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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

.Thomas
named
AL'sMVP

Pick3:
853
Pick4:

5815
Super Lotto:
11-23-35-39-42-46
Kicker:
473239

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 140

Page12-The

Sentinel F•U 111111 WIDter C.r CUe Edition

Meigs Commissioners approve co-op program

Has your old~car had it? Read this first!

..

Your machanic tells you your
car needs som~ pretty expensive
repairs, including major engine
work. Immediately you envision
yourself in lhe car dealer's showroom, having given up on Old
Betsy. Then, returning to lhe real
world, you realize it's a bad time
for such a heavy financial commitmenL
_
It's time to lake a look at Car
Care Council's new pamphlet,
"RENEW OR REPLACE (Rx for
making a decision)". The illustrated folder offers a realistic look
at ways to get another year or
more of use from one's present
car, !hereby delaying the need to
decide on a new (or newer) one.
The premise is that in this
throwaway society it's important
to realize that no matter how
much work your car may need, it
probably won't cost as much as
buying a new one.
The pamphlet answers many
questions one might have about
fixing up one's car. The infonnation is covered in readable bilesize sections packed with h~lpful
ideas. One sidebar, for.example,
suggests ways to combat "new
car fever" while another offers
pointers on replacement parts. .
Also covered are the financial
aspects of renovating vs. replacing. Per~aps _the most eye opcnmg secuon ~~ a scenario, com- .
plete with figures, of an average
age car with an estimate of what
it might take to get the car back

"""
"H;on•ev. maybe.for
car's blrthcllay
we should buy it .a .new air filter."

Undercar

variable-rate springs. Frank
explains, "Variable rate springs
have an advantage in that they
automatically incease their .resis
tance as weight-or pr~ssure ..
increased. This results in smoot' ,,
comforlable ride when loa&lt;!ed •r
empty. and improved handl.ng.
Frank recommends insjX ·t .1g
and replacing springs at lhe : me
time shock absorbers or strut ll'e
installed, if the need is found.
Mileage, road condit',n s,
weather and driving habit..' v ill
all affect lhe service life of ali~ l·
ment, component, parts ar.d tirt ·,
A comprehensive inspe• tion L r
your car's steering and ~uspen
sion systems in the fall migh1
make the difference in wi-nter
driving -both in your pocketbook and in improved driveability under hazardous road conditions.

sive."

A suspension inspectiQn
should
include a check of springs,
The owner or this car had Installed the wrong size air filter,
. shock absorbers and stmts. Howallowing dirt and grit to accumulate in the air Intake.
ever. Frank emphasiies, "Gonin tip top shape vs. the cost of whose vehicle is in need of exten- trary to the belief that shock
carry most of the
replacing it.
sive repair or the owner whose absorbers
weight
of
the
vehicle, lhe springs
The pamphlet discusses both transportation needs have
are
the
.primary
suspension parts
sides of the case, playing devil's changed.
that
support
the
weight. New
advocate with an entire section
The pamphlet is available free . shocks or struts will
not fix a
devoted to lhe positive points of of charge. Send a stamped, self
weak
spring
problem."
buying a new (or newer) vehicle. addressed envelope to CarCarc
If new springs are needed, you
The section, entitled "The Point Council. Department R, One
have
options: install replacements ·
of Diminishing Return", address- Grande Lake Prive, Port Clinton,
similar
to the origimls, or install
es the problems of the car owner OH 43452.
'•

BODY SHOP &amp; PARTS

Ci

(Continued from Page 11)

road.
"The accumulation of snow
and ice around a CV boot can
easily lead to a tearJIIId eventual!y darna~e the CV joint it should
protect,' says Frank. "Replacing
the jomt is expensive. Replacement of a boot is far less expen-

ROUS-H'S
• Free Estimates
• Do_
mestic &amp;Foreign
• All Insurance Claims
•Complete Co.l.lision Work
To.Your satlstaction

BODY SHOP ~&amp; PARTS
773-5024
Open Mondiy- Friday 8:00- 5:00; Saturday 8:00 ·12:00

.

Automotive Parts ~At
W-h olesale Prices

·.

We feature

triJM_..,.., on the

CHIEF E•Z·LINER
•

•

0

'

,

NEXT DAY DEUVERY ON ORDERED PAin'S

'N itiT a BODY SHOP

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

~

' · 'SCIPPUES

~
,......... ..........

MASKING PAPER

~-

Ro~slt's Bo(ly Shop &amp; Parts·
.

_ ..

-

' ,....

·210 5:. Sec~

28ecll-,ll . . . . . . . . .
A lluNen I dltlftO. Nsa J f II

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, 'November 11, 1993

lluiiiJMdlalnc.

&lt;DO POND

f)lasti·kolct ··

Bob ROUih; Qll!'lner

. -·,. ·
• ~=• o;.r . . .

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
" The Meigs County Board of CommiSsioners, during its regular ~j Woclnl:zday, approved membe~p in t'!e Ohio ~~ of ,'.dministrative
SeCYICeS' Ohio Coopenti~ Purchasing'Progmm.
According to Dave Spencer, offtee manager for
. the Meigs CIIUDIY Hllbway Garage, the meinbership
. costs about $100 eacli year and will be available to .
all county offq~S.
Membership in the program allows county offices
to buy items It the Slate-bid prices resulling in substantial savings, he ellplained.
·
Spencer commented that the hi$1Jway department

is considering the pun:hase of a pickup truck to aid in
snow removal. The smaller truck would be used in
arQa inaccessible to the larger trucks currently used.
The dep1111111ent has the snow removal equipment for
lhe truck, he slid.
10 addition, Enjlineer Robert Eason and Spencer
showed eommissaontrs a rough draft of the new
Meigs County map. They indicated lhe map will be
sent out ror publication soon and may be back from
the publiSher in December.
Eason and Spenoet &lt;commended the many people
who helped lhem with the map and credited Ohio
Univenity for helping in lhe design.
Commi~ioncn 'laid they were pleased with the

new map.
Commissioners also agreed to advertise for a new
Meigs County Economic Development Director 10
replace former economic development director Paula
Thacker.
Also, commissioners passed a resolution allowing
lhe Meigs County Ilepartment of Human Services 10
close from noon to 2:3o p.m. on Dec. 17 for an annual awatdslrecognition dinner. Commissioners pointed
out that phones will still be answered during that designated time period.
In other action, the commission:
- Approved transfers of $4,829 and appropriations of $318.75.

Voinovich
gets health
•'
.care bzll

Rav~nswood

plant may
ask for concessions

The bitter dispute between
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
Ravenswood
Aluminum and the ·
- Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.,
union
began
in
lhe summer of 1990
which has struggled with its
over
workplace
safety after four
finances since a 20-month labor
workers
died
,
ahen spread to
dispute, may be forced to seek coninclude
pay
issues
and work rules.
cessions from union workers , a
In
November
I
990,
the union's
spokesman said.
contract
expired
and
the
company
Officials at the Jackson County
plant already have asked suppliers hired more than I .000 nonunion
replacement workers, leaving union
to cut costs , Pat Gallagher Satd.
Gallagher said company offi- workers out of a job.
The company's board of direccials would not rule out reopening
the company's lhree-ycar contract tors ftred Chairman EmmelL Boyle
with United Steelworkers Local in April 1992 and signed a cmtnct
with the union two months lata';
5668 if finances do not improve.
Company officials said
Dan Stidham, president of Local
5668, said he has not heard that lhe Ravenswood has not made a profit
contract could be reopened. The since the labor dispute, hun ia pilt ·
union represents about l.SOO work- by lower aluminum .pii~s worldcr;l-l!!Jlt~,,ll,\!.!!,1 I!!Qng ~be O!J.ip - \Vide_:~-" . -«'!!![ll...,.jo..-.- ••
Rtvcr.
•'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The Legislature passed a bill
extending Ohio •s Certificate of
Need progqm, whic" lieeb 10 control health Clll'C costs by barring
what i~ labels as .unnecess~ry
: expa~Sions of bosna!l)s, nursang
homes and other (acfulies.
·. The vote came Wednes:d in
the aouse, which also ad . its
· apProval ·to a Senate ·mrasure lowenng from .1 0. to .()2 the blood·
· ~am~mwhicbm~ts
aaed,l8 tlarou&amp;b 2Q can be ~ed
ffilh )lrunken drivin •
"'-'"•
$ . P..Wheel·
. ,· ·s· .,........rvem
Rjft'e,
~. said ffittl those lllld ~

~~lbe~w· ·~

Iteld _t!Je ~gis~ure ••· finarnbi»
sess.ion .of'J)ic year. ,
.
,J'b~ ~ ~u not in liession,
. &amp;u\-!Jitsadent Stanley Aronoff; R- Cincinnati, said it will not meet
until 7oJII!IW)'.iulless a subc:ommit·
· tee woiidrig on •a House-approved
ethics bill reaches an agreement
· before Dec. 1.
Chairman Richard Finan, RCineinnati, said the bill - which
would ban ~ng fees and set
,tough new disclosure requirements
for lawmak~ and public: offacials
-contained flaws that will be hard
to resolve.
The subcommittee heard testitnony Wednesday from local gov·
emment .off;cials who criticized
provisions requiring them to disclOse the sources and amounts of
their private income. They called
ihe requirement unnecessary.
: Riffe said the House will not
~tum unless lhe Senate passes the
ethics bill and returns it with
amendments requiring House considelation.
. Both chambers have completed
most of their major business for the

year.

. The House debated at length but
finally completed passage of the
bill el!tending the Certificate of
Need program until Nov. 30, 1994.
Rep. Mich~J f9ll, R-Hamilton,
. and' others s11id the program bas
cratec1 situadol\s iri which .ownen
have !JOid building and expansion
· c~rtificates wi(bin ·health care
• regions, increasing the cost of CBJe•
Rep. Otto Beaay Jr., D-Colum·
:bus, and -other sponsors acknowledg!XI that the PfO@'.I'II hu prob~~ but that lhe-b,n, whiqh went
: to Gov. George Voinovich for his
: Cxpecred Sigtl!lture, al~ elltends the
· life of.a committee making a com~~hensive study on how to miJ)ce it .
, tie~.

.
.
Rep. Michael Verjch, D-WIUTen,
: won 90-S approval of the drunken
: dri.vcr biD; which lrC8ts drivers 18•20 lhe same WI)' 16- and 17-year:olds are under el!isting law.
: - The 0.10 percent staiadard for
;:ldulll would remain unchanged. ·
~ He cited sratistics showing that
' 16-. tllrOU3b 20-year-olc!s make up
· :1 percent ·of drivers but ate
. ' • volved in 16 percent of serious

.

MAP ...... Tbe Meigs County
~ C9111naiulone.h Ullllllned a drlllt ot the
netr Mella County Dlllp diarlnJIIs reguh!r naeetlp. We(neaday. r•• ·na•p-wa• presented by
Enalneer Robert E~~Jo• and Dave Spencer,
Melp County H11!"!8y Department ollke 111811·

.

