it
An EPA emergency response
team found contaminants in air
samples _that were dangerous
enough 10 wammt spending an estimated 5250,000 to cap lhe burning
section.
ResideDIS will nol be evacuated,
said Lawrence Leveque, community relations coordinator for the u:.~ .
EPA.
The GB Aulllpans and Landfill
bas been burning for two months in
this Ohio River city about 100
miles south of Columbus.

Contractors will tear down
buildings on the seven-acre dump
and push hardened clay from lhe
center 10 cover the smoldering rim.
The Ohio Department of Transportation will_close. Ohio 141 near
lronllln al vanous tunes 10 accommodate the conlnlCtors.
The cap will be paid for from
the Superfund, a federal program
for protecting lhe public and the
environment from uncontrolled
releases of hazardous substances.
the EPA will auempl lo recover
some of the cost from any fonner
owners or operators of the site.
Once the landfill is capped, the
Ohio EPA will be responsible for
any other environmenlal controls.

Agency cites
Ravenswood
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The U.S. Labor Department
cited Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. for alleged violations of safe·
ty and health standards.
The agency's Occupational
Safety and Health Administration
on Tuesday proposed $62,000 in
fines for the Ravenswood-based
company.
The company received six
repeat citations with a proposed
penally of $53,500 and four serious
citations with a penalty or $8,500,
said Stanley H. Ellioll, direciOr of
the agency's Charleston office.
An inspection was conducted
from June 29 through Aug. 3 as a
follow -up to one conducted in·
Continued on Page 3

cum:nt ". ;nooJO year.
In
personnel matters, the
board:
- Employed Jill Holter as
freshman class advisor on a supplemental contract for the 1993-94

school year.
- Employed Gary Holter on
lhe maintenance substitute list for
lhe 1993-94 school year 10 be used
on an as-needed basis only and
employed him for extra hours 10
asSJSI the maintenance department
of the district
- Approved Annie King for
home instruction and Mary Leach
as her tutor for approximately tbree
months with lhe starting date effec.
live Nov. 16.
- Accepted the resignation of
Cindy Oladwell as TuAleJS Plains
building consultant for tlic effective
schools grant due 10 her lransfer 10
Riverview Elementary.
In other businesa, lhe board:
- Approved the minutes f11he
Oct 6 special meeting llld lhe Oct.
18 regular meeting.
- Heard reports from board
members thai auended the Ohio
School Board Association Conference in Columbus.
- Heard a rqlOI't frpm Superintendent Ronald D. Minard that
Landis and Gyr were BJIIXOximalely 95 percent completed on their ·
work in lhe dislricL
- Dia:ussed higb IIChoo1 discipline and COtporal punishment
- Approved lhe treasurer to
transfer funds from lhe general
fund to food service fund for
$20,000 and 10 uniform supply
fund in lhe BDIOUDI of $10,000 for
cash flow JlUIPOSCS at Ibis time.
- Set Wednesday, .Pee. 15, al
6:30 p.m. u the ~- w ·IUM' or
the next regular meeting of the
board of education 10 be held at
Riverview Elementary.
Atlendi.ng were Minard; Ray
Karr, pres•dent; Jim Smith vice
presiden~ and board mem~ Ron
Eastman, Bill Hannum and Mike
Martin.

County commission
approves truck bids
During its weekly meeting
Tuesday afternoon, the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners
met wilh County Engineer Robert
Eason and Dave Spencer. highway
garage office manager, who
requested permission 10 advertise
bids 10 purchase a new 3/4-ton,
four-wheel-drive pickup lnlck to
aid in snow removal.
The commission agreed to
advertise the bids Friday.
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency informed lhe commission it is in the process of
developing the 1994 Community
Services Block Grant for submission to the Ohio Department of

Development's Office of Community Services.
The public is invited to review
and orfer comments on the grant
between Nov. 22 and Dec. 3 a1 the
GMCAA offices in Cheshire.
In other mailers, the commission:
• approved transfers in the
amount of $25,352.81 .
• discussed changing its regular
meeung ume.
• paid weekly bills in the
amount of $131,692.7 L
Present were Commission President Robert Hartenbach, Vice President Janet Howard Tackettt Commissioner Fred Hoffman ana Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

---Local briefs-Two die in trailer fire
ATHENS (AP)- Two people have died in a trailer fire in
southeast Ohio.
Ruth Nelson Boggs, 41, and-John Browning, 32, were killed
when ru-e swept through the home lhey shared near Stewart in
Athens&lt;:ounty, about 75 miles southeast of Columbus.
Athens County Sheriff's Lieutenant Pat Kelly said the fire was
reported around II :30 p.m. Monday as a brush fire.
Rome Township Fire Chief Larry Me Vey said he suspec~ the
rue was sel.
Kelly said the sheriff, the state fue marshal and the state Bureau
of Criminal Identification and Investigation were investigating.

No paper Thursday
The Daily Sentinel will 001 publish Thursday so that its employees may enJOY the Thanksgiving holiday. Publication will resume
on Friday.

I

KSU student
shot in dorm
KENT, Ohio (AP)- Kent State
University police were searching
for two men seen running from a
donniiOI')' where a student was shot
and seriously WOWided.
David, Kremling, 24. of Copley
Township in suburban Akron, was
a,dmitted to Robinson Memorial
' Hospilal in serious condition.

said "dlscualoas are going on" with Brady
opponea_!l and Schumer Urged people to "call
their senators, keep calliag, and tell them to
stop tlie games, piL'IS the Brady Bill." (AP)

n control bill s

~~~~ae~t~-

1•
rity
future
unlonand
members.
'
sents some of ·the '
.coel'OOin~.
The' union· ~aid il had, ~bopJ ,
17;500.members on slrilce in aeven '
states in Appalachia and the Midwest
Usery said last week a settlemenl was expected "any hour."
Also last w~k. Labor Secretary
Robert Reich lllld several coal state
congressmen, including Sen. Jay
Rockefeller, D-W.Va.,that the two
sides bad reached an agreement
Amon' those affected by the
amnesty 1ssue were 22 members
ftred from Eastern Associated Coal
COI'Jl •• a subsidiary of Peabody
Holding Co., for alleged picket line
violence. Other companies indica!ed they were considering similar
moves.

The Eastern Local Board of
Education accepted proposals from
two different companies 10 make
improvemen!S 10 the dislricl's bus
garage in Tuppers Plains.
Shuler Cons1n1ction Company
of Middleport was approved to
install new fuel links and pumps
and 10 do lhe necessary wiring and
plumbing a1 the bus garage for
53,427. Also, lhe Hockin~ Fence
Company was approved 10 mSiall a
fence around lhe fuel l8llks 11 lhe
garage and 10 install a new fence
on lhe north side of the Chester
Elementary School building.
In addition, lhe board approved
Sunday, May 29, 1994, as graduation for the Eastern High School
Class of 1994. Graduation will be
held at 6:30p.m. in lhe high school
gymnasium.
The board approved lhe employment of Cynthia Smith as high ·
school Chapter I teacher for the
remainder of the school year
replacing Sandy Needs who has
assumed the vacant Chapter I
teacher position a1 T!~f!PCrs Plains
Elementary School. This position is
to be paid for by Chapr.er I and will
have lo be non-renewed in the
spring.
Doris Wells was employed as
the building consullanl for the
Effective Schools grant for the
Tuppers Plains Elementary School
for the 1993-94 school year.
Also. Sheryl Roush was

caaaed aoocl•
other
were coatrlbated
Middleport
Sunday al1bt at tile
Chrllt. u,rejbe Rev. James

McBucks program underway
The second annual McBucks for Education program sponsored
by McDonald's in Pomeroy and Ripley, Spencer and Ravenswood,
W. Va .• will get underway Wednesday.
Last year's program pul $10,650 iniO 73 area school groups.
In announcing lhe program, Sandra J. Mills, coordinator,
explained that the McBucks for Education is a fund raiser designed
10 share the McDonald's commitment to education with local
school groups and organizations.
The business will donate five cents of each dollar spenl in the
restllll'lllt ($3 minimwn purchase) Ill any Sllldent group or organization within school systems in the ateaS where the n:staurants are
located. Customen will be n:quired 10 ask for McBucks when they
place lheir onlet.
The promotion will nm through March 31 with redemption in
early April and check p!esetllation the week of Apri\26.

Recount reveals no changes
The recount of votes for alUIICil seats in Rutland and Racine and
Coatlaued on Pqe 3

,I

J

�,

Wedntlday, November 24, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

.'

111 Court Sheet
I'Vmeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN1'EREST8 OP THE IIBIGS-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETlllRS OF OPINION ue welcome. They should be less tban 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name
addmos and telephone number. No unsi&amp;ned letters will be published. Le~
sbould be in gOod taste, addressing issues, not personaiities.

Chemical weapons
nightmare didn't occur
in Gulf . Or did it?
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP.Speclal Correspondent
WASHINGTON - The nightmare of die Persian Gulf War was die
threat .that Iraqi missiles might spew cbemicals on troopS or cities. The
worst didn't happen. But something apparently did
So nearly three years later, die U.S. J.OVemment is investigating, trying
to determine the cause of mysterious ailments afflicting some Americans
who served in the Guir war zone in 1990 and 1991.
In previous cases such as this, the government usuaUy has been slow,
sometimes grudging, to aclmowledge that chemical exposure afflicted
men long afta' they served.
It was 20 years in the case of Vietnam, 50 years for World War II veterans exposed 10 muslard gas in secret U.S. tests.
By comparison, this adminlsuation is moving fast. wary of die kind of
drawn-out controversy that ~~!sled until die government agreed to compensate veterans afflicted by expoaure to Agent Orange in Vietnam. Ironically, the bi1110 do dlst was signed early in 1991 , widl American forces
deployed for die war against Saddam Hussein.
While acknowledging t1uee instances in wbich at least traces o( chemical weapons were detected in northern Saudi Arabia, die Pentagon said
lhat could not be the cause of what now is called Guir War syndrome. The
sylllptoms include fatigue, weight loss, insomnia, and pain in mlliCles and
joints.
.:..
Even the source of the weapons gases remains a mystery; there's nolhing to prove dley came from Iraq and die Pentagon is checking wilh U.S.
allies in the Gulf War to see if dley know. Tbe official Pentagon history or
die war had said flatly that "Iraq did noc usc chemical or biological

campaign fmancc rd"orm. By night,
he's one of die shrewdcsl panhandlers ~und.
Mitchell issued a plea to cam-

By Jack Anderson
and
Mic lulel Binstein
paign contributors laSt spring: He
needed $2 million before Election
Day 1994 to retain his seat from
Republican mobs that seemed
poised to overrun him. "As majority leader, I am targeted ror defeat
- and this could mean millions of
dollars for my opponent," read one
fund-raising appeal.
Who's the.ftepublican hit-man
waiting to ambush the majority
leader? His name is Rick Bennett,
30, a struggling modular-home
salesman whO told us be bad a negative net worth. When Mitchell
sent out his pitch last spring, Bennett hadn't yet raised a dime for his
upcoming campaign. Mitchell was
simply exploiting the edges of
incumbency and drumming up a

phantom lhreatto fill his campalgo
coffers - a practice he has been
pledging to clean up.
- Sen. Robert Smith, R-N.H.
He talks tough on crime - vowing, ll!llong odler things, to. reml!ve
the color TVs and law hbranes
prisoners now en)oy. But Smith,
one of the biggest recipients of
campaign contributions from the
National Rifle Association, took
time to give the gun lobby its
money's worth lhis year. He singlehandedly scuttled the District of
Columbia's assault weapon liability law, which sought to hold gonmakers liable for ihe damage their
products inflict.
Smilh got a taste of the fear lhat
thousands (ed wben he found himself helplessly sitting in his car as
an assault·rifle wielding assassin
O)J!lned fire oh a line of ttaffic out·
side die Ce!W'a~lntelligence Agency last spnng, leaving two dead
and three injured. Smith who
called it a "~ horrifying' experience to witness, •• once called
these weapons mere "mechanical
devices."
- Reps. John Kasicb, R-Ohio
and Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. Eve~
thouRh Kasich and Gingrich are

TfE CAPTAIN GIVES US

IOTo I ODDS OF JW
ON·TIME ARRIVAL

.

v~~~~=~i:C:!tb~~~la~~::!aW::~~e!
what ocher factors, perhaps industrial cb.emicals like chlorine ~ ammo-

,

\

Thought for Today: "Nobody has ever measured, even poets, h_ow
much a heart can hold." - Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, Amencan wnter
.
(!900-1948).

Berry's ,World

Ohio Board of Regents to the Ohio
Student Loan Commission.
On· December 22, 1992, the
governor signed Senate Bill 359
which transferred die state grants
and scholarship programs and
changed the name of OSLC to
Ohio Student Aid Commission to
pose of providing guaranteed loans reflect its broader mission.
to Ohio students pursuing higher ·
OSAC, with the assistance of
education through college or voca- lending institutions and schools in
Ohio, provides several loans,
tional training.
Wilh lhe passage of the Higher grants, and scholarships to students
Education Act of 1965, all states and parents across Ohio. The folwere required to establish a guaran- lowing list is a small example or
teed loan program. Ohio introduced die this assistance offered:
and p)lssed legislation in June of
Federal Stafford Student Loan;
. 1967 to bring Ohio law in accor- Federal PLUS loan; Ohio Teacher
dance with the Federal Act and Education Loan (with the Ohio
OHEAC's name was changed to Department of Education); Nurse
the Ohio Student Loan Commis- Education Assistance Loan (with
sion (OSLC). Further studies were the Ohio Department of Nursing);
concluded in 1992 which suggested Ohio Instructional Grant (01G);
that the administration of state Ohio Academic Scholarship Progrant and scholarship programs gram and Ohio Student Choice
should be transrerred from the Grant Program.
The OSAC began operation in
July 1962 under the name of the
Oh10 Higher Education Assistance
Commission (OHEAC) for die pur·

Sen.]an M. Long

Think of politicians as compulsive shoppers ll!ld you 'II begin to
understaRd why a balanced budget
amendment to the Constitution has
become essential to the nation's
survival.
These people cannot help diemselves. Tbey are squandermaniacs,
obsessed with spending. Resuaint
is an incomprehensible concept.
Whelher dley have die resources is
irrelevant. We're out or money7
You take plastic, don't you?
Think on it: Tbe federal budget
lw not been balanced for a quarter
of a century. Only eight times since
1930 1w the botWm line been written in black inlt. As of Nov. 17,
1993, we have rung up a national
deb! of$4,462,811,124,306.37. It is
costing us in excess of $300 biUion
a year just to pay the interest on
that debt Even with the so-called
"deficit-reduction" plan the

Clinton promised he would soon
dispatch to Capitol Hill a list of
suggestions for additional reductions. It arrived in late October.

Joseph Spear The humongous savings: $11 billion, the bulk of it to come from
Vice President AI Gore's schemes
to "reinvent government." Then
the Congressional Bud~et Office
estimated that reinvenuon would
not produce the billions Gore had
roreseen, but only $305 million
over five years, and die "savings"
disappeared altogether.
Meanwhile, Rep. Tim Penny, 0 '
Minn., and John Kasich, R-Ohio,
worked up a plan to cut roughly
$100 billion from the deficit over
die next five years. and die Clinton
White House went bonkers. They

-

se,. she 'told a Georgetown Uriiversity audience last September, but in
"shifting the priorities of what
government apendS its money on.''
Spend, spend, apend "If all we
ilo is assign e\oery dollar of savings
... to deficit reduction," said House
Speaker Tom Foley, D-Wash.; last
month, "we are noc going to develop a policy of recycling federal
programs in more ... effective
mvestments.''
Spen4, spend, spend. Sen .
Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., is cbainnan
of die Senate Appropriations Committee. In 1990, he vowed he
would dispatch $1 billion of ~k
to his home state by 1995. ' I'm
trying to get die money as fast as

(USPS %13-"')
Publiahed c'vc:ry altcraoon, Monday throuJh
Fridoy, 111 COIIII St., Po111m&gt;y, Oblo by the
Oblo Volley PUbtiJhltla eo..,..yiMul!lmedla
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4l769, I'll. 992·21l6.
Secood
paid o1 Po.,...y, Oblo.

elMo-

bers are kicking ofl' dleir Red Ribbon campaign at the Pomeroy
Chrisnnas Jl811ldC Sunday at 2 p.m. MADD will have a vehicle Jn
parade and Teen Institute members wiU give out the ribbons.
The theme for this year's Red Ribbon Campaign is "de one on".
Ribbons may also be picked up from lhe Pomeroy Police Depanment or from area MADD members .

No liquor sales Thursday

All state liquor stores will be closed Thursday in observance or
Thanksgiving, according to Michael A. Akrouche, director or the
Ohio Deparunenl of Liquor Control.
.
In addition , private liquor agenc ies will not Drfer spirituous
liquor sales.
"Unlike odler holidays when agencies may remain open for spirituous liquor sales during nonnal business hours, agencies do not
have lhat option on Thanksgiving or Chrisnnas," Akrouche said.

Recycle Day slated
A Recycle Day, sponsored by Meigs County Litter Conuol, wiU
be held Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon on Main Street in Pomeroy
behind the old Pomeroy Junior High School building.
Recyclables should be sorted aild will include glass (three col·
ors); cans (aU kinds); newspapers; corrugated cardboard; carrier
stock (beverage wrappers, cereal, cracker, detergent boxes, etc.);
No. 1 plastiC'iita' bottles; No. 2 plastic (milk and water jugs) and
No. 2 mixed (bleach, detergent and fabric softner bollles, etc.);
office paper; computer paper; aluminum. roil and major appliances.
Magazine and glass containing lead williiOl be accepted.
Scouts and 4-H members are urged to assist during the Recycle
Day program. .

Newtpapcr Alloclatioa, NaiJoul Ad\'MJ~ina
Represeatalin, Btaaham Nenp!lper S1le1,

Am Ele Power ................. ..36 1/4
Ashland
Oil........................33 5/8
133 Third Avt.Due, New York, New Yott
10017.
AT&amp;T ...... ..........................55 7/8
Bank One .................................37
POSTMAsTER: SeDd t&amp;hll cbaDJel 10 The
Dally Selllinel,lll Court SL, Poma'Oy, Ohio
Bob Evans .......................... l9 1/8
4!1169.
Channing Shop.................. l2 5/8
SU8SCIUP'I10M RATBS
Cbampionlnd..,................. l5 3/8.
.,
c.m
...
Mo&amp;or
·
·
City Holding ......................31 7/8
ODe Weet.............................. ................... .$1 .60
Ooe Mootb. ...............................................569l
Federal MoJW1 ............ ... :...2415/8
0oe Yew........ -.......... -.............-..... _csU.:IO
6oodyear'I"&amp;R ... :....... .~: .. ..4f 112
SINGLE COPY
'
Lands End ....... ................... 41 7/8
I'IUCB
Dally.........................................- - l l Ceotl
Limited Inc........................22 SIB
Multimedia Inc........................3i
Sublerl~ 1101 dealrtq to pay tbe emi« IDly,
ranit Ia 111hucc direct to The Dally SeDIJDd _ Point Bancorp ....., .... ;............... 15
oa a du'ee.lix cw 12 mouth billa. Credit will be
Reliance Electric ............... .l6 7/8
atveo&lt;llri«eocllwm.
:Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 16 1/l
No IUbJCtipliOILI by mail permitted in liftU
'Shoney's Inc...................... 21 7/8
where home Cll'rier .moe .11 naUable.
Star Bank ........................... 33 1/4
MoiiS.IIocoiPIIooo
Wendy
lnt'L .. ..................... l5 7/8
J:..ldoMolpC...IJ
13 w........., ............... _........................ .$21.14
Worthington Ind................17 1/l
26
.$43.16 '
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
52 w-....................................... -........$84.76
a.m.
quotes provided' by Ad vest
o.uw. Mtlp
13 w-.... -...........................................$23.40
otGaWpolls.

h

28 Woalta........................................ .$45.50
52 Woalta .........................................SSS.40

l!
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rars.

.l~!

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7

BUCAIIt IIIA'I'DDB rat/IAI' I lUll.
aucu• RJGift 'rVIIIM.r.
t;In

CD!JriCA'IU .lYUI.ULaJ

JURASSIC PARK
SHOWTliES

FRI., SAT., SUN.
7:30,1:45

MON. 1ltAU lHURS.
ONE EVENHQ SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION 1:2.00
446-GI23

Get your free gift for Christmas '93
and extra cash for Christmas '94.
Open a Christmas Club now and receive a FREE Glass Candy Dish. The Christmas
Club is so convenient! Your Christmas check arrives when you want it most-just
in time for Christmas shopping. Christmas Club is so easy to join-and so easy to
keep up because youchoose the amount of your regular deposits.
Join the Christmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest on the daily balance
in your account. Come in today-it's never too early to save for Christmas!

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~ MIDDLEPORT .DEPT. STORE
.......
_____ _
Located
on
the,T
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992-3148
.
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446·4524

COLONY THEA fRE

off AU. ·merchandise
•

· · -free layaway

'I

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.Support Your Local Merchants!

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. SPRING VALLEY CI~EMA

TONIGHT 1HRU DUIS., DEC. 2

SAVE

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Ravenswood...

SALE

4•1 pm

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The following actions to end Meigs County Common Pleas
marriage were recently filed in the
Coun of Judge Fred W. Crow ill.
Filing for dissolution were:
Nov . 16, Dinah M. Stewart, Rut- •
Continued from Page I
land, and Gregory M. Stewart,
Middlepon; Nov. 22, Ronald Lee ··
1991, Elliott said.
The repeal violations concerned Swain and Pearl Jean Swain, bodl ·
improper guard rails on platfonns, of Reedsville; Nov. 22, Giles Lee
overexposure to Ouorides and HyseU, Racine, and Sarah Frances ·
HyseU, Pomeroy.
equipment problems, he said.
Filing for divorce were: Nov.
The serious violations related to
improper use of remote crane con- 19, Rodney Lee Beegle, Racine, •
lro ls , lack of tests on repaired from Deborah Ann Beegle, Pon- •
slings, derective slings and defec· land; Nov . 22, Jon Keith
live electrical equipment, he said.
Karschnilc, Charleston, S.C., from &lt;.
Serious violations involve those Evelyn Louise Karschnik, Whea(
in which !here is substantial proba- Ridge, Co.; Nov. 22, Paul Steven ·
bility death or serious injury could White, Tuppers Plains, from •
result and the employer should Roberta Jean White, ReedsviUe.
have been aware or the hazard
In addition, dissolutions were ··
Calls
to
Rave nswood granted Nov. 22 to S.cott Hauber .:
spokeswoman Elizabelh Long went and Emma Jean Hauber and
unanswered Tuesdsy.
George Holter and Betty Holter.

THANKSGIVING DAY

~ HOURS

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Divorces and dissolutions

Join the
Peoples Bank
Cfiristmas
Club!

l; 3BIG

..

SERVICE AWARD· Bea Wood wbo has driven the mall delivery rural route out of tile Rutland Post Office tor 20 years bas
retired. Tuesda_Y lll'lemoon she was preseuted a service award ror .her dedication 1n getting tile maU out by Margaret Edwards, postmaster. Her route was 63 miles long. She was accident free during
the 20 years. (~bolO by Charlene HoeRich)

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VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions - Ocel
. Sears, Middleport.
Tuesday discharges - Mabel
Rose, Racine.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Nov. 23 discharges - Bobbie
Hill, Luvenia Hayman, Geneie
Plantz, Virginia Howell, Melvin
Sheets, Virginia Burke and Debra
Lung.
Nov. 23 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Bostic, son from Bidwell and
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Turner, daughter
of Albany.

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Hospital news

w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . .c.u.,.. . . . . .

Today in history

J

Ares Molhers Against Drunk Drivers and Teen Institute mem-

Stocks

Menk: The Allocilkd Prell, aod the Ohio

the state can keep up With it," he
said. He accomplished his goal in
1992. Guess what be lhinks or die
balanced'budget am.endment? It is
a "wart full of wind" that would
demean and cbcapen the Conslihl·
lion, he
Here .Js what the proposed
amendment says: "Total outlays