'

'

ager. Here, c:ommltllloilen ·

etl, Robert lflrtenbadlud
HoiJ'IIIan (seated trona Jert) review the map while Spencer,
stand at rear, ud Eason, left, watch on. (Sentinel photo by Jim Freeanaa)

School voucher bill
trigge~s legislative debate
COLUMBUS - Parents
tiona! ~licy.
could use taxpayer money to
"It s probably more a quessend children· to private Sii:hools
tion of private school choice
under a pilot program that trigthan it is parental choice,"
JCfed debate wilh~n minutes of
Savors told reporters after Snyats introduclion in the Senalt.
dec's briefing.
Senate Education Chairman
"Even if a parent has a
Cooper Snyder, R-Hillsboro,
voucher and wants to choose a
school, there's nothing in this
said his $25 million proposal
was designed to give patents
bill ... that would ensure that
new educational choice• and
student would be able to aucnd a
help enterprising local school
private school of their choice,"
districts that want to panicipate.
he said.
"Jt's desiped to elltend eduThat is because there may not
cational options. It's design~ to
be room for more students in the
leverage quality, and ' It's
private school that waschcsen.
designed to raise student
The bill generally reflects
achievement," Snyder said.
recommendations of a 28-mem"1 must say that I've been
bet study commission on educadisappointed over the last few
lional choice appointed by Gov.
weeb with an influx of resoluGeorge Voinovich.
lions from school bolirds across
David Brennari, lhe commisthe state, PTA organiz~tic;ms,
siClft chairman, said lhe proposal
opposing the voucher plaal.'' '
r~resents fundamental refonn
Snyder and Rep. Michael · · that should be given a chance.
Poll., R-Hamilton, announced · . ·""This may not be an idea
introduction of identical bills in
whQJe tim'e has come in the
the Senate and the House on
minlls of some ~pie, but in my
Wednesday.
..
,
mind it,is an tdea whose time
·Delegates at an Ohio School
has come to try," Brennan said.
Boards Association meeting
The bill would authorize a
voted Monday to oppose any
pilot program that might involve
t)'l)cofvoucherprogram.
eight Of the state's 612 school
Richard Savors, the group's
districrs.
legislative lobbyist, said transLocal school boards could
ferring public tax money to priapply as test districts, subject 10
vate_schools is not wise educa-

_75thArmisti~~

PARIS (AP)- 'The tlllions lhat
lost
a generation of soldiers in
jiCCideniS.
World War I cocilmemorBted IOday
the 7~th ailplveraary ot the
· , "This is the next step .in reduc- annistic:e that lllcnced the JUIIS lllld
:ing alcOiiol-~lated deaths on our elided the.'Ncliodshed.
·tligh,~ ... Verich Ui4 of the bill,
Fiom i visit~ Prilile 'Minister
which ilso inerCue&amp; Penalties for E,d!)uard
•Ball.pur lQ Armistice
)iroviding _.cobol tO ~vcn less . ~~. ~ wllele tile II'IICe
·tllan 21. .
\VII ~ Ill' JINIIh..layina out·
· ··, The HoUle, by a 9]::2 Y«&lt;. also •ide Wulii,p~n and elaewhere,
~ent. Voinovich, a, bill allowi!'l
the piau wore ICifllber ud sub-l)ousinJ auihorltids to conlnlet wt!Jt due&lt;f. '
·
.
~county •'leriffs' depanments fo[
Not .too man)' vetenns .were
·polic:e proteclion. Cunently, such CllpecJed to ~nd the Armasticc
~II'IICII aR limited 10 city police Day ,ceremonaea. Of the tenf ojj
de!*llilellta.
millions bfWodd War I soldiers,
'

.

- Added the auditor's office. Meigs CQUnty
Court, the tax map office and the commissionus'
clerk to those employees reeeiving the public
employees retirement sysaem tax pick up.
- Noted that Don Anderson w•s named to
replace Lillian Moen on the Meigs County Tuben:ulosis Board.
- Approved moving the old copying machine
from the recorder's olftee to the audiiOl's offtee.
- Approved weekly bill of$183,978.92.
Present were Commission President Robert
Hanenbach, Viee President Janet Howard Tackett,
Commissioner Fred Hoffman and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

approval by the state school
superintendent and the availability of money that legislators
would have to include in the
next state budgeL
Fox wanted the House to
send identical legislation to the
Finance Committee, where
chainnail Rep. Palrict Sweeney,
D-Cieveland, is supportive.
Bui House Speaker Vern
Riffe, J&gt;.Wheelersburg, said lhe
bill would go 10 the House Education Committee. The panel is
headed by Rep. Ronald Gerberry. D-Canfield, an opponent of
school vouchers.
Fox predicted referral to Gerberry~s committee would eosure
death or the proposal.
"Let me just tell you the
reality in lhe House. Go to the
education committee and
they've all got interest-group
jerseys on," Fox said.
Gerberry acknowledged later
that he opposes the plan, but
insisted it would receive fair
hearings.
"Personally, I don't think
you're going to ftnd a committee in lhe Ohio General Assembly that (l'Obablf would support
lhis IYJ!.C of legtslatlon. I don't
know· tf Cooper would have the
votes," Gerberry said

Day observed

perhaps 10.000 ll'C 1ti11 alive. The

youngest are in thej.t!IOs.
Al!lerican veterans groups. say
no traps to former battlefields in
France we~ prganized· for fOmler
doughboys. few of·whelm could
· withstand the rlaors of a transAtlanlic fiighL . · ·
Chwth bells pCaled ICnlll Paris
·as Presid~nt Fnncola Mltternnd
knelt and lald a wroada ll.tlle Arc
cle Trio·mpl)e, wbcr• Pra.,ce's ·
lipknown soldier Ia b!aiied. at ~
ii)'mbOllc·hour of 11 a,11., wi!On
fightln&amp; IIDPilethlll Nov.ll, 1918. ·
· Acroas ihe Enalish Clianncl
Queen ·t.fothet E_lizabeda wiD ~

through a rleld of tiny cro11es at
Wesbninister Abbey erected every
year in memory of the w11 dead.
President Clinton was to lay a
wreath at the Tomb or the
Unkno_wns In ArlinJIOn National
Cemetery this momina to mark
. what is called Vet.erans Day in the
United Sliles. A memorial ltlvice
will be held at tile 10mb of Gen.
John PersbinJ, who commanded
U.S; troOpS.
In Australia, Prime Minister
.Paul KCI!ilag sened u a pall beM'CI'
today 10 lay to rest an unknown
Ausualian soldier wbcise remains
Contl~lled on pllae 3

Two policemen wounded,·
suspect killed in shootont
NELSONVll.LE, Ohio (AP) A gunman was killed and two
police officers were wounded early
today when shooting broke out as
police investigated a hit-and-run
accident.
The dead man was idenliflcd by
Nelsonville police as Sean McFall,
19, of Nelsonville.
Wounded were Nelsonvile
pinrolman Jody King, 30, and nearby Buchtel Police Chief Kevin
Clawson, 26. Both were taken to
Grant Medical Center in Columbus, where King was listed in criti-

cal condition and Clawson wu in
stable condition.
According to a news release
issued by Nelsonville police
McFall rired first as omceri
apProached him outside a convemence store on U.S . 33. Clawwas wounded when he went to
King's aid.
A 15-year-old boy who ~pon­
edly was with Mcfall fled 011 root
but was later captured. He was .
taken to a local hospital for treatment of a bullet wound in the
groin , police said.

Local briefs--Girl run over by car Wednesday
A 7-year-old Middleport girl is listed in f'air condilion this morning at Children's Hospital in Columhlll after being run~ by a car
Wednesday afternoOD at the interseclion of Ash and Page Streets.
MiddiCJlOCl:
Jesstca Barnhart, of 360 South Fourth Stteet, was belpin' her
mother, Patricia Barnhart, deliver newspapers when the accident
occurred around 3:15, according to a repon from lhe Middleport
Police Department
Police reported the girl was attempting to enter the moving car
when she was ran over.
The yout.h was ll'liiiSpOrU:d by lhe Middleport squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to General Hartinger Part . I r
where she was transported to Children's Hospital via Uf~.n
~:"'f:'!ll
helicopter for treatment of faCial abrasions and chest injuries. ' "' ··' 1 '"':· 'lf.
The accident remains under investigalion. police reported.
'

Youths hurt in deer-related wreck

Two Reedsville youths were treated for minor injuries foUowing
a deer-car wreck on Hudson Road in Olive Township Tuesday
around 9 p.m.
According to a repon from Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Donald 1. Haning, 16, was soulhbound when he swerved
to miss a deer in the roadway. The car then wen ainto a direh. Soulsby added.
Haning and his passenger, 14-year-old Joshua Smith, were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by emergency units from
Reedsville and Tuppers Plains.

Deer-vehicle wreck reported

A Ponland man's vehicle S1JSiaicled ligha damage in a deer-vehicle wreck on Bashan Road in SuttOn Township Wednesday around
5:30p.m.
Ronnie D. Johnson was southbowtd when he struck a deer that
jumped into the path of hi~ 1981 Chevrolet. The deer left the scene.

Blasting operations underway
Southern Ohio Coal Company will be c-onducting bJastina qlera·
lions for construction of the Danville Venti)ation Shaft for Meigs
Mine 31.
The blutin&amp;, whicll will • place on company property, may
be conducted tiom 8 a.m. 10 S p.m. duough Nov, 19.
Entnlileel to the - will be posted wilh signs and barricaded or
otherwise panled apinst unauthorized entry at least I0 miftutcs
before each blast.
Coatlaued oa paae 3
'J

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'

111 Cowt ltle.et
'--'To OJdo
WiOI&amp;D TO 1Im INJ ..... I8 OJ 'ID vr.,. M''C"ttl &amp;ft4

ROBEilT L WINGE'IT
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller
u:TTI!RS OF OI'INJOH - ~ 1bey lbould be leai tlw1 300
words. All ldlm are ~ to edi1ia&amp; llld lllllll be liJDCd witb name,
.cldral .... 10~-- No Dllliped ltUen will be publisbed. Letten
obould be in pJd lillie. \' MiDI~ IIOl pnorWitiH.

How much will
health.care cost?

Pqs a The Dilly ssnllnel
Polu:ov lldd!sport, Ohio

Russ~an

tiUL~

IJ WALTER R. MEARS

care

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Ctin!Dit wu elected praident with 43.7 ~votes. In hu camer.gn

~=.:=~~=~~~sac:::~:~:e~.::~and~

dcf"JCit ~to 11oot. "li docs not require new taxes,'' he said in a cam·
palgn ..,.et:U31110i1tbU80·
,
.
·
The lima are tho lame, but the cost and savlJJgs projectloos are not so
~now as then. Even 10, the polls indic:aite that 111011 pcople .sliU
tliink tho eM~ arc too low, and believe that•\¥&gt;' would wind up

The Gallia-Jackson·Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction
a~d Menial Health Services will hold its regular meeting 6 p.m.
Nov. 22 at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis.
'

and

·

Wh NAFTI ,t
d·
~
·
.Y ,.
:tt.
_ ne_
e sa ~a.ety n.et

-' - - Area deat·hs --~~
·

Alma Hayman

wft:.:otonn.

Martin

no

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Continued from page 1
·

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Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reports.

were repatriated last week from the
Somme, F,rance - one of World
War l's bloodiest battlefields.
"I saw so many ghosts of my
friends," said Maj . Stephen
McKenzie·, 99, one of 14 World
War I vererans on hand.
An estimated 35,000 people
Hoed ,the streets of Canberra, the
national capital, as its coffin was
taken by gun carriage from lhe old
ParliamCJJt House, where it had lain
in state, to the Australian War
Memorial for entombment
In Paris, Je&amp;Q·Michcl Nonnand,
67. was among those lining the
Champs·Elysees as a cavalry honor
guard trooped by.
"My father fought B1 Verdlin,"
Normand said. "Three times in one
day, he was buried under earth
from shell explosions. There's
ground out there that's just a mix·
ture of dirt and flesh."
Nonnand laments that a war in
which 12 million people died is
being forgotten. "When you talk 10
young people, half pf them don't
know what this is about,'' he said.
"They think it's a work holiday."