for any fiscal year shall not exceed
total receipts for that fiaca1 year."
In the words of a Washington
Times editorialist, it is the equivalent or cuaing up the na}klnal credit
card , the only way to save the
nation from the squandennaniacs. I
pray it passes.
Joseph Spear 1J a syndicated
writer tor Newspaper Euterprlse
Allsod,atlon.

,,.

Drivers urged to 'tie one on'

keep calling, and tell them to
stop lhe ~es, pass die Brady
bilf. Don t let lhe NRA dictate
to lhe U.S. Congress."
Two of the chief Senate
opponents are on the National
Rille Association board: Republicans Larry C~~~!. Idaho and
Ted Stevens of
Contentious House-Senate
negotiations on die biU on Monday led to a conference repon
that the House passed early
Tuesday, 238-187, bqt that
Stevens and ochers in die Senate
round unacceptable.
They objected to a "sunset"
provision calling for expiration
of the waiting period afta' five
years, preferring the Senate's
four years widl a flfth year at lhe
discretion of the auomey genera!.

The Daily Sentinel

OSAC. also has an extensive
community outreach pro8fll'll by
which efforts are made 10 notify
students, parents, legislators and
other inten:sted parties about federal and state grants, loans, and
schOiarsbips available dlrough die
State of. Ohio. Each year, OSAC
distributes information to over
3,000 Ohioans at an Ohio State
Fair infonnation boodl and offers
regular ttaining seminars to provide
new policy information to lenders
and schools concerning program
changes.
As always, please feel free to
caU or write me if you would like
more information on the Ohio Student Aid Commission or any other
issue before the Ohio General
Assembly, my address is, State
Senator Jan Michael Long, Obio
Senate, Statehouse, Columbus,
Ohio 43266 and my phone number
is (614) 466-8156 or you may contact lhe OSAC ail-800-837-6725.

By The Associated Press
trillion by die end of die century.
further deficit reducuon on a recovToday
is
Wednesday,
Nov. 24, die 328dl dsy of 1993. There are 37
lt seems to~ that~~ ering ~y, but dlat was a lot
days
left
in
lhc
year.
·
pie would realize that dlis incredi· of flapilj)odle~
Today's
Highlight
in
HiSkX)':
ble shopping binge cannot go on
. Wh8i really bothers diem is that
On Nov. 24, Ili59, British paturalist Charles Darwin published "On
forever; lhat we ~. keep piling · the Pennr-Kuich savin's were
·
die
Origin of ~pecies," a paper in wbich he explained his ll)eory or evoluup bilb for future geilerations 10 dedicated 10 deficit reducliOD•.Bili.
tion
through the pn:JCCss of natural selection.
pay; that sooner or later a bad ClintbD dOeiD't WIDt 10 save; He
On jhis date:
'
.
econ,omY is bound 10 decimate our waull tci ''Invest.' • This dolicit
In 1784, zachary Taylor, the qdt president of die United States, was
credit rating and the entire bOilae Of reduction nonsense was stuffed
·
·
cards wili come IUIIlbling down.
down hll t11ro1t by ROill Perot, 8nd • boni in Oninge County, Va.
In
1863,
die
Civil
War
h&amp;Ule
for
Lookout
Mountain began in TenThat many of our.leaden lllill do now lhlt he's tabu a Perfuncta:y
nessee.
Union
forces
inJC"«dtd
in
taking
the
mountain
two days later.
not recogni.te this danger iUUSlrltea . swipe at it, it's time to spend.
In 1864, French ilrtist Henri lie Toulouse-Lautrec was born in Albi.
mr point precisely. We are dealing spend, spend.
'.
In
1871, die National Rifle Association was incolporlted. and ill first
wtdl people bere who an: pathologListen to die chainnan of Clinpresidellt
naliled: Major General Ambrose I!. Burnside. '.
ically addicted to spending.
ton's CoiDICD of Economic AdvisIn
19&lt;14,
during World Wll D, U.S. bombers baaed on Saipan a!J41:ked
Last August, in an effort to ~ ers, Laura D'Andrea Tyson: The
Tokyo
in
the
fllSl raid against the Japanese 'capital by·land-baaed planes.
congressional deficit hawks behind administration is not interested in
In
1947,John
Stein))e4's novel The Pearl~ fllSlPUblished.
his budget plan, President Bill reducing government spending per

Continued from Page 1
trustees in Salisbury Township resulted in no changes, the Meigs
County Board of Elections reponed today.
In the race between Bernard Gilkey and Larry R. Thomas ror
Salisbury Township trustee, Gilkey won by two votes.
For Rutland Village. Council, Duane 0. Weber's election wilh
107 votes over Stephen E. Jenkins' 106 was confmned The olher
new members elected to Rutland Council on Nov. 2 were Danny
Davis, Judy Denney, and Gladys Barker.
•
In Racme where the small voce difrerence required an automatic
recount, dlere were no changes. The winners were Gary K. Willford, whO tied with Alfred H. Lyons, Jr. and was named by a flip or
lhe coin at lhe official count of the Meigs County Board or Elections earlier this month, Larry Wolfe, Robert E. Beegle, and Dale E.
Han.
.

Gun control... _c...:.on_ti_nu_ed_rr_om_Pa..:;..ge_I _ __

Rep. Charles Schumer, ON.Y., chairman of the House
Judiciary crime panel; ·said people shOuld "call their senators,

•

.------Briefs... -·---....,

C1993 Aceu-Weather, lrte.

talks. Coffey · says it was
because the Republicans rejected both dleir offers. Hiiie says it
was l!ecause the Democrats
''suddenly dropped a reasonable
proposal" that had been under
discussion all day and replaced
it with one the (l.epublicans
could not accepL
Democratic gun-control
advocates tried to provoke a
public outcry against lhe Republicans.

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•lcolumbus l49• 1

Politicians are just squ_
andermaniacs

~~nre:sw?.rc~i~ ~~~~$~.rs ;!~!~:;:! ':r/:aa:,1

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IND.

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nia, might b.e involved
.
.
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The veterans Affain Deparunent ts sewng up a pilot program at a
As die cost of bi~r education
medical center in Binningham, Ala., to conduct neurological and other increases in the Umted States, so
tests on area vetenllls who say dley ·have ,ailments because of chemical does die demand 011 die Amencan
exposure in die Gulf War.
·.
workforce 10 ~ue post secondary
Sen. I a.&gt;: Rockefeller, D-W.Va.,chairman of die Vete1311SAff8lCS Com· educabo'l. This dem!~~~d bas p~
mittee said be will seek legislation to provide government care for ailing · a ttemendous financial hardship on
vete~s of the Gulf War. He said they are entitled to die presumption that many low and middle income famitheir illness is connected 10 !heir service, at least "until we uruavel this lies and students throughout the
mystery."
State of Obio and faniilies are lookNearly gulf 1,500 veterans have filed claims with lhe V.A. seeking ing to die ~ and federal governcompensation fer disallilities dley blame on envirorunental exposure dur- ment ror asststance.
ing lhe war. Fewer than 100.had been approved as of October.
Assistance for student education
The government said earlier lhis year that some.gulf veterans were sur- may come in ~any rorms, ~nd
rering from undefined ailments that couldn't be diagnosed, but that !here through m811y differeot-organ•zawas no rmn evidence linlcing them 10 service·in the war.
tions across the coun1ry, yet no
The topic has been debated in congressional hearings ever since, with agency is more active or aware of
demands that the government do more to find the cause,ll'CIIt die ailments Ohio's n~ ~die Ohio Student
and provide infonnation on the prpblem.
A1d Commtsston (OSAC). The
That too has happened before. Administrations were reluctant, OSAC is Ohio's guarantor for stuCon~ insistent, that there be compensation ror veterans with ai!ments dent loans and is die administrator
linked 10· die Agent Orange deroliants sprayed on the jungles or V1etnam ror state grants and schOlarships. In
between 1962 and 1971.
·
the past30 years, OSAC lw assistBut even now dlere are disputes as to which diseases can be traced to ed roughly one million students
lhat chemical entitling victims to disability compensation. Five, including and guaranteed nearly $4 billion in
three types or' cancer. are on die list now.
.
.
student loans since its creation in
Eventually, there will have to be answers like those about ailments 1962.
linked to Persian Gulf duty.
It was a hundred day war, swift and viciOri~s. w.idl relatively rew
losses in battle. But it seems there are other casnalnes still to be counted.
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mears, vice presldeut aud columnist for Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Waslliugtou aud
natinllal politics for more tban 30 yean.

MICH.

0 -h.a·,\0 st••dent al·d· com· mt·ssl·on

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•

The National Weather Service on Thursday. Highs for the hOliday across Ohio overnight. A low pres- reached .®&lt;thw~st Ohio early this
s~y~ it wiU be cloudy for Thanks· wiU be in die 40s in norlhem Ohio sure system to die west of die JtaiC morning. TemperaJutes were m die
and lhe low to mid ~ in die cen- and a frontal boundary to .die north 40s over most IIIQS, but lllOUIId 50
gtVll)g Day and into the weeltend
· The chance or showers will tral and southern regions of the I remained close ,eoough tD eanae die in west central Ohio.
cloudy condi tions . Showers
diminish toni~ht as a cold front state.
A chance of rain rellliUns in die
reaches the Oh1o River. There will
continue to be a cluu!ce of some forecast for the rest of the holiday
patchy drizzle overnight every- weekend. There may be some snow
where in Ohio except die northwest mixed with the rain by Sunday.
comer. Lows should range from the Highs will be in the 50s Friday and
Saturday, but it will get colder Sun30s to around40.
The cold front wiU retteat to the day, with highs only in the 35- to
nonh and become a wann front on 40-degree range. Lows will be
Thursday, causing a chance or rain moatly in the 30s.
Overcast skies were the rule
in the afternoon for western Ohio

Accu·W~ forecast

die-hard opponents of tax inmas·
es, lhey've eiJ!braced ROllS Perot whOse campaign platform last year
called for stiff tax hikes. It's noc so
n111ch Pm&gt;t's (llatf~ that ~ed ~ two right-wmgc;rs. but his
coanaols. Now lhat Perot s popular·
ity is falling, it will be interesting
to see it Gingrich ~ws his membeBhip "! Pa-ot's Uruted We Stand
organizalion. . .
- Senate Minonty ~er Do~
Dole,,R-Kan., wbo lw gtve~ patti·
sanship a bad IJ!lllle. Last ~cr.
Dole was ~g to set sail do~
the Potomac River for _a ~-181S·
er aboard a luxury~ liner. W,e
cal!ed Dole to tell h1m ~at ~ts
crwse was on tbe verge of Yio)aung
two federal laws, and wuhm 24
boors Dole dry-doc~ the ad~tore. The man wh~ bad~ trying
to tof!ledo the Clinton admmistra·
ti~n £~r mbnths had .to abandon
ship bimseU:.
The cru1se was scheduled as
Republicans were trying 10 block
campaign finance rd"orm, and were
courting what Dole called the "forgotten middle class." Tbe middle
class, however, probably couldn't
afford the $5,000 ''special
overnight pachJe" Dole .was asking of his potential conuibutors.
- Sens. Dennis DeConcini, DAriz., and Donald Riegle, D-Mich.
They were the. ring leaders of the
Keating Five, in which senators
inrervened widl thrift regulators on
behatr or then-campaign contributor Charles Keating. Keating was
ultimately sentenced to 12 years in
prison for looting his savings and
loan. The senators were censured
by dleir colleagues for violating
Senate ethics. Nonedleless, they
only got the message dlis summer:
Voters can't be fooled.
Even as both DeConcini and
Riegle announced dleir retirements
from die Senate, neidler man could
teU tbe li'Uth. Riegle, whose popularity never recovered after the
scandal, said he was leaving
because he wanted to spend more
time with his cbildren. DeConcini,
who mastered the money chase,
atuibuted his decision to disgust
with the system.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3 ,

Clouds forecast for Thanksgiving weekend

Tbunday, Nov. 25

An inside-the-beltway tur~ey ~hoo~

weapons.••
A Czech cbemical defense unit detected traces of nerve gas a1 two sites
on Jan. 19, 1991, and mustard gas st anolher spot on Jan. 24 during the air
War against Iraq.
· U.S. offiCials checked and concurred wilh die fmdings, aldlough there
was no odler data to confmn them, lhe Pentagon said. That was done in
October, with Congress prodding afta' hearings wilh ailing veterans.

OHIO Weather

Page , 2-the Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
W~nelday, November 24, 1993

WASHINGTON - For ' 61
years, this column 1w been exposing die turlteys whO rule die roost
in Washington.
Today we are roasting the top
turkeys of the year - politicians
whose fibs and follies are worth
reasting on lhis Thanksgivin~:
- Sen. Trent Loll, ~-Miss. He
shOuld never play poker With Budget Director Leon Panetta. Earlier
lhis year, Lou provoked Panella by
claiming during a congressional
hearing that he had "in my pocket
a list of $216 billion in painless
budget cuts thst just about everybody would agree widl, including
you." Panetta called Lou's bluff:
"Let me have that list I want to
see !hose painless cuts." Lott folded the paper and put it back in his
jacket pocket.
,
We obtained a copy of Lou s
list. Those "painless _cuts" tw:ned
out to be wholesale rmds on enullement programs that serve the poor·
est of the poor. "Maybe I should
have used another word (such as)
relatively painless,"' Lott told us.
- Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, D-Miline. He
leads something of a double life.
By day, he's a dogged champion of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Marietta

Athens

Belpre

373-3155

593-7761

423-7516

Lowell
896-2369

Middleport

Nelsonville

Tbe Plains

992-6661

753-1955

797-4547

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Sports

The Daily Sentinel:
WedneSday, November 24, 1893
· page • ··

Ohio

..

Stat~

cagers open
new seas()
aturday

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:,~: s.'fetey·"' ;,

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DUDLEY SCORES • Oblo State's Rickey
Dudley, ript, scores two polola iD Ohio State's
.

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Scot'"Ciloard
.

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w:ltb fbel·&amp;tl&amp;c• .... iia piNIIlbetot,
f'MCII'U IIUDaP, No,., 20, W\11 poinw

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2:5 poUUtor
tor~liat
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ChiciJOatEdm'WfM 9:15p.m.
£lrc:l:ftliiatV~ IO:JS p.m.

ThurtdaJ'I G-1

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67
1: 57 6S
70 72

lsll 49 67

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BOIIOO
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..... 1013
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75 74
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WISTIRN CONPEII•" .
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16

bled,_

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l,tie

7,3l p.m.
New Jeney at Bulfalo. 7:3S p.m.
N.Y. Rtnaoaa~OU...., 7'3l p.m.
Mortrul M fhi1*1C:ia, 7:3Sp.m.
Hanford It T~Y.7:35 p.m.
Sl Louis at W '
1:05" p.m.
N.Y. WaDdaut
,8 :35p.m.

4

IAS'IIIRN CONFIUNCE
AllaalcW L T rt.GrGA.
ll l ~
~:

• NY- .

Gamt~

Newlc:rwcl)'l,~

.u,...ur

·: New.....,.
... 14
I'!I;I•M!pri• , .. 13

20 62 78
16 61 77
9 61 90

N.Y. J1ana&lt;a S, Monoeol4
llanf..ol, Flcrida 1, ar
San Joac 6, Detroit 4

AlA~

••

20 10 14

AnahoUn l, c.Jauy I
TOlCiltO !ii, Vancouver 2

_,'-

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IS 70

Bulfalo 5, OU.wa 2

6
I
9
1

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:M fi8 62

Monday'• Cam•

l

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IS
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11. Col&lt;ndo
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1-:1-1
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ll. ladWia
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1·!--0 ll9 l5
23. Miihipo
7-4-0 114
24. Clomooa
1-!--0 161 l4
2:5. MidllpoSL
6-!--0 II 0111.. feooirin&amp; •o«e~: Southern Cal
"1 A..d.loaa 23, Ocri=nt! 23, PJw.
;i.' S~a~all, l:.oui..u1o 22, VU.W. 19,
1,8alls-2,Ca!iramlal.

w.._

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. 'lbaT;:._~--m'l'lloAa­

•

96-73 exhibition win ovet Croatia Tuesday night
in St. John Arena. (AP)

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...... 8
BMal
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Odalulo
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L Pet.
2 .100
4.600
4 .600

Wu~W&gt;&amp;t&lt;&gt;n

4 ~s•
6 .400

2 1/l
4

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New Jersey '""" 4
Miami
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Mklw•t IHvlllon
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HOUI\OD
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3
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.........

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP)
Time. The Chicago Bears wish
they had more of it. The Detroit
Lions feel there is too of it
AU lhe while, both teams have
less than lhe normal time to prepare
for their Thanksgiving Day game.
If lhe Lions (7-3) had !heir way,
the season would end today. If it
did, they would win the NFC Central by one game over lhe Gre.;n
Bay Packers.
The Bears (5-5) have won their
last awo pmes, both on l!te road,
But lhey feel they might be nmning
outofume.
Chicago, with a new coach and
an aging nucleus of vetenms, didn't
·figure to be il) the NFL playoff picture when the season started, That
has changed with 1he lale spurt.
"I have loved the last two
weeks," Bears quarterback Jim
Harbaugh said. "We are on a miniroll. We will try 10 parlay that into
a win over Delroit Then we have
Green Bay back at home.
"You know, we could make
things real interesting as far as the
playoff picture. That is what we
have in mind. Our focus now is on
Dettoit, and we have a short work

ULok""
M-..,
.• a ....

3

I

.l73

6

•

inside killed the Buckeyes game ~
after game last ye,ar, With the .addition of Eaker, some of that might
be alleviated. Funderburke abo has
added more weight But the team is
stiU 'dominate!~ by Skelton, ~mlerson and Simpson on the outside.
.
•'Our guard play was one of our
strong points last year. That's
where we had experience. It proba- ·
bly will be a strong ~int again,
judging from what Stmpson and
Anderson did this summer in some
USA Basketball events," Ayers ·
said
But there is plenty of room for
improveme~t. With . t~e loss of
Flint, an entue recru1Ung year IS
gone. And losing to anothel .Ohio
school at St. John Arena didn't
exactly leave a good taste in anyone's mouth.
"Top 10 bot10m the conference
is going 10 be good," Ayers said of
the Big Ten race, "We have 10
improve on the road, where we
were 3-6 in the league. And we
also lost six games at home, so we
have to take care of ourselves better at St John Arena None of that
will be easy 10 do in a conference
as good as ours."
Ayers had been criticized for
. cupcake scheduling in December
the past two years. This year, the
Buckeyes will have all or more
thalllhey can handle when they go
on the road 10 play NCAA champion North CarolinB. possibly meet
Kenwcky in the Maui Classic second round 111d play other toughies
such as West V:irginia and~
"It'll be very challen~ng, but
we .think that schedule will get us
ready for conference play," Ayers

Bowl picture still-fuzzy for O$U
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The postseason bowl picture is still

a fuzzy one for Ohio State,

Depending on the outcome of
No.lO Wisconsin's Dec. 5 game
with No.25 Michigan State in
Tokyo, the Buckeyes could wind
up in the Rose Bowl, the. Citrus
Bowl or the Holidny Bowl. If Wisconsin \\!ios=i
will represent the
Big Ten in
, Calif.
The sec nd~.place team in the
Big Ten qualiftes for the Citrus
Bowr under an agreement between
the bowl and conference. Ohio
Slate played in lhe Cittos Bowl last
year,losing 21-14 ID Georgia.
Conference Commissioner Jim
Delany said two weeks ago thai the
No.12 Buckeyes could not rellKll 10
the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Fla.,
because Big Tei\ athletic directors
had voted "unanimously on three
separate QCCBSions" not 10 send a
repeat team 10 1he game.
Delany said Saturday before
Ohio State lost 28-0 to Michigan·
that informal conversations wilh
the league's athletic directors led
him 10 that conclUSion.
But he added that he did not
believe Ohio State would have to
week.''
Five games remain for each tum down a Citrus Bowl invitation
because university athletic director
team after Thursday,
"This is it. This is the home- Jim Jones had said he did not n:call
stretch," Detroit coach Wayne . any athletic directors' agreement
Fontes said. "We've got 10 put all preventing it
"I was aware of various discusthe liltle hurts. and bumps and
sions," Jones said. "I knew of no
bruises behind us.

voted agreement''
the ·Badgers beat Michigan State.
After an 80-minute conference Wisconsin would go to the Rose
call Tuesday that included Big Ten Bowl becalJSC Ohio State has been
officials and athletic directors, mere recently,
Jones said he learned nothing new.
"There are no solutions," he
The Spartans (6-3, 4-2) can still
said. "Our discussions are ongoing
because of the various o_ptions finish second in th!: league with .
availat)Ie and the uncenatnty of victories over No, 14 Penn State
wlio beats who in the:J;Cmaining , and Wisconsin. The Niuany Lions ,..
(8-2, 5-2) also can ftnish alone in :·
two gam~ ,(in I~ play),"
The B:ilclccyes are 9-1-1 overall second if they defeat Michigan · ·
and 6-1 ~ 1' ill' the. Big Ten, but State .and the Spartans defeat Wis- - ·
would lose a Rose Bowl tiebreaker cons in.
10 Wisconsin (8-1-1, 5-1-1) should

•

IQ~LPB'S

DAIRY lALLEY·

I

HI"

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'J'Jafs ""-••'• lpeefal:

MON .-SUN, 10:00 AM-10:00 PM •

The second BIUlual reserve basketball preview sponsored by the
Alexander Lions club will be held
Saturday at Alexander High
School. Proceeds will be!lefit
Alexander High School Athleucs.
The time schedule and matchups
is: Meigs vs. Logan, 6 p.m.; Nelsonville-York vs. Eastern, 6:45
p.m.; New Lexington vs. Trimble,
7:30 p.m.; Southern vs. Marietta,
8:15p.m.; Athens vs. Federal
Hocking, 9 p.m.; and Alexander vs.
Jackson, 9:45 p.m.
Tickets will be available at the

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The schedule of games 1s:
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Vinton County vs, Alexander at
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SOCCER
LONDON (AP) - England
coach Graham Taylor resigned, six
days after the nation failed tO qwilify for the World CUp lor lh~ ftrst
llliiC since 1978. England was 18·
7-13 under Taylor, who failed to.
win a ~e iD 1he 1992 European
CharJilrionlhil' and lost to the United Stalt8 2-0 tn June.
BASEBALL
,
NEW YORK (AP) - A full
share for ~ the World Series
with the Toronto Blue lays was
WOI1b a lel:«d $I,Z7,920.77, and a
fuU losing share on the Philadel·
phia . Phillies was worth
$91,222.27.118o the most ever.

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16-104.
Halftime score : Findlay 55,
Rio Grlllde 45.

20"TV

Sports briefs

I

Ream, 1-1 -2-7 ~ TOTALS 26-ll·

'

NEW YORK (AP)-: Clc:m S?meumes _be's on ano~ planet
Haskins was bemoaning hiS Min· I ve told him that his b1ggest basnesota team's lack of beigbt when ketball asset is that be causes probhe said be hoped the " little lemsforboth teams."
Mi~ta, which beat Rice and
Gophers" would bave a chance
against Kansas in the Preseason Georgta 10 advance 10 1he semifiNIT semifmals.
nals, has no starter biggt'Z than 6-9,
Roy Williams had been moan- but the !"hole team is back from
ing just a couple of weeks ago last years postseason NIT champlabout his Kansas Jaybawks' height ons.
7-foot-2 Greg Ostertag.
"We have great recent memoWilliams had taken a few shots at ries of New York," Haskins said,
1he senior center's weight, inferring "but they won't help us against a
a lack of intensity as the season team lilre Kansas."
&amp;ppiOacbed.
After Kansas plays Minnesota
On Tuesday, Williams was a lit- tonight, top-ranked North Carolina
tie more upbeat as be talked of the meets No. 18 Massachuseus . The
280-pound Ostertag.
winners meet Friday night.
"He had seven blocks in our
Williams expressed shock when
victory over Western Michigan l!nd the Jarhawks were selected ninth
four against California, and now in the-preseason- poll because
I'm going to chase him around Richard Seott was the only re!UmNew York for a few blocks," said ing starter from last year ' s Final
Williams, who spots Ostenag at Four team,
least a foot in height. "It's just that

and Lane
Recliners
Special

Athens Shrine
slates preview

•

4· Greg [)eneebr, 8-2-18; Ra.ady
Slefker, 2-3-0-13; David Smitb. 52-5-21· Jon Thorbabn, I-3-H2;
Jeremy Pembertoa, 2-3-7; Vi~tor
Washington, 1-0-2; Chuck Dltlids,
3- t -7, TOTALS 33-9·16-lOf.
RIO GRANDE (104) - ~t
Powell, S-3-2-21 ; Jeff Hoe~, 54-14; Brett Coreno, 3-1-4-1 ; Walter Stephens, 2-4-4-20 ; Larry
Can&lt;lill, 3-2l0-12; Eric Burris, 1-02; Shawn Snyder, 6-1-0-lS; Lance

(bristmas

La·Z·BOy

doOr.

I

Page 5 -

NIT action resumes tonight

.Reserve preview
set for Saturday

I

Unifonns • (Crest and Angelica Brands)
Labcoats • Fashion-colored Scrubs
Standard Whites • Styles for Men and Women

00

cent performance ou field goal.a
Overall, Rio shot 48,7 percent
(22-40) and 46.2 pereent rrom the from the field with a three-point
th=-point range,
percentage of 34.3. Findlay shot
· The ~a-t had two players in 53.2 percent on f~eld goals and was
double fiaun:a by the half in for- 42.9 on lre)-s. Both teams shot well
ward TyiOQ t.1ocn (12 ~ints) and from the frt:e throw line.
guard Randy Siefker (13), while
High IICOil:l for the Redmen was
Rio Grande. bad one in forward Powell with 21 , while Stephens
Mau PoweU (1 5). The teams were totaled 20, Moore led Findlay 's
even in rebounding with 20 apiece. scoring with 25 mlllkm and guard
The key to F'mdlay's lead was 10 David Smith neaed 21.
lllnlOVen by the Redmen, eight of
The Redmen enter the Pikeville
theni on steals by the host.
(Ky.) Classic Friday,
Staning the second half down Box SCO!e:
by 10 points, Coach John
FINDLAY (109) - Tyson
Lawhorn s team improved ita Moore, ll-3-25; Rod Rose, 0-1-1shooting percentage, but got into
foul trouble, eventually losing three
ID the whistle in Jeff Hoeppner,
Walter Stephens and Lance Ream.

The Reds extended the contrBCts
of third base coach Ray Knight and
pitching coach Don GuUeu before
the end of last~-

FOR THE

,I

opinion.''

By 11M BREHM
Student COI'Iesr gMe•t
The University; Rio Grande
Redmen traveled ID the University
of Findlay ' s Croy Gymnasium
Tuesday for their fust away pme
oftheseason.
.
The Redmen entered the game
3-0, having defeated Wilberforce•.
Daemen and Milligan. Findlay,
however, proved 10 be more than
the Redmen could handle u the
Oilers handed Rio Grande a l09104loss.
·
Rio lost this gam«; in the fust
half with a 47.4 percent field P,1
showing (18·38) and a three-poilll
percentage of 2S (tbree of 12
attempts). Findlay· bad the hot
hands m the fust half with a 55 per-

season.

BRING HoMl ABuNol£ OF PEPsi

{

Palmeiro told WBAP that he
''wants everybody out tllere to
know that be (Clark) deserves better, That's not the way I am and be
deserves betler,"
Earlier Tu~y, Clark said his
former college roommate had the
right to his opinion. .
"I respect Rafael Palmeiro as
both an athlete and a person,"
Clarlt said during a news conference in center field of the Ran~ '
new stadiwn. "What be says IS his

Reds complete
coaching staff

said

The Dally SenUnel

Rio Grande suffers 109-1\04 loss to Oilers

Before lhe conference, Clark
greeted another Ranger who had
criticized him, Jose C!lllseco, with
a handshake at The Bal1ark in
Arlington. Canseco an Clark
reportedly had personality clashes
in the late 1980s.
Clark •ownplayed the reponed
episodes with Canseco.
"The thing with lose and I a
few years ago was blown out of
proportion quite a bit,'' Clark said
Canseco-was ambivalent about
Clark's arrival,
·
"I'm sad that Palmeilo won't be
w(th the Rangers," Canseco said.
"On the other band, I'm glad we
got a player of such qwility as Will
Clark, ... It's an organizational
move, and if they're happy wilh it,
I guess the players have to be
happy with it, too."
· ·clark, a teammate of Palmeiro's
opclllteS."
at Mississippi State, declined 10 say
whether there was an unwritten
rule that baseball players don't
compete for their friends' jobs.
Said his agent, Jeff Moorad:
"I've always been aware of lhe
fact that once you become a free
CINCINNATI (AP) - The agent, there are no rul~ ''
Cincinnati Reds completed their
coaching staff today by naming
Bob Boone their, bench coach, Joel
Youngblood ftrst base coach, and
Grant Jackson the bullpen coach,
Boone, 46, will be united with
his son, Bret, a second baseman
who was obtained from Seattle in a
trade this month. The elder Boone
was a major-league ~tcher for 1_9
years wilh Philadelplua, Califonua
and Kansas City, and managed
Oakland's Class AAA Tacoma
farm club the last two years.
Youngblood, 41, was an outfielder and infielder in 1he major
leagues for 14 years, including two
with the Reds. He also played for
St. Louis, the New York Mets,
Montreal and· San Francisco. For
the past three Y,e&amp;!S, he's ~n B
minor-league hltung coordinl!tOr
for Baltimore and manager of the
Orioles' Class A Kane County
farmclub . .
· Jackson, Sl, pitched in ~he ­
major leagues for 18 years. gomg
868-75 with a 3.46 ERA and 79
saves for Philadelphia, Baltimore,
·the New York Yankees, Piusburgh, _
Montreal and Kansu City. Jackson, a native of Fostoria, Ohio, was
pitching coach for the Reds' Class
AA Chattanooga farm club last
n

1/l

''I:
II

minutes play • But be, along with
backup All nio Watson, underwent knee ~ in the offswon
and is slowly bemg brought back
because of a lack of conditioning
and practice.
Skelton is the team's designattd
shooter; be 'U air it out from anywhere past midcourt. He ~ped
up 164 3-point shots lllone
season - almost as many as the neJtt
three Buckeres combined. Of
course , he a so averaged 14.2
points a game.
Anderson, the unknown from
Louisville, Ky., and Simpson, 1he
two-time Mr, Baske,tball from
Lima, both had stellar fust years at
OSU. Anderson showed he could
handle the ball and defend in the
Big Ten but was spondiC with his
perimeter shooting. Simpson, belymg his race-horse personality tn
high school, showed a patient hand
in directin~ Obio State's offense
from the pomt-guanl spot
Also back are several quality
members of the supporting cast 67 Rickey Dudley, 1he 6-9 Waison,
6!0 Doug Etzler, 6-7 Killer Macon,
6-11 Nate,Wilbourne, 6-9 Jimmy
Ratliff and 6-5 walkon Otis Winston.
Added 10 the mix after a redshirl
season is Gerald Eaker, who enters ·
his first year of eligibility carrying
heavy expectations.
"He gives us a different look
because he's 6-11 and an athlete,"
said Ayers. "Of course, we've still
go to toughen up and be more
physical. We've got to puSh people
back and that's something we
didn't do last year."
Rebounding and physical play

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Palmeiro apologizes.
for Tuesday's remark
ARLINGTON, TelUIS (AP) Rafael Palmeiro, who had called
Will Clark a "lowlife" with "no
class," bu apoklgized 10 the newly
signed Rangers fint baseman.
"I think Will Clark is a great
person and a sreat ballpl( yer, "
Palmeiro said Tuesday night on
Fort Worth radio station WBAP. " I
was speaking out of frustration and
I want tO apologize 10 Will."
Clark signed a five-year, $30
million contrBCt with the Rangers
• Monday. The contract means
Palmeiro probably will have 10 sign
with another team. Both were free..
agent ftrst basemen and Palmeiro,
who hoped 10 re-sign with Texas,
had blasted Clark.
"That's Will," Palmeiro was
quoted as saying in Tuesday's ediuons of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "That's the way be is. He' s
got no c(Jiss. Friendship didn't matter 10 him. He was looking out for
himself. I don '1 think much of Will
He's a lowlife."
Palmeiro also described the
Rangers organization 'as "low
class" and called club president
Tom Schieffer a "backstabbing
Iw.
"They never gave me the option
of gett10g back with them,"
Palmeiro said, "It was unprofessional. But that's 1he way Schieffer ·

s

i·
:1

Bears, Lions
tQ clash on
Turkey Day

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Trying to erase thoughts of last
year's disappointing season and a
current NCAA investigation, Ohio
State welcomes almost everybody
back as it prepares for Saturday's
1993-94 season-opener against
Missouri-St. Louis.
The Buckeyes went 15-13 last
season but ended the year on a couple of disturbing notes.
First, they fell 10 in-slate MidAmerican Conference opponent
Miami of Ohio 56-53 at home in
the first round of the National invitation Tournament
Two months later, coach Randy
Ayers BIUI&lt;iunced thai prized recruit
Damon Flint, expected 10 step in
immediately this fall and start as a
swingman, would not be allowed 10
enroll at Ohio State. An NCAA
investigation revealed 17 violalions
in the recruitment of Flint, who
later signed on with Cincinnati.
The NCAA still hasn't resolved
the investigation, coming 10 town
earlier this fall 10 ask qu~tions of
four players who had recently
bought or tried to buy new spon
vehicles.
"I don't think it's a distraction
for our kids," Ayers said. "They
understand what we're trying to do
with the program,"
Getting back 10 basketball, the
Buckeyes return seven of their top
eight scorers.
Leading the way are 6-foot-9
senior Lawrence Funderburke, 6-2
senior Jamie Skelton and last
year's freshmen standouts, 6-6
Derek Anderson and 6-1 Greg
Simpson.
Funderburke led the Buckeyes
in rebounds, blocked shots and

.

Wedneaday, November 24, 1893

j

742·22111·100·837·8217

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OHIO

11 .

Wareho•

�'Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

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**DALLAS ............................ 30

/

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BRIDAL SET

FAMILY HOMES INC.

MIAMI ...... - ............... ~ •..27

The O:OI~s and Cowboys bave?'t m~t in four yean. Both teams bave solid defenses and outstanding offenses,
but Miami does best through tbe 811', while Dallas can do almost anything with the ball.
",
••DETROIT ........................ 26
cmCAG0.-.................. 18
AJ ~venly.matched as the Uons and Bears appear to be, Cbicago's defense may keep this one close. In '92, for
lbe tbiid straight year, eacb team won at home, the Bears 27·24 and the Lions 16-3.
(Sunday)
BUFFAL0 ................... -.31
••KANSAS CITY....... 24
In 1'91, the last season these reams me~ lbe Cblefs beat the Bills iD lbe regular season, 33·6, then paid for it iD the
AFC divisional playoffs. losing 37-14. They may just meet rbere again.
MIDDLEPOIT
CLEVELAND-...................24
..ATLANTA ................ l!l
.
1
Th~ baS been a one·sided series, ibe Browns baving won eight of the nine games they've played, most recently 13- ~~---1111!11!'·1 1-'•'•211!••51!16•2•7--~---1
10 m '90. Cleveland's offense isn't much better than the Falcons' weak defense.
'I

v.

89

•,

••SEATI'I..E ................. n
A month ago in Denver, the Seabawks gave John Elway all tbe lime be needed in the pocket to complete 23 of 36
·passes and lead the Broncos to a 28·17 win. Denver basn't swept Seattle since '89..
DEN'VER ......................r•••••••28
••G~

BAY -~ ............. 27
TAMPA BAY....- .- ........ 17 .
Led by wide receiver Sterling Sbarpe's club·record-tyiDg four 1D catches, the Packers scored the first 30 points
.llf!ainst tbe Bucs in lbeir flfSt matcbup five weeks ago and werit on tO win 37·14.
L.A. RAID~RS- .............-29
*°CINCINNATL ......... 14
\file memo~ of last year's 24-21 OT loss. to the Be~gals should motivale rbe Raiders: L.A. scored a late tying ro,
won the com ~s and lben fumbled the kidc.off, serung up a Cincy fteld goal.
NEW ORLEANS ................26
• **MINNFSOTA...........23
One thing this series basn't featured in recent years is close games: The last four scores were 26-0 (Saints) 32-3
45·3 and 44-10 (all Vikings. N.O: loolcs too srrong for the defensive Vlkes,
'
·'
••N.Y. GIANTS ................... 31

PHOENIX. .................... lO
The Cardinals'19·0 win over N.Y.Iastl;lecember was a nigbrmare for the Giants, tbeir fifth loss in a row and tbelr
flfSt regular-season shutout In 12 years. Butlhal Giant team flilished 6-10.
·
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When The T'une Comes

See Us For Your 1994

AND 14K

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Announcements.

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LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS • ONLY 10% DOWN!

Middleport

255 MIII 'St.

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N.Y. JEJ."S .. :.-~.................28
. ••NEW ENGLAND .....12
~e Jets were o~ fire in their fllSt meeting wilb the Pabiots, scoring toucbdowns on their fll'st five possessions. With Boomer Es18S0n completing bis fl1St13 passes - and rolling to' a 45-7 win.
PfiTSBURGH ..- ...........-.lS
**HOUSTON ............. :U
.·,
~~~~~~~ are slrugg11ng io slay in contention In the AFC Ceniilll. the only reams they can beat Consistently
worst In
the Sreelers beat Houston lwice\ 29·;7.4 and 21-20. .
·
SAN FRANCJSC0.-.... -~.33
. ••L.A.JlAMS.~.-~......16
With irs defense forcing three turnovers aDd sacking T.J. Rub~ (wbo?) seven times, the 49ers ran rou'abshod over
: the Rains a ~1/1 ago,~ J7. This pmc sh.ould ~theirs~ over L:A. .to,sevetJ. . ··~
·
...
.
.
WASHINGTON-..,..'"·-21
PIDLADELPHIA ..- ... lO
.
In week tbrcc, Randall Cunnlngbaln !brew a 1D pass to 'Calvin Williams with four second left and the Eagles eked
out a 34-31 win. The 'Skins may be down, but Pbilly hasn't swept them in 13 years.
(Monday)
SAN DIEGO ....................... l3
**INDIANAPOLIS .....19
The only team that beat the ColiS twice last Yel!l' wasn't one of its tougb division-mates, Miami or Buffalo, but !be
~ers.wbo seemed 10 have !ndy:s nl)lliber. 34-14 and 26-0. Still a tougb call.
.
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three: point firi ng gave her 2·1
points for th e game. Norris also
dished out six assists .
Tricia Collins added 10 points,
six rebounds and lour steals to the
Rcdwom en vi cto ry. Michelle
Crouse produ ced I 0 points an·ct
three steals.
For Fairmont, Teresa Haggerty
led the way with 19 points and 12
rebounds. Shclli Cannon added 15
points. Sarah Hivnor, who was also
in double figures wi th 14 points,
led the game with five steals.
The Redwomen are back on the
road Satwday at West Liberty State