The Daily Sen~el

.,

RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) - It's
been nearly a year since this Ohio
River village's major employer
moved, eliminating 3S5 jobs. But
there fUially may be a prospect for
the abandoned 56,000·square.foot ·
U.S. Shoe factory.
Village council has heard from a
mei'al-toefiilg :bu'siness ..:.. Metal
Tee, of Hamersville - allout an
. expansion that eventually would
employ up to 50 people.
If aU goes well, Metal Tee could
be in its JJCw home in 90 days, said
owner Connie Bowell of Lexing·

Nine calls were answered by
units of the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service Wednesday
and early Thursday morning.
At 10:47 a.m. the S)'IIICuse unit
weni to the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabililltion Center to transp&lt;?n
Oc:ta Ward w Vcterans Memorial
Hospilal; B1 2:32 p.m. the Syracuse
squad transported Barbara Fisher
from Mile Hill to Veterans; at 3: 17
p.m. the Middleport SIJ.uad went to
Ash Street for an acc1dent where
Am Ele Power ...................35 1/2
seven.year-old Jessica Barnhart
Ashland OiL ...................... 34 1/2 was struck by a car. She was trans·
AT&amp;T ................................ 57 l/4 ported to General Hartinger Park
Bank One ........................... 37 1/4 and then taken by LifeFlight to
Bob Evans ..........................19 118 Children's Hospilal, Columbus_
Channing Shop .................. 13 S/8
The Syracuse squad took Mike
Champion Ind. ................... 14 3/4 Frankoviak from Fisher Big Wheel
City-Holding ..,.................... :... .32, at 3:49 p.m. to Veterans. and at
Federal MoJ!U) ...... ~ ............25 If.* 4:34 p.m. the Rutland unit transGOOdyear -r.tR ..................43 318 ported Ronald Fry from Route 124
Lands End ..........................44 1/2 ID Vererans.
Limiled Inc ........................213/4
Thursday morning calls includ·
Multimedia Inc. .................37 1/4
Point Bancorp ........................... 14
Rax Reslawant........................05
Reliance Electric ..................... .17
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ................ 17 1!2 HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
.Shoney's Inc......................21 ~12 &lt; Discllarges, Nov. 10 • Tyler
Star B!ink·;· ........,............ ,.. ]~ '·Austin, Mrs .. Eric Blackburn and
Wendy.lnt 1... .....................1.. .,., . daughter, Marjorie White, Earl
Worthington Ind................ 18 1
LaadJilP, Donald Click. Charles
Stock reports are the tlr
, [rrilJble and JiU Combs.
.Lm. quotes provided bJ
, ' ..lrtle, Nov. 10 • Mr. and Mrs.
I!;;;~;;;G;;,i~;;;IU;i;jpolls.;ii
_~·--,i;;JJ;·lll!iliilil
' , BiYY No)VT11811, son, Wells!Dit.

ton, Ky.
Bowen said the company. which
does powder coating of machine
parts for other manufacturers,
hopes to expand its operation to
include metal fabrication . It has
operated its plant in Hamersville,
about 15 miles nm;thwest of Ripley,
since May. -

Light rain fell early this morn·
ing around Los Angeles. Forecast·
crs predicted tess than an inch of
precipitation along the coast by the
afternoon, not enough to cause
mudslides.
.::touds were huvy in the
exuc;me Northwest, along the
Canadian border in New England,
in the Great Lakes ~gion, and in
the interior Southwest from Texas
to Nevada
Winter storm watches were
posted todar for lhe higher eleva·
lions of. Anzona, Ulah, Colorado,

• , '

·

"We're all very happy to have
them," said Virginia Schroth, a
member of the village's Economic
Development Commiuee. She said
the village is continuing to negoti·
ale wilh Metal Tee.

The 1993 campai~ in support
of United States Savmgs Bonds is
off to a record start, acrording to
Paul M. Reed, president, The
Fanners Bank and Savings Cpmpany, Pomeroy.
For the flfSt eleven months of
the 1993 campaign, (October 1992
• August 1993) oounty bond sales
were $587,247 an increase of 43
percent compared to $411,359 sold
during the same period last year,
according 10 Reed.
Reed, who serves as chairman
of the Meigs County Savings
Bonds Campaign, ·reported 1993
fiscal-year-IO-date sales have sur·
passed 1992 record Bond sales.
Final results showed that Meigs
County residents purchased
$450,009 worUt of Savings Bonds
during the 1992 campaign year
(October I, 1991 ·September 30,
1992, an increase of IS percent
compared to $390,896 sold during
the same period a year ago.
The campaign encourages county residents to buy U. S. Savings
Bonds through the payroll savings
plan where they work, and through
application initiated at local fmanClBI instilutions.
Howard N. Gabe, U.S. Savings
Bond Division, Columbus office,
said that while August sales figures
arc the most current for the county,
nationally, Savings Bonds sales for
Fiscal Year 1993 closed at $17.3
billion, an increase of 27 percent
over sales for the same penod last
year ($13.59 billion). Sa.Ies for
September reached $746 m1llton, a
63 percent decrease from . S~ptem·
bcr 1992 sales of $2,~ bilhon.
Although a dramauc decrease
from September 199~ sales, the
S~p\Cmbez sales figure IS the fourth
htghest September sales figure m
the history of the. Savings Bonds
Program •. Gabe satd. The value of
U. S. Savmgs Bonds held by Amer·
icans at t_hc _end of ~~)ltember

ed; 12;52 a:m., Racine unit to Canter Road for Tom Tucker who was
laken to Veterans for treatment:
4:55 a.m. Tuppers Plains and
Reedsville First Responders to
Route 124 for Gloria Decker who
)Vas transported to Veterans, and
8:06 a.m. Racine unit took Corissa
Mulford from Elm Street to Holzer.

F
WOMEN'S ·COLOGNE
YOUR CHOICE

20%0FF
RUSSELL STOVER 2 OZ.

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES

500 2111- 24's

3!

0ao wect:................................................$1 .60
Oao Mootl:. ............................................. .$6.95
Oao Y........................................ ,_,$13.~
SINGLE COPY

PRICE
Dlllly.........................................- 3 5 c....

Subl&lt;ri- not dellqaa to PlY U:e c:arrla- inay
romlt to """'""" diiOct to The Dilly SOttliool

ooalhlee,li&lt;orllmotiiii-.CredttwUibe

1pvea c:.rw _.week.
'
No Mibocripllo01 by 111111 ponnll\04, ID . . .

=

When,...._ tOnicoltaYIIJa!&gt;li.
1
'

.W.v

I

-~
'Jll.a.
'
•, Weeb. ...............
_ ............................
215-.............:_ . .............................$43.16
s:i .....................:........................ $14.16
O.WOM!IpC..IJ'
I) -

.................................c ........... ,$23.40

.. w.M....,....,.....................,....... A45.50
52~ .................................. ... ;..111.40
. I

,

·r

$259

BECTON DICKINSON DISPOSABLE
INSULIN Syringe &amp; Needles

1499 $ Pkg. of 10 11 11

lox of 100 S
COLO NY THEATRE

PAINIUSTER·11
SPECIAL CREAM FOR ARTHRITIS • 3 OZ.
_,.

REG. $5.95

.

SUISCIIP'I'ION IATU
~c.m ..... Motora.a• .

ONLY

REG. $3.93

ONLY

$3 97 .

CLEO CHRISTMAS CARDS

•

~169.

1

55 4

RLENOL GELTAIS

Hospital news

ros'llo!ASTI!It: send o:ddr... chan1ea "' The

'·

ONLY

REG. 79'

Mcmbtr: Tho A11o&lt;ii!led ,_, ud lhe Ohio ·
Nowsp,P.. Allocllllioo. Nationai.Ad...U.Iaa
Repmeautlvc, Branham Newsp11pet Saltl.
733 Tbird Aveaue, New York. New York

,Dally SeGtiael, ltt Coin St, Pomeroy, Obi0 1

reached $169 .084 bttlion, an :
increase of 12 percent over the~
$150.321 billion a year ago, he
pointed out.
Savings Bonds issued on or
aflcr March I, 1993, and held five
years or longer, earn the marketbased imerest rate if it averages
more than the guaranteed minimum
of four percent. If redeemed during
1he ftrSt live years, lhe bonds earn
four percent. The current semian·
nual market-based rate effective
Nov. 1 through April 30 is 4.25
percent. Bonds issued before
March 1993 retain their existi11g ,
guaranteed minimum rates until .
they enter a new extended maturity,
Gabc explained
.
Interest on Series EE bonds is '
exempt from state and local income ,
taxes, and Federal tax may be
deferred until a bond is redeemed
or reaches final maturity. Moreover ,
interest on the bonds may be ·
exempt from federal income taxes
altogether if the proceeds are used
for qualified educational expenses
and the holder's family income is :
within certain limits.
·
The original maturity period for
Series EE savings bonds issued Dll '
or after March I, 1993 will be
lengt~ened from 12 years 10 18 .
years 1n order to ~rve the char· ·
acteristic that, wtth inierest accru- '
ingrate, Series EE bonds double in :
value from issue date to original ·
matwity date.
Gabe said that new issues of
' Series EE bonds held less than five '
years will earn inrerest at a fixed ,
rate of 4 percent. Because of the ,
statutory floor of four percent, the ·
redemption values of new Series '
EE bonds will increase each month ,
rather than sell\i-nn'!.a lly, The
redemptipn· values ·on oUIIWICiing
Series E and EE ~:~ .. .~ngs :
notes, however, will continue to
increase semiannually he advised
'
·

MEl'S &amp; WOMEI'S

Stocks

Publihed every artemooa. -Monday thtouah
,friday. Ill eo..t St, Po~. Ohio by !lie . , .
Ohio Valley Publilhio1 ~y/Muldmodll .
loc., Pomeroy. Ohio 4S769, Ph. 992·21S6.
Second cl• poltaao paid at Pomonoy, Ohio.
·

10017.

Fair skies wete orecast for
Southeast and the Atlantic :
seaboard.
•
Highs wen: forecast in the 40s :
and 50s across the northern states :
and as far south as central Arizona •
in the west. dipping inco the 30s in :
the nonhemOreat Lakes region. :
In the Southeast, southern-ceo- :
ua1 Plains and extreme Southwest. •
highs were forecast in the 60s and ;
70s.
•
The high temperature for the :
nation Wednesday was 88 degrees:
at Coolidge, Ariz., and Ft. Laud· •
erdale Beach and Hollywood, Fla. '

BILLFOLDS by Amity

(USPS 20.'111)

.

&lt;i • - 1..., '

Youtb Da1 to be held
·Meeting changed
The Racine First Church of the
The November meeting of the
Nazarene will observe Nazarene Gallia-Jackson·Meigs Board of
Youlh International Day Saturday Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Menfrom .! to 3 p.m. at the church . tal Health Services will be held
Sports, fellowship and refresh· Monday at the Holiday Inn in Gal·
mealS will be fcawred. The event is lipolis at 6 p.m. The board typically
for children, ages six to 16, and meets on the third Monday of each
~attending
are asked
10 takeona monlh at 7 p.m. at the board office.
•- fnelld.
The church
is located
~Blvd.
·
Chinese Auction to be held
-;Moden Woodmen of America
#4798 will sponsor a matching
fund Chinese Auction and cow
plop at Alexander High School in
Albany on Saturday from 3 p.m.
The~ will be over 100 drawings in
the auction.

Ripley has prospect
for U.S. Shoe plant

..

75th ...

C

:Iii,-.

·

'l

seen

for-.._

.

Alma Donna Hayman, 81, of
Pike Street. Hartford, W. Va., died .
Monday, Nov. 8, 1993,!¥ Pleasant
Valley Hospiial. Point Pleaslint, W.
Va.
Born on 'Sepl-.30, 1912 B1 Rock·
land, she was !he daqhtcr of the
late Charles W: Swan and Alma
Mae Fulton Swan. She was a mern·
ber of the Hobson Church of Christ
in Christian Union.
She it survived by her husband,
Waid B. Hayman of Hartford; a
daughter and soJJ·in.Jaw, Cheryle
and Robert C. Knight, Hartford, W.
Va.;
a sister, Vers Hayman, Pomeroy,
and two grandchildren.
Besides her parel)ts, she w~s
preceded in death by .a son, Archie
Andrew Hayman, a brother, Clyde
Swan, and three sisters, Geraldine
Wheeler, Pauline McGufien, and
~{X)omis:-"'-" . .
..~: ,.
~
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home, ·Pomeroy. ·Elder
Dan Hayman will offic1ate and
burial will be in the Letart Falls .
Cemetery. Friends may.call at the
funeral home today (Thursday)
from 61D 8 p.m.

Tbe Clinton Crusade for negotiating and eoactinf NAFI'A. age of global economy.lt givcis ul
They claim NAFTA will mean a ~
NAFI'A is not~ Y~
.
A11d there are 66 new y elected leverage over Mexico's e"viron· net job'gain, not job loss. But with· :
It hangs on bte ru·4pslav•a's Democrats, many of whom are menial and wage costs while wip.
Marshal Tito, issuing daily repons IDidcr lhe impression (u.sually !llis- ing out-Mexican' tariffs dial arc 2.S ~~nad:'!~::t to back ~t up, no
-..~..
dlat itls·afive
w~l- paper·
timeJ ,higher than ours. Yet on
7
....
dial' a a certaillty, PanettuaicL "If we fail to JIUJ this
lltin press
thai~ doubt
Schrlllli NAFTA.labor's ~ c:rY is"~
til PJ,an, 100 I8'CMI of AIDeric:es c:an lie apect.ejlio pay higher insurance wor!h their weig~t. in· gold. But
· IIO-IIC!iolll" r- a llipffloJ!'tl\flt ~f · ·
'i• ·~~~~~~,"''iiilaid. "beCIUie tblt'a ,whele hcallh ~ coau are going don I pay a penny more until taken) that'lhey owe dleir congres. tOda,Y'a Jailor leaders tn tlle ·dO· ! 1 "
nptoow."
you've heard the auossment or sional existence to the money ailcl n0tbin1 role of yesterday's.conserto Corpo.rite
,
.
Rep. Bob Matsui. The avvy Cali· votea delivered in 1992 by orp. Wtives.
.
.
IDI'I'Oil'l NOTE- Walter L Mean, m ·pmldeot and colnm- fomia Democrat is leading Preai· nized lallor ,-the iame ~clll
~ Bizarrely, labor cauti®s that
':,""th
·•lat for 'nlf Associated Pr-. llal reported oo Washington aod dent ~inton's !1ght for the North . interest that is now lllreatcmng to NMiJ'A'1Mi,ll ma1ce ~firms ,,
our Ami&lt;lri'"'''•
iallau• p tid
30 ·~
Amcncan Free Trade Apecnicnt in cut off money and vo~ for any· walK 10 shift more jobs to Mexico
~orporate
,
·
the ~se. but be-docs DOl let bis Democrats who dare bact their because it will .mate Me~tico With the .
Worker.. We, . :
T.
quest cloud his c;aodjlr.
president on NAFI'A.
stronger and more itable. ~ay the unders!pnCC! co~orauons, : 1
"We have 10 have a perfect fit
The~ ID enaCting NAFI"A has what.? Isn't that whll our foreign pledge tha~ t N1iFT
. At. ~ ~nac~e!f. . l
.
·"
•
,
•
from now on,'' 'Mitsui told me. · been rad1cally reshaped' by new =:t:the,Americ:uliasbcenJor . we~Jiotcrea~a~jobl~m l
·
·
B7·'hl AIIOCiated Prell ·
"We have to get every Democrat truths:
.
? We'D never 11a11 the iiJo. the ~nt~ ~lites ':'hll~ cresung a 1
Todlyla Thurailay, Nov. 11. the 31Sth day of 1993. There are so.uys in die House whcnk have 1 chance · (I~ The Clinton·Eisenhower gilimmigratioJJ IUIIil we achieve · net.iobh P1
'
·1
, 11 m Mc:fltltco.
1
left In
1bla Ia y...,. n.y in the U.S., and ~membrance Day or getting."
·
·
Similitude. Our young leader, who the very end labor deC:iies.
tha • a sa e Y net strong ' I
·in
t
,
·
It can haJIIICII. Alid if rommon l never served in tlie military, still
I Meanwhile, C~te America
save NAFI'A~
.
Tadafalfilhtigbl Jaibary: .
sense rules, n· will; Mter al!, as has o~e ,striking parallel with
has beCn little help,. bankrolling writer ror
Is a ~lea!~ . ,
... • • fhe- ... • Nov · 11 1918 fiahdng in World War I ended Matsui and ICDlor Cllnrm·ldviJers A~penca • commander.hero of pto-NAFf A tclev1sion ads that
aper a erpn.., '
~f.r~ai ;;:'"nMdce betWOCII A.IJlej and Germany.
pointed out In recent Interviews, WQrld War n: CtintoJJ hasthe · -.- 100 slick, and lhu5 ineffective. Association. ' '
·
l
those Democra11 who are stlll political coallails of • Eileohawer
·
011 dill
II 1620, 41 Pllpl• abOard the Ma~owe(, '!'C~?rCII orr !1a•· undec:idcd have, in fact, already jacket. During the' Clinton presi·
t
_....,lip 11 Cllllll*l cat1lng for a • body polltlclr: to enact · just made pne pivotal decision: They dcncy, there have beCJJ six big 11110
1
lftd illlll llwa.''
·
.
.
.
.
. . have decicled that, oti ~ merits, ·and local elections - and six
. ·
1
·
IIi lUI b •• *'t Nit 1\trnCr, who had led a violent UISID'R!CIIIli1, NAFT~'s critics do aot have .a Republican victOries. Uildecic!Cd
I
~-5 r':IIII!RW!':J'.V~~2nd· ..:-• ., ·
..
~gc~.~dlthelr_.. CDemocratsll canfmdno~tyina ~ ,
.i:,
', l'lti.,Wllt!P"'om ~-'" --:"" ,
•· ,,.
.· UC:Sthat . ..... u~AFTA,byiodiilg
ilton . ptomiseof~idi£Jabor , .~,
,
1:11911, Ps; r•• rll Htldlni dedk:aled die T0111b of die Unlplc)wn Sol tariffs between !he Uilltecl SlatOI blacklists them· bec:1uae of i
·. . . . . .11Miot'""C&amp;illllr)'· . · , ,; ·
, .·
;, and Mexico and C!a']"'', WW.aeDcl NAFTAvo:e. '.
"
, ',,
11 mt,
S111it11 h IIIII Irvin&amp; Bedlil • ~ Blea j\merlca 1011111 ~.000 Jolia fOoth to ltfal· "" (2) The Great Labor·~· Tory
.J
• MIIJIL
·
.
' .
•.
co. But tbey remala uodeclded Swttc:h•.Ooc:e, libcrala adv!ICated
II I9G, dlilla Wadii W• 'l_"wo, ~ CUI'fle~ its oq:upa!lon berlule ol ~iw lllll- polill· positive ICdon ,to 10lve IIIOblems; \
Dr~
...
. c:alt...not ~· conservatives advocated slicking
fa I
Dah '•p!Gr~ll!i= ulndeperile!a flolp Britain. .
To put Cllllloo'• NAFI'A Cru· . lhelr heads In die land, ltopiqllhe '"
. 11 I
0 ' 1 XD bllntct
~.:.r~~ with lade bito Its Pft!l*, dire pOlitical .POO!enl \YOUid fix ltlelf.ln thil c:ri·
.-.....~!'..tu•A.~:'...
Ita buo It~
to lhe South penpac:live, consider th~: :rtJe~ ~Is o~ and90a ...,.... '!'«*sands of .,.
'' ~ ~ f
I ,
II am 1
ovw
•. .
1ft Oll)y 6S PeiDocrals left ID the
JObs .ihlfted· by AmOrican rompa·
• I
.•J
col11dn't
'find
a
job,
so
I
got
Into
eareer
coun·.
VI
Jl5
IYtllllolizl!'J tho end of dlmct U. · military mvolve- Houle out of the 91 who vocec1 in nics to Mexiro ud elsewhere a
. ~~ .
seling. • · · '
•·
•
.
l •
-ladle Vlecrr• W•.
.
,
. 199llor the fast·II1Cit IJlllloach for NAPTA is PD$itive·adion ill ·the

and
mlcascs

Saturday tlerouJih MoodJ!;y:
A chance ohhowcrs Saturday
and Sunday. Lows ill upper 30s to
low 40s. Highs i,n upjlcr 50s to low
60s. Chance of rain on Monday.
Lows in the low 40s. Hlghs in the
mid·50s.
'

South·CeJJtral Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy witlt a
low around.·40. Priday, mostly
cloudy with a high in the low 60s.
Chanec of rain is 20 percent
Extended forecast:

•

the need for vengeance in the
minds of so many women workers
who have had to endure the
dcmcatlingdominalionoflecherous
bosses.''
. Ther.e· may be some truth .10
what Sarii'C.charges. Sexual harass·
rncnt of those less powerful in the
w.o rtplace, whose jobs often
dcpcn4 on die whim of the harass·
er, is something lhe whole country
has had a belly full of. As is the
ease with child abuse accusations,
it has almost llecome politically
~ toeverquesti9n such aUe~tion.s. Eve~ the American Ci_vil
Liberties Umon, tare the champ1on
of the likes of the Ku Klux Klan,
loots the other way while the
Ethics Committee paws at Pack·
wood's diaries.
• · · owe p ackwood a
. If _.emm1sts
kiCk ID the rear for his pinches of
thei~, we aJs:o owe him gratit)lde
for his work tn llehalf of the DJht
to privacy. Condoning the taking
away of Packwood's rights is no
way to procect out own.
Sarah Overstreet Is a SJndl·
cated writer for ·Newspaper
EaterpriseAssodallon.

I •,

- - - - - W e a t h e r - - - - - --Meigs announcements--

Packwood as a rig t to privacy
Sarah Overstreet

"and

Mental health board to meet

~-·

vege~ation.

1993 Savings Bond
.
campaign off to a good start j

Continued from page 1

-

~~ 9~:~ry c:oni~ittcc that ·.
dlioks 1t has sniffed out some 1Jlis. ·
conduct, no one is going to have
much rue in .the llelly to bop die
valuable .behind-the-scenes infor·
mation thattnhances ~Bob Packwood's 1s ·a pathetic
story, but a.famil~ ~!DC .in politics:
a .man whose public ~re IS as champ1on to groups needing prolection,
but in private a man from whom
olhers need procection.lronically, it
is among one of the groups he best
protected dlat he stumbled worsL
While he was fighting to keep the
S_enate from eroding abortion
nghts, femate· co-workers say he
w&amp;S groping them iJJ offices and
cloakrooms.
The other great irony in the
Packwood sap is that the constibl·
· nat ng
· ht 10 pnvac:y,
·
.~.
Ito
""'under·
pinning.ofpro-c:~ Jaw, is eliiCt•
Jy ~hat die~ Ethics Commit·
tee 1s trashtng 10 go after Pack· ·
wood
,
S)'l!dicated columnist William
Sarue "lmtes that the Packwood
ethics investigation "is not about
accusations of one senatot's past
boorishness. It's about satisfying .

Ohio Sunday will cause a chance of
showers over the weekend. Highs
win be above normal arouJJd 60.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 71 degrees in 1949
while the record low was 19
degrees in 1957.
Sunset tonight will be at 5;19
p.m. Sunrise Friday at 7:13 a.m.
and sunset will be at 5:18p.m.
Around the aatioa,
Clouds streiChed over much of
the nation today, and Southern Cal·
ifomians kept an eye out for land·
slides in areas weakened by wild·

Local briefs...

_

• h

Clouds ·are expected Friday
statewide with a slight chance of
showers mainly over the western
counties. Highs will range from the
mid SOs to lower 60s,

•lcoiumbus!sa· I

1l

.