$199

i*anday, Sunday and Monday, ln. 29, 28, 21, 1113

'IIACTOIS and

By KELLY ROBINSON
Student Corresrondent
The Universi ty o Rio Grande
Redwome n defe ated Fairmont
State (W.Va.) 101-74 Tuesday .
After a successful championship at
th e Bevo Francis Classic over the
weekend, the Redwomcn improved
their record to 5·0 on Fairmont's
court and continued their winning
streak.
Coach David Smalley's club
seemed to dominate the fi rst half
with a field goal percen1age of 54,
compared to Fairmont's 36.5 per·
cent from the field . Rio also shot
six of seven from th e free throw
line and 8-16 from the three·point
distance.
The Redwomen continued to
take control in the second half,
shooting 65 .5 percent from th e
floor over Fairmont's 35 percem.
Rio Grande led the way in three·
point shooting during the second
half with a 50 percent showing
over Fairmont's 0 percem. Overall,
the Redwomen shot 59 percent
from the field, 68.5 percent from
the line and 50 percem from three·
point land.
Lori Hamil10n' s overall individ·
ual scoring was 22 points. She also
led Rio Grande with seven
rebounds and contributed three
steals. Gena Norris' seven of eight
field goal shootin~ and five of six

DIAMOND BRACELET

THE NEW COLI) ·sTANDARD IN
CHICKEN TASTE

992-5432

711 108.

Redwomen extend
winning streak to 5 :

WRAP- UP
CHRISTMAS!

Navy .........•. :.........•...... 19
Tulane .......................... 14

Michigan State ............. 21

points, beating Chicago behind
Hakeem Olajuwon•s 28 points, 11
rebounds and six blocked shots.
Clippen 105, MaverickS 98
Los Angeles beat Dallas for the
ninlh consecutive lime and handeil
the Mavericlcs their. fifth suaigltt
loss at home as Ron Harper scored
32 points and Loy Vaught 24.
Trail Blazers 109, Nuggets 94
Clvde Drexler had 27 points and
Rod Strickland scored I 0 of his 1~
points in the fourth quarter fO:S
Portland agai nst visiting Denver. :
Hawks 103, Lakers 94
BuUets 118, Hornets 98

.9LCQU.ISITI09\[S 1"19{.'£ J'EW'E£~

228 WEST MAIN

'RIDIIG MOWERS

'

992-3671

Sunday, Dec.&amp;

992-3322

TOHO

~ANDERSON'S

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Saturday, Dec. 4
Army .............................. 20
*H awa11.. ............................ 24

Wt have tht
Serlo you want ·
in lht size you nttd
at a price you 'II like.

WARNER

lor Webber's, had 23 for Orlando
which rallied from a 16·poini
defiCit in the second ~uarter 10 trail
S5·54 at the half. 0 Neal started
the comeback with a dunk and had
six points during a 10-2 burst to
close the second period.
O'Neal outscored Webber 19-4
in tbe opening half, hitting eight of
13 shots and drawing two of the
three fouls that kept Golden Slate's
rookie on tbe bench for 11 minutes.
RockeCS 100, Bulls, 93
Houston improved its record 10
10·0 and kept alive its streak of
holding opponents under 100

The Veterans Memorial HoSpi· the winners with 42 yards. Justin
111 Dolphins won the recent Big Roush led the defense with 10 rackBend Youth Football Champi· les. Justin Robson recovered two
onship by winning the tournament fumbles for the winners and C. D.
Ellis one, while Mike Johnson
at Southern High School.
The Dolphins won the first COD· ' picked off a pass.
The Dolphins won the tourna·
test6-0 over the MeDonalds Eagles
in a hard fought contest The Dol· ment title with a i2.() victory over
phins scored the games only touch· Mustangs. The Mustangs, spon·
down when Josh Davis hooked up sored by the American Legion Post
with Matt Smith on a 53 yard 128 of Middleport defeated the D.
SKILES DRIVES • Orlando's guard Scott Skiles (4) takes
(J&gt;I.Va.).
touchd.own pass with 1:56 left in D. Blake Conslruction Browns to
advantage of a pick from ttammate Jeff Turner '(right) to drive by
Box score:
advance to lhe title game.
the
half.
The
rest
of
the
game
was
a
Golden State's Avery Johnson (center) during their game Tuesday
RIO GRAND E (101 ) -Kim
The VMH Dolphins scored frrst
defensive
struggle
as
the
Dolphins
ni1ht. The Magic won, 120-107. (AP)
with
just
12
seconds
left
in
the
half
Sowers,
2·0-4; Shannon Miller, 2·
held on for the vic lOry.
4-8; Gena Norris, 2-5-2-21 ; Slacey
Davis was the leading rusher for oh a two yard pass from Zack
Ritter. 0.2-2; Michelle Crouse, 2·2·
Meadows to Mike Johnson . The
0-10; Megan Winrers, 2-0-4; Congaines final score ·came on a one
nie Fazio, 0-1-1; Tricia Collins, 4yard run by Meadows with 44 sec·
2-10; Stacy Riley. 1-5-0-17; Lori
onds left in the contest. That score
Hamilwn, 11-0-22; Ginger Smith,
By Howard Siner .
Punter: TERRY DANIEL, SHULER, Tennessee, senior. RB: was set up on a 33 yard run by
Davis.
1·0·2. TOTALS 27·12·11·101.
NEW YORK (NEA)- What's Auburn, junior.
·
BRENT MOSS. Wisconsin, junior.
FAIRMONT STATE (74) Davis
led
the
way
on
the
ground
become the most dangerous auack
'Faulk. the sensational runnirig RB: CALVIN JONES, Nebraska,
Shclli
Cannon, 2·2-5-15; Nikki
with
liS
yards,
Sm1th
added
added
in college football originally was back for San Diego SIBle. aru1· Wal· junior.
McGinnis,
2·().4; Crystal Fields, 3·
52.
Tangy
Laudenniltled
the
Dol·
designed to get the most out of just drop, a 275-pounder who anchors
WR: JOHNNIE MORTON,
2-8;
Sara
Hivnor,
6·2-14 ; Cindy
phin
defense,
Roush
added
a
fum·
one player.
the defense for Arizona, are the Southern Cal, senior. WR: JOEY ·
Martin,
2-0-4;
Becky
Geisinger, 3·
ble
recovery
and
Davis
intercepted
He is some player, of course.
Only repeal choices as NEA first- GALLOWAY. Ohio Slate, junior.
0-6;
Teresa
Haggerty,
7 -5· 19;
a
pass.
TE: CARLESTER CRUMPLER,
Charlie Ward, a cool leader with team Ali·Americans.
Becky
Steele,
2·0-4.
TOTALS
27·
The
Eagles
took
home
third
all the right moves. calls the signals
Because 'foes have lceyed to stop East Carolina, senior.
2·14-74.
place
on
the
strength
of
a
22.0
win
for Florida State in a "fast-break" the ,Pun this season, San Diego
L: MARCUS SPEARS, North·
Halftime score: Rio Grande
offense that bears his trademark.
State has used Faulk more often western Slate (Louisiana), senior. over th,e Browns, no other slalistics
54,
Fairmont State 40.
were
available
on
the
other
games.
For his unique success, Ward, a than before as a receiver out of the L: RICH BRAHM. West Virginia,
senior quarterback, has been named backfield. StiU, he made the AJJ. senior. L: JASON WINROW, Ohio
by Newspaper Enterprise Associa- America team by rushing for over State, senior. L: STACY SEEtion to head its 1993 All-America 1,300yardsand 17TDs.
GARS. Clemson, senior. C: K.C.
college football team. The
Waldrop, who is regularly dou· JONES, Miami, freshman.
PK: JUDD DAVIS, Florida,
announcement of the squad was ble-teamed, dominates one of the
syndicated by NEA to more than nation's best defenses. According junior. KR: CHARLES JOHN600 daily newspapers throughout to Stanford coach Bill Walsh: SON, Colorado, senior.
GALLIPOLIS· MIDDLEPORT
DEFENSE - L: SHANTE
lhe United Slates.
"Rob Waldrop is the best defen·
'
CARVER, Arizona State, senior.
"'To me, Charlie is like a sive lineman in Arnl;lica. Petiod."
vapor,'' says FSU head coach
The best linebacker in the conn- L: WILLIE McGINEST, Southern
Bobby Bowden . "Just when you try is Thierry of Alcorn Slate, a Cal, senior. L: KEVIN PATRICK,
• •';It~
.
-."!. "'
4 ·t:•·
•
think you see him, and can reach Division I·AA team in' the South- Miami, senior. L: LAMARK
out and grab him, he's gone."
western Athletic Conference. He SHACKERFORD, Wisconsin,
Ward·, who is 6·foot·2 and certainly hasn't gone unaoticed by senior.
LB: MARLO PERRY, Jackson
weighs 190 pounds. is a Randall the expens.
Cunningham·type star whose- . Notre Dame, which took over State, senior. LB: BARRON
GOLD "S" BAR
excellent arm is overlooked from Florida State as the nation's WORTHAM, Texas El-Paso,
LB :
ANTHONY
because of his scrambling. He has top...-anked team, placed·three men senior.
the poise and intelligence needed on the NEA AU-America squad: McCLANAHAN, Washington
for making the right choices on the offensive lineman Aaron Taylor, Sate. senior. LB: KEITII BURNS,
Reg. ·499
·field.
along with defensive backs Bobby Oklahoma State, senior.
B: AARON GLENN, Texas
In just his fiTS! nine games this Taylor and Blll'ri$ .
y, Ct.
season, Ward zoomed to over
Ward was joined on NEA 's A&amp;M, senior. B~ TIIOMAS RAN·
Total
2,500 yards in total offense as he ~ by an FSU teammate, Brooks, DOLPH, Kansas·oStato,senio~. B:
REG. '299
MARVIN
GOODWiN.
UCLA.
guided the nation's top·ranlced . a lmebacker.
..
Weight
team. By that point, he was averagTh~ hottest compebll~n for All· junior. B: VAN MALONE, Texas,
ing nearly 8 yards every time he Amenca berths was at w1de recetv· senior.
P: CHRIS MaciNNIS. ·Air
pa.!sed or ran the ball.
er. Stokes of UCLA and Yarbor·
Force,
senior.
SALE 1499
Furthennore, Ward is at his best ough of Wyoming lead a fine crop
in big games. Last season, he was of. pass catchers in college foorball
Dating from 1915, tbe college
the Orange Bowl MVP. On. Nov. thiS season.
football
selections issued by NEA
13, he almost led Florida State
Here is the NEA All·America
are
the
oldest
or any major news
back from a 24· 7 deficit to win at second team of 1993:
organization.
Notre Dame. That brought calls for
OFFENSE - QB : HEATH
.
a bowl·game rematch.
7 DIAMOND MARQUISE DIAMOND PENDANT
Dating from 1915, the annual
All·America college football selec·
7 Diamonds Set In Gold
ANNIVERSARY BAND
Swirls
of
Diamonds
lions made by NEA are the oldest
~
Set in 14K Gold
of any major news organization.
Here is the 1993 All·America
team chosen by an NEA panel:
Model Home Located at
OFFENSE
Intersection of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Quarterback:
CHARLIE
Pomeroy, OH · 614·991-1478
WARD, Florida State, senior. Run·
ning back: TYRONE WHEAT·
'!.Carat t.w.
LEY, Michigan, junior. Running
Reg. $999
CARAT t.w.
back: MARSHALL FAULK, San ·
REG. $499
Diego State, junior.
Y. ct. tw
Wide receiver: J.J . STOKES,
5
UCLA, junior. Wide receiver:
Solh Rings Onlj
reg. $599
REG. $169 ONLY
RYAN
YARBOROUGH,
Wyoming, senior . Tight end:
MARK BRUENER, Washington,
junior.
Hundreds of Beautiful Christmas Ideas- All On Sale!
Lineman: AARON TAYLOR,
Notre Dame, senior. Lineman :
BERNARD WILLIAMS, Georgia,
senior. Lineman: WAYNE
~OK
GANDY, Auburn, senior. Line·
man: MARK DIXON, Virginia,
A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features
senior. Center: JIM PYNE, Vir·
ginia Tech, senior.
• Andersen Wmdows
Place·kicker:
TOMMY
THOMPSON, Oregon, senior.
• Georgia Pacific Doors
Kick returner: DAVID PALMER,
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 ln. On Center
Alabama, junior.
• Annstrong Solarian Aoor Tile
DEFENSE
Lineman: SAM ADAMS, Texas ·
• Kitchen Compact Cabinets
A&amp;M,
junior.
Lineman:
"From Mfg. Sugg. Retail
• 8 Foot Ceiling
BRENTSON BUCKNER, Clem·
T.
W.
Ia total diamond weight
son, senior. Lineman: DAN
• 2x I 0 Floor Joist, 16 In. On Center
WILKINSON, Ohio Slate, sophoIf~
. .
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
flll~'
more. Lineman: ROB WALDROP,
Arizona, senior.
• Carriage Carpets
,
Linebacker: JAMIR MILLER,
• Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
UCLA, junior. Linebacker: DERRICK BROOKS, Florida State,
• 25 Year Warranry Asphalt Shingles
•Diamonds
FREE PARKING
TWO LOCATIONS
junior. Linebacker: JOHN ~­
•Gold Chains
• 10 Year StrUCtlllli Warranty On The Home
RY. · Alcorn State, semor .
FREE GIFT
151 Second Ave.; Gallipolis
•Selko ·Witches
Linebacker: TREY ALBERTS,
WRAPPING
Our
Prices
Are
The
Lowest
In
The
Area.
and
•Croll
Pens
Nebraska, senior,
'
~
Back: ANTONIO LANGHAM.
91 Mill Street, Middleport
•Rare Colne
Alabama. senior. Back: BOBBY
Model Home' Vlnrlna Houn 1:00-5:00 p.m.
TAYLOR, Notre ·pam e. sopho·
more.
Ba'ck:
ANTHONY
Tue..S.t. or by·appolntmentC"I614-992·2471
. i
PHILLIPS. Texas A&amp;l, senior .
...Member Jewel1r1 Bo1rd of Trade
Back: JEFF BURRIS, Notre Dame,
senior.