Jtlbo is 1 subject of IOIIIC sensitivity. It is aclllll, not actuarial. And it
·With. libraries and .liii'OF'stOres didq'·~ r~~liz~. my actiou 'Were
with a bit of recent history, to show what can happen when rates 'go filled wtth sttamy r~c:non, why on offens•ve 10 I responded, warts
up, even for biOidened coverage.
earth. would the Senate Ethics and all"
Congress expanded -Medicare ill 1988 to rover catastrophic illrless ~o11_1mittcc need Bob Packwood's
But Jet's, just for the sake of
c:osJI. widl hiJI!Ier premiums and a·special surtax on high income retirees diaries?
ID pay for il. iilrring elder opposidon that led to ~peal in 1989.
. If the~ hope to ~blain correct
This situadon Is very diffetent;, said Ira Msgaziner, the top White mformauon to sec tf S~n. Pack·
House adviiiCf on hcallh care. He said some people are going to have to wo~d. ~·~re., com,mlttc~ any
pay more to .JI!Dvidc for their own prO!ection, so that everybody carries ethiCS Vl&lt;!labons, tl!eY d do J~ as argument, assume that every word
theg~O:~lkl. who wss'punued
jeered by demonstrat·
to piCk IIJlthe ~~De in Packwood's diary is true. And
in~r~ dtizenl in Chicqo during lhe Medicare episode, is han4ling
tee! novel With Fabio tearing the then let's assume that all die com·
tJJi widl
"We ~pnxnt the people," he aid,
if the people busller off a woman 0!1 the ~cr. miuee wants is 10
if Paclcwood
want health insurance and are willmg to pay for It, as a recent poll Men who
~gh life tryJng to job~ his influence 10 get his wife a
showed. lhey'm f?ing ID get it. ••
paw ~ t lip~ c:o-wf!:·
But he !11Jo said in aCNN interview that if substantial numbers of. pea- ·~~
as 11'111
Yas ys
F'lfSt, criminal JliOSCCUtors can't
pie would 11e payinf more, "we'll juSl have to mate IIOi1IC adjustments."
~ ~ ~~:~~~~thf09111 w:: ~C::;: u~res~x:~~':!e ~:~sg::~
The price quetJiiiD ~w out of administration teslimony for the Clin·
.
Y•
etr sex
ton p11n on ~ 28. • For a relatively small number of our citizens, this. m~~r die
.
·charged. Thae are 110 criminal pronew sys1a11 Will eM a bit more," Secrcrary of Health and Human Ser·
t
senatOrS are trying 10 cecdlngs going on now • as .there
.Donna Shalala "d
get a loot at what Packwood SIIJl"
were when Nixon's White Hoose
vicesS oan· 1Patri Moynihan the chairrnail wanted to know tiow po~ly ~veal~ allout his fellow
tl1"'5 w~ sou~L ~ e~ com·
en.~ailing
t~ thatc die ·who1e M'ed'•care nap sternme
'
d f rom as1•g
legislators afflllfS,
shame onaren't
diem.
m1ttcc
. ht Packwood'•
mPy,
co·wortcrs
e. IS only tn die mvestia•tory
. .,..
818
change 10 fees five ycarsqo.
bcina&lt;" ...,_,,.... pd the should
g•
d'
.
The esil1111te then in an HHS chart. was that 40.4 percent would pay
... m . - - . .
Y
. Seco~d, a . tary ts a per~nal
•
,
!Je fuU' protcc:ted ~anyone see- ~at tn wh1ch every Amencan
m~oynihan said tfilt·- p J 'to mean eonvincing a IOiof"'pC(jpfe- tlia~"""!I•W n 'he·•rOIC 411 a personal,,,.. m:~_he,.2!hlw the,priYilege
the would et more for lhel' money. or should pay more as a civ1c duty. du~ry •• Wha! t~ey.are obse)'v~d
to comlle Wllhobt'tthl:rs ~.. Je·~ not ~ways very &amp;004 at that," be said.
domg ~ty .0 bgh~ yean away
S~ll)e leaders have always. te~t
Usin the lowered 4iliimlle on individual Q&gt;SIS, about S1 million pco· from w 0 wntteJJ ~t ~ by
diaries to record eveniS _for h•~·
1 man whose expansive view of
1
fd 11e JJIYIDIIDOie dian they do JJOW
·
cal reference
autojltographies.
pen,:'ubignumber,IIIClabig~iob. · . .
•
.
reality runs the gamut from "I If diaries become the tromp!ng

one care.

40.

IND.

y

CCliiiCII

and

..

""'!':"!..

_

~!!i-!r:E.E~r~=~oo.Shehadcalled ~Bob

•

I'Toledo I 54• I·

·

[r:••'".'1

·

•

pre:teot 'fo~~ _Wanaw Pact . UDtil iro!J~lad law.s are in ,P~
nauons from .JOmJ.III NATO and ~tccl!'g ~ nJhll of etbJIJC
that Russian troops prOtect the RassiiD IDIIIDrlbel_ m those newly
ri&amp;bts of RDSSie millociliea in the ir:dep&gt;•le!'l COUIIIriel.
.
••
DOW·independent fonner Soviet
II! leecDl days. die RUSS~~~! m~
Jq~UMics
tary 1111 bec:ome m~re ~clive m
W~grium
Although details of the ape· . IOIIIC lrOUbJccllqJUblica lib Qeor.
meat biYC DOt bealllllde public in gia DJ!d Azerbaijan~ and in the
ralcc over COIIII'Ol and ICCUiily of all
Moscow Yd. U.S. iotePiP"' - · . lq)Ublics of ceatral ~
key national assets - aaclear lyi!S say that is • die bart of die
U.S. experll beheve the JJew
P."CC' plants, major iMi•1 ia1 facil. new policy y eJtsio 181=1 to.
~g rules for the Russfan miJ.
llies llld die in!unal uansporwion
Analysts say the new policy ttary go even furt~er. ~efore
sySiall.
appears to be even broader than Yel~ln's confrontatton w1th the
As predicled, the power of Rusdlcy might have expected. Report· ha'dliners, there was ~ena-al.~
sian DefCrJSC Minister Gen. Pavel edly, YeltsiJJ ended up cboosing men: that the RuSSian mdttary
Grachev, 44, is c~y m the rise. between two competing policies_ should lie sharply downsized, pn.
At lhe crilicaliDOIIICDt in die m:au me brought forward by Grachev; '!llfilY for economic: reasons. ~·
stalemetc betwcco Yeltsio and bis the other more conservative, l~nt had passed a !aw, wh•.ch
coJJScrYative oppoiiCIIts, Gracbcv Dll!hored by YeiiSin's new natioDal Yeltsm ~ c;aJllllng die SIZC
rallied the Anny io suppon of security adviJer, Oleg Lobov.
of the Russ1111 military ~ I pc:rc:cnt
Ydtsiuod disiJIIdled J*llloopen
In a meetin• with RussiaJJ of the populatlo~ 1 wh1ch would
from the elite feanttmirovsty Divi· I'CpCX1eD. Grachtv would not talk ~ a C1JIRIIl ceiling of about l.S
sillo to put down the hardlinc:n bar· about the specifiCS of the new poli· mtU10n.
.
.
~ ::::;~~'i!Atb;• cy. But he spoke sharply against
The ~w pol1cy does away w1.1h
"' .....
..,.
the idea of WlOIW Pact countries any spec:1fic cap. Radler, the wnt·
lfOOPI to Yellsin's side, U.S. Rus· joining NATO and offered strong ten policy aPJlBRIItiY says the RussiaJJ experts predicted that be support for tecpinJ Russian lrDO!!' sian military should maintain lhe
would demand that Ydtsin IICCk 10 in places like Lativia and EsiOIIla minimum strength necessary to
repel foreign ~ and main·
wn the clomesuc peace. It is not
clear how many troopS that is, but
f
,/"""
-'
it is many more than l.S minion.
}'""'..9,
More troubling to Western
_
observers is a st•tement \hat
Grachev li1IKie concerning the doc·
Ot ~I.IAPS: /
trine of "no rlfSt use,'' to which
rtn~-~~
the Soviet Union had long sub·
-~
scribed- die promise not to be the
first to use nuclear weapons in a
conflict,
o~·
~
"There is nothing in the new
~WO.~~
doctrine about non-use of
_
weaponJ/' 'Grachev told reporterS.
Asked specificslly about a no-first·
use pledge, Grachev said: •'That
'DI AWi'o • ~ I
th S · U ·
Doc th
~HI A
,_niJ!IV\MO,
was e ov1et mon.
s e ..
AIIP
~'r:r!!'r.• have such a pledge,
HE~f60VJHA
U.S. analysiS say it is infponant
th W h"
at as mgton· not overresct to
the new Russian military doctrine.
Even though it gives the Russian
r&amp;:::;\_
military a much more direct and
~
expanded role, under lilly: circum·
- ......_..-~'Q·--:-~~~j..
stances
RIISSian
military today
L'IUIIIIIMf,'
. onIYathe
shad
.
_
_
IS
OW 0 f What the SOVICt
mil:~~: Waaman is a cvndi·
e
-•
cated writer. for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

&amp;...,

WASHJNG'I'ON- Amid die intricacies of health care change, the
IJI(lllthly price ill for die aYCIJI&amp;e American - who would pay more, or
1cu _ is a plliJl. everyday question the administration has had uouble
answering.
They've$
' tried qain, after IICJUbbing the numbers, as they say in
hcaldl
The new
inistn1tion l!l2ima&amp;e is that costs would $0 up for 30 per·
cent of heaJth.inlaie!J Americans under President Chnton's proposal.
inslad ofthe40J~C~tCIItthey'd said llef~~~e.
Budpt Director Leon Pinetta said the increases would aversge about
S24 a IIICIIIIh. wltile 10 pcltCIII of die people who now have fiealth insur·
aoce would save • avaqe of $61 a nionrh.
.
The Cldler, blpcr lllimber wu no oflhand estiiDI'IC; it came from the
DciJirimCIIt of Health and HIIJIIIII Services, computed down ID the dec:imal. By :Ilea. die CJinrm propam had been delayed. refmed, recanputed,
llllde illlo 1 bill ed clcacribed in a book.
So the price~ is self-inflic:tc4, Dll a point thai is particularly vul·
nerabJepciidcanybean¥ it is 10 limply pilL
Hillary R.odlwn Clinton saw it coming. "This will be the next big
pound ollltack aaliDSt die prclidcllt's proposal," she said Monday. The
praidcol and die first lady WIICd a counteroffensive, saying that most of
the people flcingltighcr COliS would get better Q&gt;verage for small incl't'aea, and that die rat, about IS pcreent, are healdly young people who will
up •····.
-~·•~h
That'•"""
fair, CJilllon said.
Besidei, he laid. everybody JC111 more value because "100 percent of
die Amaic:an people JCl aomethins no one has today, absolute secwity.''
Then, after a week. the Cltimate was ~viJed on Thunday, and reduced
30
10 pcn:enL Scc:rctary of the Treasory Uoyd Bentsen explained that the
previous one didn't .tate into account offsetting savings like lower

Today will be
and mild in
the stste. Sties wtll be mostly
c:. loudy in the north aJJd partly
cloudy in the south. Highs will
nmge from die upper 50s to lower
60s. Normal highs will be in the
SOs.
Skies will be partly to mostly
cloudy 'IIM!(ght with lows around .

MICH.

sappon police -ia ~aiataining
t,c..,. .,;.. onb, "••"' 10 liiUnl
disuters and!'Jht terrorism. In
addition, the • iwy is going to

b
Ro ert ].