get •

Air(.,.._,
lftidoM
.
y.
Enwty ~·ilia liNt Pumps

Saturday, Nov. 27

Dolphins capture
Big·Bend Youth title

..·, w~,
tli$ I'

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY,

thursday, Nov. 2&amp;

Dignity and Ser'rice
Always

II

By The Associated Press
play him, but you've got to take
Shaquille O'Neal and Chris whatever you have. Alexander
Webber., fellow No. 1 picks who wasn't available. So that's the way
could have become teammates. it is."
·
were not supposed to guard each · O'Neal scored 28 points and
other.
Nick Anderson 24 for the Magic,
O'Neal, afr.er all, is 7-foot·l and who used a IS.() run 10 take oonlrol
300 pounds, while Webber is 6·9 in the fourth quarter. Webber fm·
and250pounds,
·
islled with 13 points and 10
But a foot injury 10 cenler Vic· Jebounda:
tor Alexander forced Golden State
Elsewhere in the NBA it was
coach Don Nelson to pair Webber Washington 118,.Charlotte 98 ;
with O'Neal in their fint meeting Atlan18 103, the Los Angeles Lak·
since Webber was drafted No. 1 by en 94; the Los Angeles Clippers
Orlando last June and then traded · lOS, Dallas 98; Houston 100
tollwWarrion.
Chicago 93 ; and Portland 109'
The result was a mismatch that Denver 94.
'
O'Neal exploi~ 10 lead the ~c
Billy Owens and Latrell
to a 120-107 VIctory Tuesday night. Sprewell led the Warriors with 18
"That' s not the way we wanted points apiece.
to play the game," Nelson said.
Anfernee Hardaway, the Orlan·
' 'We wanted to have Alexander do rookie whose rights were traded

Prescription
Shop

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

The

Orlando wallops Golden State .120-107

·Football 93
Caich All The
Excitemeni!

INGELS

I:

Ohio

Wednesday, November 24, 1993 ·

I

' .

�.

.
The Daily SentineJ.

By
The
Bend
.

· Wtdnelday,November24,1m
· Page a:'

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~~-----------------:

Flower show wfuners Regional garden club installs officers j
•

'·

New orriccrs were installed
when R~on II, Ohio Associadoa
of Garden ,Clubs, beld its fall
rcgioaal m~:eting at the Carleton
Scbool in Syracuae. ·
Installed by Deny Dean werr
Linda Hensler, regional director;
Toni Llewellyn, sccrc~; Beny
Wells, treasurer and Kimberly
Willford, news reporter. The meeting was called to order by outgoing
regioaal dircc:tor Freda McGirr.
There were aB Rcgioa 11 garden
club Mcml!erS attcndiog with 22
clubs represented. State officers
Ruth Waller, treasurer, and Faye
Collins, second vice president and
Region 11, advisor, were also in
auendance.

With Hensler presiding OfflCCI'S
reports were read and approved.
Awards were ~red by Faye
Collins to Suzy
nrer for out·
standing garden clu member and
to Judy Snowden for outstanding
amateur gardener. Both arc members of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
McGirr presented awards for
outstanding fair flower show to
Washington County, outslanding
garden club to Utde Hocking, outstanding publicity books to
Chester, Rutland and Marietta, outstanding program books to Mariet·
ta, Rutland and Gallipolis, excellent fair flower show to Meigs
County and slide awards to Betty
Marcinko.

and announced dates to remember. :'

~in' also JHI!SCIIIt4 s1l of her

Dares announced were GardeneQ •.
Day Ow on June 21 at _Richmond, !
Ind. ro. gardens; OAGC Conven~ ~
lion July 18-20 in Mansfield and :
OAGC tour to Toronto, Canada •
September 19-23.
:
Hal Kncen, Mei8!1{lallia Coun- :
ty Bxtension agent showed slides •
and gave handouts on perennials :f!)r the morning propam. Faye :
Collins did an arrangmg,progtam :
entitled, "Fun with Faye for the ;
af~oon program. She used most· :
Iy dried Oowers and many different •
plant materials. Some of her Oow- :·
ers were made from dned sweet ;
potaiOCS and pine cones.
;
Several door prius were award- '

outjlomg regional officers and
cbmmen gi(tl or pressed flower
pictures. She announced that Sally
Smity and Iva Stacy received master glrdeneis awards in the state.
This is the top awa¢ for any gar·
den club member to receive.
McGin' then ~red a money
tree IS Outaoing regional director,
Hensler announced she would be
sending out a Region II winter
newslcucr.
The spring regional meeting was
announced. It will be on Apri123 in
Belpre. The m~ program will
be on the Mohican School of the
outdoors and the afternoon pro,gram will be a flower show.
The state officers gave reports

ed.

:

Community calendar
J
".,

'WEDNESDAY

JUNIOR BEST OF SHOW • Willi bel' attndlve arrangement
of red and white caraatlons In a wooden sleigh container, Lisa
Stedlem took the jUDior best of show award In the Christmas !low·
er show of the Melp County Gardn Clubs Association held over
the weekend al Carleton School, Syracuse.

MIDDLEPORT • The Freedom
Road Resource Center will hold a
Thanksgiving Dinner from 5 to 1
p.m. at the Old Legion Building.
Seating is Jimired to 100 and reservations can be made by calling
Kerry Wright at 992-6822; Dona·
lions for the dinner arc accepted
but not required. The public is
invited.
POMEROY · Free Clothing
Day will be held at The Salvation
Army from 10 a.m. to noon. All
area residents in need of clothing
arc welcome.

( I~

·~

~ -··. ,..,./"'

RESERVE iiESt OF SHOW • Brenda Bolin took the senior
reserve best of show IIWIU'd at the county Christmas nower show
held at Carleton School with this modern design.

. SENIOR BFST OF SHOW • TJail anlque arranaaumt featur·
'lng coatriftd ftowen of dried Jlllllllolla leaftl painted white and
accented with gUtter won the best of show award for Betty Dean at
this year'• CUistmu nower show held at the Carleton School,
Syracuae, over the weekend.

Homebuilders
plan party

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Ufe • Health • Home • Car· Business ·

President Cecilia Lisle coaduct·
ed the meelin' which opened with
the group havmg prayer and giving
the pledge to the flag.
Plans were made to have a
Christmas dinner at the home of
Carol McCullough on Dec. 14.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Barb Mullens, Olita Heighton and
Barb Smith.

CALL: · JEFF WARNER
INSURANC&amp;

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INSURANCE ···

113 WEST 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
PH. 6141992'5479

Nallono!tdo to an ~ -

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Plans for a Chrisanas paity ,10 .be
held on Dec. 14 were Dladil !"ben·
the Homebuilders Class met recent, Jy at the Middleport Church of
Christ. The' party will be held at
6:30 p.m. at the cburch. A p&lt;&gt;tluclc
dinner will be followed by a gift
exchange.
Dorothy McDaniel presiding at
the meting which opened with
prayer by Glen Evans. Officers'
. reports were given by Katherine
Evans.and Elsie King.
Prayer was requested for
Dorothy Jenkins .. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Evans and a closing
prayer was given by Raymond
Cole.
Attendir)g were Thelma Boyer,
Roseanne Manley; Willard and
Nettie Boyer, Flo Grucscr, Bud and
Hazel Wilson, Lester Bowers,
Lorena Tiemeyer, Bonnie Smith,
Dorothy Baker, Olen and Katherine
Evans, Gene and Dorothy
McDaniel, .Raymond and Farie
Cole, Osby and Mary Martin and
Dorothy Roach.

the Ohio Department of Agricultore.
Efforts to collect data on agri·
culture trace back to the time of
George Wasbini!On. 'f!le first ~P
Repon was published m 1863, Just
one year after the formation of the
U.S. Dcpartmc,nt of Agriculture.
Crop and Livestock reports arc
issued several limes a year and arc
used by farmers in plannil\g their
~lions, by elevators in deter·
mmmg storage needs and by processors of food for humans and
feed for livestock.
.
effort possible 1s used,
to Brown, to be sure the
is accurate. Data is

·,

33" Mgb Back

Manuel wins
contest with
prettiest eyes

El&amp;ht Solid Colon ltlcJucllDa wvu. Manhall.

· Breeanna Nicole Manuel, 16
months, daughter t:l DoDita Manuel
and ·granddaughter of Joyce and
Donald Manuel was awanled a trophy of the prettiest eyes in her category in the Sunburst Beauty
Pageant at the Grand Cenbal Mall
in Padcersburg, W.Va on Nov. 8. .
As a prize, she will have her
fee paid to the international.
uon in Atlanta, Ga. in

MC!OhloState

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SWIVEL

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Oak llnlooh. ~

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THUNDERBIRD LX

SPEAKER • Leland E.
Brown ol the Ohio Apicnllural Statllidcs Service speaks to
tbe Middleport-Rotary Club
Monday nllf.bt on "Facts for
Agrlenlture.

Aueo., Air, C..., Til, Cnil8,
Power Wlndoin, Loeb, Seat

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1993 PLYMOUTH
ACCLAIM

1992 CHRYSLER
LEBARQN

.

· This js the third consecutive
year of this choir's performance as
part of the Town of Pomeroy Open
House.
The program will have traditional carols of th4; Cbrisbllas season,
both sacred and wnb!r, The choir,
under the dinlction of Jane.Irvine,
plays a set 1of 53 chromaticallytuned handbells. They are rung
singly or in multiples witb each
ringer responsible for as few as
four or IS many as eight bells, and
many techniques arc employed for
effect and interest throughout the
coocert repertoire.

Twelve 'ringers combine many
years of experience to form this
lively group of young adults ranging in age from high school to "40something."
Mrs. Irvine has been involved
with handbells for 14 years. She
bas a Bachelor's Degree from West
Virginia Univmity and a Masla''s
Degree from Ohio Univmity, both
in music education. She has taught
general music, band, choir, and
handbell choir at Little Hocking
school for 13 yean. In additioa to
worlcing with bells at scbool, she .
has taught handbell methods and
directed a bell choir at Ohio University. Sbe directs !he Celebranlos
Ringers and serves IS accompanist
for the Sanctuary Choir and assis·
tant organist for the cburch.

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personal field obseryatioas. ~ou·
sands offarmcrs arc mvolved m the
collection of data. All information
received is completely confidential
IK! no o~ can ~inc: ~Y .indi·
vtdual Information on md1v1dual
farms.
Brow~ indicated over 300
reportS arc~ each year for 120
cropa!ld45 livestockuems. When
natiOnal_reports arc releued they
mu~t first b~ reviewed by t.~e
Nallonal Agr!cultural Statisllcs
Board On the.day-reports .-e to be
release~ the board members are
loc~ed 10. No one ~an come out
until after die report u released at 3
p.m. after stock and commodity
mllltets have cloled. This prevents
anyone from getting-an unfair
advlintage over other individuals,
groups or corpo181ions.
President Gene Triplett presided
at the n\ecting and announced that
the Christmas party for the club
members,. spouses, children and
grand children would be held on
December 20th. Ladies of the
Heath Church served the dinner.

!'.Rl.

(One Inner Seat with Top Stitch Aelnllretntl

Bouquet

• • 1/t, C..,~ 1,11111111111

Kevin PlnBoa II a staff
writer for Ohio Valley Publishing and basbls Christmas shopping doae already.

f~cts to

The Celebramos Handbell
Ringers of First Presbyterian
Church, Parkersburg, W.Va., will
perform at Trinity Olaith on Sunday following the p8llldc at about 3

double~-

Send the fTD'
White Christmas~

Entering a shopping center
between Nov. 2hnd Dec. 2S II
lilcc walldtll iDID Jllflllic Part
wcmng blrb6cue auce after.
sha'lltl. If you're not struck clown
by a~ !:lit opu81tid by a
hyperactive three-year-old, you
risk 'being body slammed by a
300-pound mother Jrying 10 Jhvent you from taking the last
Barney doll off the lbclf.
Personally, I would rather
trim my noae hair&amp; witb electric
· hedge clippen than set foot in 'a
mall during the shopping frenzy.

lfanabell rzngers"to
perform at_church

Featurtnc heoo:lftat IUpport: double IIpper,
Utde Drummer Boy"
Bouquet
·

.Leland E. Brown, Deputy State
Statistician for Research .of the
T:Jnited States DeparbJICnt of Agri-.
culture, spoke to the Middleport·
Pomeroy Ro119: Oub on Monday
night on bow Facts for Apiculturc"arc eollected and distnbured.
Hal Kneen, program cbairman,
ifilroduccd Brown:
.
;:-' Brown is a Middleport itative
"bo graduated in the last blgh
,chool class at Middleport High
Scbool. For tile last several years
Brown bas been associated with
what is commooly called the Crop
Livestock Reporting Service.
has
Columlllui 'Ib,I1 -Fcdel:
. a1

~Oti.QIII

BEAN BAG CIIAillS

Send the FI'D'

:JJrown presents ~gJ1culture

~

MAKE THEIR JPIRITS BRIGHT!
$hire your rreshest
Holldlywlsheswtlh
r..lly, t'r1&lt;nds and
bUsiness asoodltesuywhere In !he -w•

I

PORTI.AND • Lebanon Town~ ';:
ship Trustees will meet at 7 am. e( ~
the Townsbip Building,
.~ ...

1 {_' ll f •' I ,

Wllbin&amp;lonliOIIdlamonlllDCIIt
drcJh 17 ~ 10 dJe JlC'MI who in- Thanbgivlna Day 1'Jnc..Hour
Lana Com-ciial Pnle.
Wilted 'X'Iwtklli\!1111Maay oldie rDctw... ltalted
Wbaapnh.. .
~ llilt 11m holiday arc ltil1 ~
. I • llil!l li1liJ!a on Plymouth lil:ed
Family llid I'Midlli1,
Rock.lookmaalatliblbe'Jbintcr downIeday.
10
,a
llqc
clianer. of ~•
only -m.c'othelllldahatfalh:
Cllll~
sauce
IDd
piel, followed ·
jonedou&amp; ofIll~ Ken- by Cd.lowibip with loved
ones and ·
tucky Fried CIUckm banel lnd
~gibe crazy old uncle thtow.
construCtion paper(abblcrical fact up
in the r!Sh tankallcrone boaleor
llelntcd fnJm J*1icq•ling in cle- wine lllO IQ!y.
men!P'Y school Tbaaksgiving
Moltimponandy,thedayisfor
plays).
.
on what we arc thankful
Suddenly, he rill up and strikes rcflec;ling
for. This year, I ·have a long list
one of JhoiC J101e1 usually accOm·
•mywdlpayingjob(wringout · • the 1111C011ditimalloyalty of a good
panied by a IIOIIing light bulb. ·
that
it's dripping, sar- dog. .
"We need a holiday to get to- casmICilleliCeaU over the tlool').
•anllDUSUallyw.mdayinthemiddle
JCthc:r with rdaliws we wctildn't
• family and l'rienda both old ofa long 'colchpdl.
IIOIIIIIIIy visit tile rcst.o f die yet~~," and new.
• I don't drive a Pl!cec.
·
be says tobimself, "andeatourown
• I don't have leprosy.
·
• mypan:nts,chilclrcllofthe60s,did
11odY weight in turkey IDd SIUftlng.
• the fact that Ross Perot is not not name me Moonbeam or Starchild. ·
lben we'llaU faDuleeparound the taken seriously by a majority of.the
Thanbgiving abo his the honor of
televisioa whilc watching SOObowl general public. ·
.
officiallykickingoffthcCbrillmasShop. games,"
.
• God gave me the good taste Pi\111 Season. And ilot a ~t too •
Most people l,abelcd this guy • not to jump 011 ihc "BeU bottoms arc either
- those poor Olrislmas decora·
· liuiicakc (they didn't know what • back in st)'le" fashion band wagon. lions have been standing in department
television or a bowl gamC..was).
• Budweiser in a frosted mug. stores for more than a mouth waiting for
Like the rest of us geniuses, he was
•
laud. 'Offensive rock and roll sboppers to be told It's lime to stan buymisunclcrslood.
• tlneStarTtet series. And six ins them.
'
, tbeydid lilcc theeat- moVIes
. '
Crazed fran theltnowledgetbat they
An4 so began the Thanks• only 12 days until my vaca- will be living 011 turkey sandwiches, Jur•
tnlditioa. And it stuck, tion stans and a ~n blue-eyed key~lelandturteypicforthencxt
blonde returnS from a three-month two weeks, shoppers attack the sales lilcc
tour .of Europe.
lions 011 caribou.
.

•' '
LOTIRIDGE • Lotttidge Com·:
munity Center will have country •
music night from 1 p.m. to mid-:
nigbL Refrcsluncnts will be served.:
Everyone welcome,
--'
•
POMEROY • Preceptor Beti
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phl
will sponsor a ctaft show Nov. 27
and 28 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the; ,
upper block of Main StteeL
-

POMEROY • Fraternal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary 11217i depoait is
·due for Chrislmas dinner. Deposit
attend.
will be retut:ncd if you attended the
LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full dinner on Dec. 4 at 6:30 p.m. The
Gospel Church will have a candle· deposit is .$5 and can be turned in
light communion service at 1 p.m. no later than Nov. 26. Membe!'ll
only. There will also be a $10 gift
The public is invired.
excbange,
THlJRSDAY
LONG BOTIOM • Faith Full
POMEROY • The Pomeroy Gospel Church will have preaching
group of AA and AI·Anon will and singing at 1 p.m. Pastor Steve
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Reed invites the public. Refresh·
Catholic Church. For more infor- ments will follow.
mation call 992-5763.

Advent program presented
A program on the advent Season
and an advent prayer was given by
Sister Fidelis Bell at the recent
meeting of the Catholic Women •s
Club of Sacred Heart Church held
at the church.
.
Mass was held for aU living and
c~C'ooiscd members of the Catholic
Women's Oub.

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

TIJPPERS PLAINS : Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053 will have a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the post
home. All members arc urged to

fot

.

Drive a little
Save·a lot ·

~ ..

Air. T.._ CNIM, C...,
M J - . l..odo&amp;. SMI,
lalhar I_..,, IO,CJD!Imlo&amp;l
CLEAN CAR!

Oliff

Olllr

•5,495

•3,995

�wednelday, November 24, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport,_Ohio

Thanksgiving EASTMAN'S
dinners to be
prepared

Ohio Univ(frsity
College of Oste~pathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

ADfi'OOLUE:Ss:"~·~r;~~m:ass~;:~~~

There is no need to cat Thanksgiving dinner alone or to go without turkey and all the trimmings,
says Mary Pickens, one of several
Syracuse women who will be
preparing and serving dinners at
the Syracuse Fire Department
beginning at noon Thursday.
Names of shutins are still be
accepted and meals will be delivered to them, Mrs. Pickens said.

STUDY: OBESE
'CENT' S BECOME OBESE,
dividing the weight measured in
LONELY AND POOR ADULTS
by the square of the
Question: I'm concerned
in meuirs.)
because my grandchildren are overincome. pattmal educaweight My daughter, the children's tion,
chronic health conditions
mother, is a little overweight, but such as asthma and musculoslteJe.
her children are very large. I think tal abnormalities were considered
they are at increased riSk for seri- because of their pofential impact on
ous problems when they become eventual income, self-esteem and
-adults because they are overweight marital status. This study showed
now. My daughter doesn't think so. the most consistent predictor of
·She says they will slim down later lower income and being unmarried
and be fme. What is your opinion? as a young ailult was i&amp;e presence
Answer: Being overweight by of obesity as an adolescent
20 percent or more - which is the
·Overweight individuals com.medical defmition of obesity - is pleted less education, were 2.5
11 serious condition that increases times less li1tely to be married and
'the risk of developing many had a S6,710 lower yearly income
imwantcd problems, including high than their normal-weight peers.
blood pressure, heart disease, respi- There was no difference in sclfratory problems, and diabetes . esteem between the groups. Obese
Arthritis and other problems women had slightly less education
involving ~ bones and joints are and a slightly greater chance of
Jllso more common in overweight being single than did obese men. ,. '
people.
..
• So, I think you are correct You
. All of these condinons are also should be worried about your
more frequent in individuals who grandchildren. Obesity is related to
were obese as teenagers, but this is many objectionable social condiEMPLOYEE RECOGNIprobably because "77 percent of lions and undesirable health probTION
• Delores Riggs was
·obese adolescents ~tinue to be !ems. However, knowing this IS the
been named employee or the
-ilbese 8$ adults. There goes your easy part Clanging a longstanding
month
for November at Overdaughter's "slimming down later" behavior like overeating can be
brook
Center.
She was chosen
Jheory.
very difficult, but it's not impossiby
her
co-workers
for her dedA recent study done at the Har- ble.
ication
and
caring
service to
vard School of Public Health has
As I'm sure you know, obesity
the
residents
and
the
facility.
shown another complication of can sometimes be a consequence of
Delores
bas
been
in
the
Nurs- ·
obesity - reduced mcome and a "medical" problem like low thying
Department
at
Overbrook
loneliness. This is surprising and roid hormone levels, but this is
since August of 1991. Her curcontrary to common belief. Most very rare. Most obese individuals
rent position is Nursing Assisdemographic studies have shown just eat more each dar. than they
tant-second
shift.
that low income and social status bum up doing that day s activities.
increase the risk of being single The body, being incredibly effiand obese. This study suggests that cient, simply saves that extra food grandchildren that a change is in
obesity itself may mcrease your as fat This small ·amount of extra their best interest It will take much
chances of being poor and unmar- fat - when compounded month sltill, di_{)lomilcy and love to accomplish thJS without malting some or
ried.
after month and year after year The researchers followed more adds up until and the person is all of them unhappy. But don't be
than 10,000 adolescents for seven obese. The only way to reverse the discouraged by this difficult assi$11years as they matured to young trend is to eat less food than the ment It's just part of being a canng
'
adulthood. These individuals were body actually needs. The body will grandmother.
selected to represent the cultural, draw upon that stored fat to meet
ethnic and economic mixture of the energy requirements for that
''Famlly Medicine" is a weekly
U.S. society. From this group, 3.4 day, and this brings down the colrmn. To submit questions,
pcn:cnt of men and 3.0 percent of weight
wr te to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
women were found to be obese by
"'lou arc faced with the Ohio Unlvenity College or OsteoJhe definition of being above the formidable task of canvincing your pathic Mediclne, Grosvenor Hall,
95th percentile in body mass index. daughter and then con'!'incing you . Athe111, Ohio 45701.

DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO .
HARVEST OF TRU.CK VALUES

Prices Goo
ay,
Friday and Saturday •••
Nov. 24 25 and 26th.

SUPERMARKETS
Open Wed. nite Nov. 24
unid 11 p.m.

THANKc£&gt;GIVING Thursday Nov. 25 .
DAY
1 a.m. -1 p.m.
Friday
7 a.m. ~ 11 p.m.
.
.

ASST. FLAVORS

Pepsi
Cola
Products
2 Liter Bottle
12 Pack
12 oz. cans

Limit2 with
additional purchase

$249
~$st•.Fiav~r~

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~---~--~

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~.

1
_.&amp;t
~

1994 CHEV. S10 \
PICKUP

AS LOW AS

'8,888 ·

FNI Dunlllner becllner: Included during

Nowmber.

~--....---. ---1

t!¢- 1994 CHEV.

Y2 TOll PICKUP

_.t:t~~. 1994 CIV~LIER

\

DIED ftUCII I

I LilliS

1991 Olds Bravado ................. 18,900
1992 Chev. S1 0 Blazer ............ 514,995
1989 Chev. S10Tahoe PU.~ ........S6, 995
1991 Chev. S10 Pickup.~............55,995
1992 Chev. S10 Pickup..............59,499
1992 Chev. S10 Ext. Cab-......... 510,995
3-1993 S1b Blazers in Stock
1993 Chev. Astro Valt.............. 514,995

2-1990 Ollis 98's ..................... 58,9951990 Chevy BereHa ..................56,995
f,led, 5 ap11d,alr
5
PerMo.
1993
Olds.
Achieva
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----~------• 1993 2 Dr. Cavalier RS ............ ..S9,499
~ 1994 CHEVROLET
10-1993 4Dr. Cavaliers ........... 58,~88
IEIEnA
8-1993 Corsicas .......................59,688
Automllli:, - ·ooncl..,..lna.
1993 Olds CUflass.Supreme ..... 513,995
S
1993 Chevy Lumina ................S12,99r
1993 Cadillac Sedan Devilles
AslAiwAs 520,995
1993 CHiftOLET
-~

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,

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CAPRICE Ls

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AIEl DISIIIIUiOR FOR
ROYAL PAUl
COmRSIOI VIIS

All......_.. toDMier

QPEN'SUNDAY·

iii'

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F~RM!!
SAlJIAGE

...

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3
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Roll

'

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Bob Evans Saus.age
Small
Casing U~ks 12 oz.

Hagan Ice Cream
·Sandwiches box
3 varieties

FOODLAND
COTTAGE
CHEESE 24 oz. dn.
'

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15 oz.
Bottle

This ·Holiday Se.asoa~:"
Give the Gift of Food, A.FOODLAND Gift
Certiflcate. Something
anyone·can •s• and made
· to fit a~ prk8 r~nge.

.

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F.arm Sausage

5

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9.9

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32935">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32934">
              <text>November 24, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