The Dilly Sentinel P8gr 3

~Fr~·d~·Y~·~No~v:!·!~~~t~~or~~con~di~.ti~ons~~~~~ . ~~~~~Or~~~.,!~~~~.
~~~e~~-~~r
_w:._~~~~d
,
4rr.
d!e :

military to become more active ·

. WASIIJN!l10~ &lt;NEAl.- ~
widely ~ted 1.11 U.S. mtelh·
poce circb, die.Rnssiao military
11M Ileal pvcn ~ new powm
by 1tassie ~.,.....Boris Ycltsin.
1'bis is Ydlsin's payoff far die mil·
i~'s hacking d-e~recent
c:riu with Russie
·
The Rossin ncwspapcr Izvestia
t. poblithed • iK:WWll of what it
dcaaillea as a top secret 23-pa-e
eucutive order signed by Yellsin.
~ iaucd ~the IIPIC of his secunty council. The decree, says
lzvalia, will allow the military a
mach c:Jpaoded role • home 10 put
~ ci"!J clistarllances. and. proteCt
Rnss!ID mteresu outside Its bor·
ders.
His~rically, t!'e Sovie! army
DCYct tntcrYened m domes~ mat·
tm. That 'WID ~to die polil:e and
!he ~GB, but llliiCe die latter-~ at
Its dispos~ a ~'!ge p~amtb~
fon:c, SoVJCt military mtcrveniJDII
wasalmostamootpoint. .
Under the new doctrme, the
Russian army will lie allowed to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

~,Nowe:nber11, .1113

~Tr....011P ~_,.~-mfGPN·

AP S,deJ CorretpOIIdent

Thumtay, November 11, 1993

'

101 OF 30

·DEPARTMENT. STORE
H2·31U ·

$9.00 val••

ONLY

$299

,, NOJ'PB.BR FINANCING SPECIAL,.

t$
.

·10'00

. DOWN

$1 ooo '
:

ONE

PER MONTH

0%

APR
KennelllliloCiilloull!, Fl. Ph. CllllriH Rlllle, R. Ph.
ROIIIIcltwlnlng, A. Ph.
Mon. t11nt $at 1:00 a.m. to t:OO p.m .
Sunci8y 10:00 a.m. to 4:00p.m.
PRESCRIPTION
PH.~ ·
. E. Mitln FriendlY Servlc:e "-Y, Oh.
Weelt

�•
•

•

Thursday, ~~vtmber 11,11193

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

In upcoming Saturday battle,

the AL MVP wae Hlmk GriUibeag penonnd cbanp:i." he said. "We
(1935), AI Rosea (l9S3), Mickey might need 10 go 01&amp; and get lmthMantle (19S6). Frut ltobinson er hiltin lhreaL"
(1 966), Denny McLain (1968),
For \is own part, Thomas
Reggie Jacbon (1973) and Jose already bas started worlring out for
Can5eco (1988).
.
next season. He credits working
" This was the loosest day or with weiJhls last win~r with
my life," said Th••oa:c, wbo was so adding a measure of power that
pumped up lhat be slept
about inaeased his home nm poduction
three boors ~y nighL 'Tbete by 17 over his 199210111 of24.
was a lot of l!!!iciparioo going on,
One other thing might help him:
and when the call f'mally came, I He won't hllve 10 face Nolan Ryan
Jot il on the fint ring." .
ever apia. Ryan, who retired this
lbomas' viclory pYe the White year, was Lhe. only pitcher who
Sox liiRie of tbe four AL pos~Sea­ always tamed him - Thomas was
son awards. Jack McDowell was 0-for-12 with 11 strikeouts in his
. voted the Cy Young Award and caiur
Ryan.
Gene Lammt was voted Manaaer
Thomas and the White Sox
of tbe Year. The last leam 10 bave agreed last mmth Ill a $29 millim,
three different people CIJliiR lhoiC four-year extension that runs
awards in Lhe same season was lhrouah 1998.
Atlanta in 1991, when Terry
A[ balling champion John
Pendleton was the MVP, Tom Olerud, Molitor's ~mate, was
Gla~ was the Cy Young winner
third in votinJ, followed by Texas
and BObby Cox was the lOp manag- outi~elder Juan Gonzalez. Seattle·s
er.
Ken Griffey Jr. was fifth.
Thomas said the While Sox,
wbo lost 10 Toronto in die AL playThomas receives a $100,000
offs, miJht need another Slrong bat bonus ror winning. Molitor and
10 ge110 the next level.
Olcrud received $25,000 bonuses.
"I'm sure there will be some

f01
second-ranked
NOlle
Dame
in
Satnrday's showdown against No. I
,..
Florida Slale.
; And it's not just bec•nse Florida
State leida the nation in scoring
o(fense (44.1) AND scoring
defense (6.4). •
Altltough Notre Dame has
played in more No. 1 vs. No. 2
games than any other school, the
Pightins Ii'ish hav~ never won
when 1hey were No. 2. They are 4•
2·2 in Games oftheCeniOry, but 0when ranked secOnd.
The No: 2 Irish lost io No. 1
Army 48-0 in. 1945, played II !lalf!l·
less tie aga1nst No. 1 Army 1n
)946 and lost 10 No. I Purdue 3722 in'l968.
But that's history. Right now,
Notre Dame is more concerned
llboul a Florida State squad thai has
made most of its opponents look

:z-t

•g•

Scorc iJoard
Loo AnacJco ...... I 7 ~
Sud............... 4 10 3
........... ........... 4 10 2
Edmanlm ......,.. 3 13 I

-•NBA•EASTERN CONFERENCE
-II&lt; PI-

TII'~PeLCI
NowYad&lt; ............... .A 0 1.000
O!llndo ...................3 0 1.000
.5
.....................3 I .750
I
How ~«My ..............2 I .647
1.5
lofloml ......................l I .500
~
~ ............. 1

3

w....................... l

.250

3

3 .250

3

.....................2
Allanu .....................1
Cllotloao .................l
~ ......... 1

Mil•aU. ...............I

lndlano ................... .o

I .150

I
2
2
2
3
3

67
31
&lt;10
46

67
5!
59
66.

WedDeldat•-

llatllaot4, nar.. ! (Of)
I'!Ubd~phla 5, Bullok&gt; 3
flarldo3,Mamwll
N.Y. RonJon 2, Winnl(loll
Now Jmoy !5, N.Y.llliailtn 3
Vanccr.~,..4, Loo A...... 0

••

.5
1.5
1.5
1.5
l
2.5

.667
.333
.333
.333

.2SO
.000

after beln11 named the American Leape's MVP
ror 1993 Wednesday In Cblcaso. (AP)

THOMAS HONORED - With blllrile Ellie
and tbeir 10ft SterliDJ to his left, Chk:ap Willie
Sox slill~Jfl' Frank ~ llalbes a •ile abortly .

I'(

II

•I ' ' J' t. •
' t
I

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1 '

'

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, ' I,

'

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I

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'• ..
••

••

••

Mld-DI•iobo
TWLPd.CI
Houlton ...................3 0 1.000
Uloh .........................3 I .150
.5
San Antonlo- .......... .2

2

..500

1.5

llehind tb·e Whalers' aet 'In tbe first period or
UPENDED - The Hartrord Whalers' Bryan
Wednesday
nlgbt's NHL game In Harford, CODD.,
MarciiUKnt (rt&amp;llt) Is qpuded by Ottawawlnawhere
the
Whalen
won 4-3. (AP)
man Darcy LOewen as they cliase Lhe loose :pack ·

W.Va.
a

HUNTINGTON,
(AP) ' more he!ght·b~ my sky kicks."
_David Merrick's mom is tough
Memck Slid he lea~es the r_ole
' ·u
of team leader to others, hke
~n Merrick hit four of five fleld lineback~r. William King, "who's
aoals as the Herd beat East Ten· always !Pvmg 100 percent and realS
da Th 1 ly working hard."
11essee ·state ,las t al!Jl' Y·
a
"I don't think you ever have
flroke the. school stngle-game kickers who are leaders on the
" M · k 'd "I think I .
record he tied last )'C3' and shared
with Ed Hamrick (1976), Scoll team~
emc S8l •
J~St
t.aTulipe (1982) and Dewey Klein ~o w!th the flow. I come to pracuce
ti988).
JUS! ~k~ everyone else.
.
; But his mother still sees room
It s to~gh to ~e a k1cker
- ~r improvemeiiL
1x7ause you re not domg _the same
"She thinks I do a pretty good thl~gs !!te rest~r~~ ~IS always
·j&gt;b but she was upseithe other day domg, he ~d. Yo'! re not out
.-1-'hen I missed the Held goal 'ther~ runmn~ p~aellce plays.
' •gainst (East Tennessee State),·· You ~eon the std~lines domg son:te
. fiierrick said. "She wanted me 10 k1ckmg_. so you re not really 10
·lje 5-for-5. But there's always room there .~1th the sweat and the hard
·for improvemenL"
work. .
.
-~ M~ck, a 6-foot-1, 195-pound
Mernck S!'ld he would make
- ju~ior rrom Worthington, OhiO, has on~ f~ange, gtven ~chance.
hit 32 or 34 conversion kicks this
I m ~appy w1th what I h~ve
season and bas made 12 or 15 field now, but I~ probably be a_ nerd 1! I
goals.
.
~~~ to do 11 over," Memck S81d.
, He made· four of five last SaturI d. come to co!le$e on an aca.day as 1he Herd beat East Ten- dem1~ scholars~1p mstead of an
'l)essce State. He -also handles kick- ath!~Uc sch_olarshlp;
,offs for the Herd.
Athl~llcs ~on 1 get you, a cup
~ He said he's made great strides of corfcc ~~.a dii!C!' once_YO!f, re o'!l
. ill the latter area since high school, of college, Memck sa1d.. . But 1f
· hen "I couldn't kick off worth a you have a good educauon then
yo~ ,h~ve a ~ter cbance.
.
' "Kicking off well you can set
I m geumg ~ good educauon
;ihe tone or the ~ame, and that's here and,I'm play111g a~ llov~1
.: iin{Klrtant." Merrick said. "f want soh I ~don I regret what I ve done,
··t!J 1mprove on my kicko(fs. I ~uess e sa1 ·
1-AA second-ranked Marsha! I
· t!tc only way 10 do that is 10 kick it
'out of the end zone.... And I want (7-2, 5-1 Southern Conference) IS
"•
at FUrman (4-4-1, 3-3)on Saturday.

ToniRhi'IIIDiea

Flaridut OUawa, 7:!!5 p.m..
New Jeaey a
7:35p.m .
Woohil!pn 11 T..,po y, 7:35 p.m.
PIUiblqllll OUcap.l:!l p.m.
Toror40 at SL l.AWI, 1:35 p.m.
Sill lOll It O.U.., 1:55 p.m.
Anllht:im -' Calpry, 9:35 p.m..

I'll'"[''

Den"cr .................... .!

2 .333

2

Dou.. .......................
Minnaou ................0

3

3

o

.ooo

3 .000

3

Pa&lt;lllc Dloto._
SeatUe ...................... l

0 1.000

fltlocni.11 ....................J 1 .750
Sacramen10 ..............2 I . ,6/lJ
OoWon
t -- ·2 .353

J

LA. Clippon ........... l

2
2

1

s................

l'unlmd ................. l

L.A. Lallm .......... .. l

2

2 .333
2 .333
3 .250

2.5

Wodnetd8~ICORI
Now Y"* 92, W
jlan, 14

Bueball
Amerlun~M&amp;ue

Ullh9t,AIINMSS
"
~ IOI,S..Ao....,93
S.-10 112, LA. Lak.. 101

Ton)Jht'l pmes

Nalloftiii.Aque
FLORIDA MARLINS: l'ludulo4 lho
...,"'" of BrWI Dnlmaa, pildl., r.:..
1he Chlcqo Wbbe So&amp;.
SAN DIEGO PADIU!S : N..... Du
Wan.hcn piLChift&amp; eo•ch: Many Barnu
ooech 11. Lu YIIJI• oi·Cfil1'111Md111'£o*t Loosuc: o... 1 ...... pildli•• _.. ..
Rancho Cucamonaa of tho C11ifontia
t.p; and Ride Adair pilddna COld! at
Wiohiu ot lllo Teut'IM·

JlOCKETS, l!x...-.lod lho
oonttact of Rd)' Tomj1norich, ooaoh.

011-·~ 7:30p.m.

........ .... 199'1·91-.

CI.E\'!UND 11 S..W., 10 p.m.
Do11D11" LA. Cippon, 10:.30p.m.

Cooper, ptnl. \o I

PIIOENJX· SUNS : Sisoo4 O.aoo

Mbwi.U .......... 1:30 p.m.

~ .. -..,,30_

"w....._, 7:30p.m.

Mlamlll~7:Jifpa.

""* ......... 1 , ...
Dlllu ........... 1 p.m.

,'.t:.

-*NHL*- ·
EASTERN
.
AU.CONFERENCI
.. _
,
~

T Pto.
l o, :14
l I 23
I 0 22
7 o· 16

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MIAMI DOLPHINS: Sia...t l ...o
DeBora. quarterback. Sipod Ch•c.ll.
BuUo111h, linoblekor, to 1M: prtctloe

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PIDLADI!LPIIIA BAOLI!S: Claimed
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FIRST PRACTICE - Dallas quarterllack
Bernie Kosar (lg) bands olr to runnlnt llack Judd
Gllh'elt (31) duriDJ Kour's first praelice with his

new team Wednesday In Irvia11, Texas. Kosar
signed with the club Wednesday morning. (AP)

WILL

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Call Joanie or Debbie at 9·92.;.2155
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,,

WKSTIIN CONFERENCE
c-oaW~T Pto.GfGA

Kosar played for Johnson at
Miami in 1984. He led the Hurricanes to a national title in 1983,
one year before J.ohnson became
coach. Kosar left Miami with two
years of eligibility remaining so the
Bt:awns could choose him in the
1985 supplemental dmrt

74

McMillin, 11fety. Relo11od Tom
lolclAo.... IIJ'&gt;I ond.
DAUAS COWBOYS: Siped B....
Xo11r, quart•rMck. Reloaaod Huah
loGIIon, .,.............
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Slaned

Wli¥tl'l,

., ...

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"'~"':~o;N~, s~p~.;;t'

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

ncr. He took the Brown~. to the
playoffs five stnuJht years.
The Cowboys released backup
Hugh Millen t_o make room for
Kosar, who w1ll become a free
agent after the season. M11len
hadn'tplayed in a game this year.

(ContinuedfromPage 4)
Buffalo's deficit to 3·2 a&amp;,6:17 of ·
·$0 2S mJ (UCI!,!IBCQI! ·~~' "'"
,
aller raoata'
~angers' eighth shorthanded goal the third period. But 30 secondS·
of the season in the first period. In later,.Milce Recchi used -~~.,.. .
lhe third period, Graves made· a a decoy and beat Grant Fuhr to
Limit t6
~ackhand pass to Amonte, who
give the Flyer~ a tw9-goal advansco(ed atl0:32.
tage.
,
·
·,Aibllit
: Bob Essensa made 40 saves r.or
Canucks 4, Klnp 0
llni 'W
lf'1nnipeg
Kirk McLean made 24 saves for
IIJII'II ...
',
Wh.alers 4, Senaton 3 ·
his fli'Sl shutout·of the season and
• Hart(ord broke its' 10-game winViooouve( shut down seven power
~ss streak whe~ Brian _Propp plays 10 beal Los Anseles.
$1 99 sale ptice
.
icored 20 seconds mto·overtune.
The Canucks blanked Wayne
·SQ.157mf(45
...~~:.'!~
- Propp stopped a pass (rom Gretzlty, who leads the Nm. with
.
anor rebate·
Roben Kron with his skate, then 36 points. Jtis frusuation showed in
~ol past Darrin Madelcy.
the first period when he drew an
Urrit 16
4 0t1awa rookie Alexandre Daig~e· unsportsmanlike penalty with the
it at 3-3 with 35 secondS lefl1n Kings ~Y one man ~orL
ulation, His seventh goal cam~
· Sergio Momesso ~ored two
er the Senators pulled the,ir goals in the (irst peri!Ml: Trevor
Pill
llnAiie.
·
L.indcn and Dixon Ward also
~'"Only 7,232fans saw the game at sc(lred f9r Vancduver.,:tJI~ ,game
!lie Hartford Civic Cetltcr; It w~ drew ·16,150 fans, the Cll,lucks'
t~e ' seventh-smallest crowd m
fli'SI sellout of the~
Wbalers • hislay.
Devl1l 5o Islanden 3
'!'
FIJtn 5, Sabns 3
StephanC Richet acon'd one goal
: Mikael Renbq scored the fli'St and Sell~{!- two others, leading New
two goals of ~ame amf Eric. Ietse? to Jtslhiid lllliPt :win.
\.indros 1a1er ljl) · • Pliiladelphia . Rtcbet's power·iiiiY p1 mid·
kept Buffafo the only team winless w11y through the tliird period put
it home Jllineason. ·
the Devils ah~d 4-3. John
• The Saini II1'C 0-6 at Memorial Macl an added h11 second goal or
~uditorium. IIIII also .100 ancither · the game for his SOOth point~of his
•.
4csipatccl: home same that was · carcc:r" ..
'J&amp;yed il Samlilet)IO, Calif.
· . ~.en01t HOjllle seored tw1ce for .
p Craig,Simpsoq~-~ goal cloaed VI$1URJNew York,
. .iii

re.Nrv• Bat. Stanod Bill Ooldbera.

M~tqu lse

No. lO LoullviDe (piU113)
It No.ll Teua AI:M
Agaies baYe won 17 atraiJht at
home ... 'IEXAS MM 35-21.
("'··PICKS
--7)
_...
011 • . .~

NHL games .•• - - - - - - -

NaliMII P...... Lut•
ATI.ANTA fALCONS ' 1'!10141 Mike
.......... Mlnylloclo!l&amp;, ...,_ _

Doaoilol
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10:30 p.m.
a.JlYI!I.\NI) .. Dol.... ,..... 10:30
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lolilw..t• 11 M1""'- 7:30p.m.

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CALIFORNIA ANGELS: Aped lo
c. •

Natlenal •aNhiiM A&amp;loda&amp;IOII
NBA: Pinod l'«o Myon, OWloF Blllla
au•ed 1!,000 r.r hlnitla s..., Smith ol
Mi1,.;i in "" baU: af tho hoad with a
for. a~~ In IJIIM an Nov. 6.
CHICAGO BU~LS: Slped D1vo

80110n 91, PIOII4olphlll9

Arizona St. (plull)
at No.lO 1JCLA
Bruins avenge last year 's
shutout loss to Sun Devils ...
UCLA 28-21.

r

- • Transactions • 1e1m1 wilh Mike Bnmloy,

No. 9 West VlrJ)all
(mlllus40) at Temple
Mountaineers warm up ror
showdown;t_ainst Miami ... W.
VIRGINIA 7.

10WIII,
10W40

MU'S Merrick agrees with mom
about need for improvement

No aamea Friday
WESTERN CONFERENCE

d
· ·
· the boo!'
_etemun~uon to Win . sc .
s
rust nat10nal champ1onsh1p. ...
sive weapons than an international FLORIDA ST. 27·24.
arms
but their.
undisputed
Ru'en
ICI\Iefdealer,
js Hcisman
Tf9Phy
favorite
11 o 3~31)
Ch ar1·1e Ward • The sentor
· ll,uarter'.
• won 62 straight
Humcanes
bave
bac k is fedk' ing ~me aftcrMiiiiiD, outd over liiUllllked teams ... MIAMI 551asl wee s wm over ary an
10.
·
with bruised ribs, and that's bad
Iowa SL (no Uae)
news (or Notre Dame.
.
at No.4 Nebraska
. The bad news for Flonda State ·
Cyclones shocked Huskers last
1s that No!fe pame could con~;WI . year ... NEBRASKA 45-21.
the ball w1th 1ts {K!Wenul rush~ng
No. l!Hndlau
attack and keep 11 out of Ward's
.(plul14) at No.5 Oblo St.
• handS.
.
Buckeyes move:one step closer
S T!te wleathler( alsodi~uld hurtf tl}e to Pasadena ... OIDO ST. 24-14.
emmo es. pre cuons o rat!f·
No.7 ~ubun
come true, that could negate thell'
(plus Vl) at Geor&amp;la
s~ advantage and hamper their
Bulldogs band Tigers their Ill'S!
passmg game.
loss ... GEORGIA 31-28.
Both teams enter the game with
No 8 Flo ida ( 1n 14 Vl)
9-0 records and 16-game win~ing
' at &amp;ulh C:.r:ma
streaks. Notre pame h~s s~ze,
Gators first trip 10 Columbia
power and mysttque on 1ts s1de.
Flori~a Stat~ . a seven-point
since 1939 ... FLORIDA 38-28.
rav!'nte, has speed, depth and a
likethejuniorvarsity.
The Seminoles have men offen-

By DENNE H. FREEMAN
said. "I think it's good for the
IRVING Texas.(AP)- Troy team."
Aikman isn.'t Worried about Bernie
Aikman's hamstring was still
Kosar being a threaiiO his job, and sore on Wednesday and he said "if
Kosar says an be wants is a cham- there was-a game today I couldn't
pionship ring.
play."
. Kosar signed a one-year deal
The Cowboys.signed Kosar 10 a
Wednesday as a backup to the one-year dealm the $500,000
injured Aikmat:t. The ex-Miami range. Kosar got a check for more
Hurricanes qullit¢jack, cut Mon- than $2 million when he was paid
day br the Cleveland Browns, olfhy the Browns.
inade u clear .he's not alter Aik"We jumped at a chance 10 get
mill! 's job lnd just wants a chiiiiCC .someone the quality of Bernie,"
at a Super Bowl ring. Three times .said Cowboys owner Jerry Jones.
he led l))e Browns to the AFC Iitle "To have him on this team is a
game orily 10 lOse.
tremendous luxury."
· "There's no question Tro~ AikKosar immediately
man is one of the most bnlliant a uniform with the No.
quarterbacks in the lea~ue and ~ John Jett has No. 19)
way am I here competing for h1s study of the Cowboys
job," Kosar said. "The shot at a He was on the field for
Super Bowl ring was a big factor noon practice.
.
'
why I came 10 Dallils."
Johnson said he would decide
. Miami,. K~nsas City and . S~nday so!De 30 minute.s befor,e
Philadelph1a tned 10 woo Kosar, k1ckorr agamst the Pboena Cardibut his loyalty 10 his old college nals whether 10 Start Aikman, Jason
coach, Jimmy Johnson, was too Garrell or Kosar.
strong.
"For the avera!!" quarterback it
, "Loyalty means a lot 10 me," would be almost Impossible 10 go
Kosar said. "They showed a lot o( to .another team and siBrl in (our
confidence and trust in me. I don't days but it could happen,'' Johnson
intend to let anybody down."
S81d. "I'll watch practice and see
Aikman, who is ll')'ing 10 over- how much he can pick up without
come a pulled lcrt hamstring, lOOk errors. We'd have 10 scale down
the arrival etiJ{osar in stride and our orrensive paclcage, I don't rule
didn't see him.\s a threat.
out Troy or Jason as a Slll!ter. I do
"I think it's good," Aikman know this: Bernie Kosar is a win-

FAtmoot~;~n at lcnm, I :35 p.m.

c.. ~niDI-

g:x.·. -.. . . . .. . 3

II
II
10
7

•

v

Kosar sigqs contract with Cowboys

Panthers hand Canadiens 3-1
loss; Senators also win
Canadiens player Jesse Belanger
scored in the second period and
Gilhen tallied in the third. .
The Panthers' relentless checking limited the Canadiens' good
scoring chances. Florid_a. meanwhile, toolc advantage or liS opportunities apinst soaltender Patnck
Roy.
In other games, the New York
Rangers beat Winnipeg 2·1, Hartford de(eated Ottawa 4-3 in overtime, Pbiladelphia.beal Buffalo 5·3,
New Jersey downed the New York
Islanders 5-3 and Vancouver
deleated Los Angeles 4-0.
Rllnsen z, Jets 1
New York won its sixth sbllight
game and extended its unbeaten
streak to eight (7-0·1). Tony
Amonte scored midway through
the third period 10 break a 1-all tie
at Madison Square Garden.
Mike Richter made 26 saves for
' the Rangers .
· , Adam Grave&amp; scored the
(See NUL on Pa&amp;e 5)

B:PRICKWARNER
SOUTH BBND, Ind.

The nllmbers don'tlook 8

onJr,

Canadiens (8-5-2), who lost their
second in a row at home. Florida
(6-7-3) won three days alter a viclOry at Quebec.
Monll'eal outshot Florida 38-20,
including a 14-4 edge in the second
period. Vanbiesbrouck, however,
slOpped everything except Brian
Bellows' shot in thC second period.
"We're not as talented as other
teams but we have the Beezer.
Whenever we have lapses, he
makes the saves to keep us in
there," Florida's Randy Gilhen
said.
Rookie Rob Niedermayer
scored in the first period, rormer

&lt;:J -

'

In theNHL,

By Tbe "--lted " The Florida Pandlers made the
Stanley Cup champions loolt like
an expansion team.
John Vanbieabroud: made 37
saves IIIII the l'llnthen won their
fUll trip to the Forum, beating the
Montreal Canldiens 3-1 Wednesday nighL
"We have to Jive credit 10 the
Panthers. They're an expansion
team IIIII they may lose 60 games
this year, but if you lei them play
their pme, they won't lose 60,"
Montreal coach Jacques Demers
said.
A crowd or 16,195 jeered Lhe

.·

The Dally SenUnel Plgt 5 :

.:No. 2 Irish don't llave history on their side vs. Florida State

Thursday, November11,1193

Thomas named AL's top player
11 PAUL A. DRISCOLL
CHICAGO (AP) - Af~r
beeominJ just the eishth pi!IY.er
unanimously voted Amencan
Leasue Moll Valuable Player,
Frank Thomas lalkcd .00.. pullinJ
up even beaer numben.
He had 112 walks in 1993,
founh·IIIOSI in the league. He IIJures he miJhl improv~ bis offensive atatillics by sWIIIguJJ a1 puches oul5idc die JCrike zone.
"I wa very selective last year,"
Thomas said Wednesday after the
voting was announced. "But probably .340 would be maximum few
me, because I'm a home-run biller,
too. t '
~hit .317, was second in
the major leagues with 128 RBb
and set a club record with 41
homers. He easily 00. out TOIOIIto's Paul Molitor, who received 13
second-place v~ in haiJor.inJ by
lhe Baseball Writtrs As'!!Ci•ioo of
America.
"I was really rhocked I ~ot all
28 votes," Thomas &amp;aid. • I was
like, 'Wow! ' There was no better
way 10 win it. "
The other unanimous winners II

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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IAlLIPIUI
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�Plllill

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PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

6 The Dally Sentinel

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CLEVELAND.......- .. --...26
••SEAiTLE......- -.... 21 ,
With the Steelers bwatbing down their necks iii tlle•AFC Central, Ibis Is a very big game fqr,fhe Browns. The last
time they met, ia 1989, Cleveland's 17·7 win cnckd a fOlD'· game Seabawk.strcak.
"DALLAS .......................... 34
PBOFNIX ------..-l!J
In lhe lhird week of the season, the Cowboys got their rust wia, beating the CardinaJs 17-10- Dallas's sbtlh
straigbt win over Pboenix. In anocber bot division race, the Cowboys can't let up.
HOUSTON ....... _ ... ____ .....lS
A
-----17
.. '
. ••CINCINN•':rJ
Three weeks ago the Oilers won ugly over the Bengals,18-12, playing sloppily but &amp;airing 21 points in the second
half while Cincinnati self-«strucfel!. Houston needs every win it,qn get.
'
,
·
••L.A. RAIDERS ....""-"'"28
KANSAS CITY -""-22 ij), • ,;,_.,. .
..
The fists and forearms were Dying it! tbi Chiefs' 24-9 win over the Raidcn silt weeks ago. fOIIf K.c;. . were , h..ii
" ~-~fli
hun, wbile !lie Cbief defense sackedrVince Evans
silt limes. More of the same.
· . ·•' · ,.-,.;
,• · '·. ,' ;'
''
··~
10~·~.;
••L.A. ~ ....:;,......:.. ~-~- .
. ATLANTA.--...~~'! ~
4
--.,~.
On tbe strength of tbree 'I'D passe$ by ~illy ~oe JP~ver1 the Falcons beat the ~ 30-24 a . . lflb; ~~ a
seven-game losing streak. They're ilmost deid eveo,'but L.A. gets lbe nod Ill bome:
~· · llf -r~ •' ,r ·
Graduation
MIAMI .........~---·-··--30
. . ••PHU..ADELPBJA....~ ·
'
The Dolphins are a more well-rounded·team tban the Eagles, less dependent 011 - and a lot mm coofideat without
Announcements.
- tbeir swting quarterback:. They've woo their last rour games against Pbil)y.
MINNESOTA ..................-.Z7
••DENVER .............-..:.24 .
This pick is dangerous, because die .Brontos tend to wia at bom~.but their only real sln:Dglh Is the pus, against ·
'
..
wbicb die VIkings are the best in lhe NFL. Two yean ago Denver won Hl-4.
· · *·*NEW ORLEANS ....
,f .
GREEN BAY -"-""-11
.
.r;
The mysteripus Saints can crumble against I' goOd ,$m ~ Pittsburgb) or a bad one Oike AtlBnla), but they're ,
Mlddltpqrt .
still explosive when Iiley bave to be ..:. tike peri(. 'lbcy Mvcn't met since '89.
i .·
'· ''
' '
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'Gu"""":
•
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.
,
.
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~, f· ~····~'1."")'!"T"'5' ~
n.
. ...,.
. . . .• .
Redski11 QB Mark R~ien got btick iato llllliOO qai!W the ~IS five weeks !IIIO.bul be couldn't save tile ,•sJdni ••.-......
,._iliii~
· froma'lt~7'roul.lnantotiieryear ~1fpicll:.!waslilnslllll10payNewYortbac:t. '' ··· .' · · · .~G
. ' · N.Y. JETS"" __,;,..,.,..'" """'.l1
••INDIANAPOUS..-14
.' b''
. The Colts DI!IY-bave won both games ~st the ~eiS in '92 (6-3), and their rcoords may be similar Ibis year, but
New York is tbe superior team. Tbey'U ineetltllln ia lbreo weeks.
~·
. ~· ': ' '
. .
·
. •S~tN DJEG0 .......,..-·~"'1~24~ . . CHICA~,0.-....
-¢fl. ·
.
:·
San Diego's offeiiSCI showed signs of life against tile RUJen.two weeks ago, wblle Clliatgo's Ia ClllC
~1uc'sl
,.,
,.
least productive. The n.•-era and Bean,h•ven't faced cW Iince '84
. •
'·
• · '·I
'
, .1
- ·
•
I

·Baum
Lumber .
"

CHEml, OHIO

985-3301

---~--~lllliii.l!liij[i...liii.ii.iii..-1

R.~_~p,t!.s ~

Bank

],

•

•

Oklahoma SL (plu21)
at No.17 OkJ8homa
Cowboys,have 1081 five in I! row
... OKLAHOMA28-10•.
No.18VIrpua
(minus 6 1/2) lit Clemaoa
Cavaliers are 0-17·1 a1 Dealh
Valley ... VIRGINIA 28-14.

.

....

1

-

.

SHOP

-.-.lll!l...,_....

·

Yourltcill

I

tt

----..20

S71HL ,

•

~ S~LES.,-:- SERVIU -

'

.. ..

PARTS

IID.ENOUR SUP.PL Y
'

''

tiS-JJGI
l .

Chester, Ohio
l

». ·

..TAMP.{IAY"-:.~1,

. SANFRANCliSco:.;....:....
,
-. .
. The 49ers' 21-14 win over the Boo aneen lilc lutaeasqlulas their se~lb s~ ~:ti~Dpa Bay,alni:Ci :J.3.
1
one-sided7TheBucsarewt·m~te&amp;Pmcilfenat'aild26di'incJeteaae: · '· _.,~
·
·
·
;,
·
"'"
' &lt;
'
•
. .......
'"
'
(Mol'lday)
...n:tlBURGB-..- ..--D
' ' ' u.,.,;u.o __ ..._.._"l7 ' ' "·:,·
·,.
Last yeilr the Billa. beat tbe Steelen ia the regUlar seaon, 28-2o,llien sbutlbem dOwn Ill tlic: AFC diVltlooal

offs, 24-3. This year, bowev~. Plltsblqb wW~IO lbeoccalkm Ill

.

• ' '

&lt;Open -

0~11'011; llM'

·diagnosed~w:l~.th~!;~~:~:~~~an~.

-·-· 111. ·ENO.UR'.·.s:~.-.·

. ,.,··.·
4~ • , .u &amp;
'? .; ' ..... ~

·· ' Inflammation
. iniQI!ines
,' '

APPLiauCE
. . .. . •., '
,.;. ·-~·~1 ,r GAS "'ERVI·c·E''
•
,

CHI.JTER
.

I

.915~3307

'

Sports briefs--

Football ·
TAMPA, Ela. (AP)- Tampa
Bay linebacker Jimmy Williams
was rincd an undisclosed amount
. by the team ror pushi'ng Petroit
Free Press writer MicbeU• Kauf·
man during 1 locker room conrrontalion ia Dcuoit on Sundly.
·Kaufman compllined WUlilms
shoved her and told her she hid no.
business in' the locker room.
Willi.ams laler apologized for pusbing past the reporter 10 remove a
coat and bag from his locker.
Footb1D
'DENVER (AP) - Denver
coach Wade Phillips was hospitalized. ror IS hours with severe .
abdominal pain. Phillipa,
was

.Q."ALITY PRINT .

..,:.-.%3

. ·

,

,.

'

.

· Mlnhdppl SL (na line)
at No.ll Alabama
Tide lias won 34 or last 35 vs.
Bulldogs ... ALABAMA 27-7.
No.13 Arizona
(DO line) I~ Cllllf01'11Ja
Bears have lost four straight
afler S-0 start ... ARIZOliA 31·10.
No. 15 Nolfi Carolina
(mlaulS) at Tullne
First meeting since 1975 ...
NORTII CAROLINA 35-17.
Illinois (plu 10 1/2)
at No. 16 PaiR SL
Nittany Lions end Dlinj's four~ winniag Sll'elk ~· PENN ST.

POMEROY

.,HE BOB IIIIIMII.Piilf

ftACTORS and
RIDIIG MOWERS

for New York.
Elsewllcn: in the NBA, il wu
Boston 9J, PllilldeiiJIUI89; Ollca·
go 91, ~ 90; I'Loelli&amp; 101,
San Antanio 93; llld StaamentD
111,LOI!Aqeleal.ataa 101.
K• 112, Liken 101
Sacramento beat Los Anaeles
for onlv lhe sixlh lime in 41 meet·
inaa aince lhe leam moved from
~City toCIIIComla.
Lionel Slmmoaa tcored 33
poinll- more lhln doublina hia
production from bia fint two
san-- for the 11011 Xlnp.
1 - Wordly hid 20 poinll in a
raerve role and Vlade DiviC bid
18 poinllllld15 n:bounda for the
Libra. Mitch Richmond ICOI'ed 20
pointa for die Kinp.
The Liken trailed by u many
u 23 poiall before closlna to 95-88

universities.
Fighting Irish" wu a chant fust
One legend about the origin of heard in E\'IIISIOII, W.,lt lhc 1899
Figbting msh liaks il to the 1909 Notre Dame-Northweslerll football
Notre Dame-Michigan football game.
game. With his team trailing at
Noire Dame offacially adopted
halrtime, quarterblclt John Murphy the nickname Fighting Irish in
of Notrc Dame is $upposed 10 have 1917.
said: "What's the mauer wilh you
• Wb~J~e nicknames are
guys? You're all Irish and you're the most
not fighting worth a lick." As
Accordmg to the new book
reporled by lhe ~. the ouii:OIIIe "College Nicknames and Other
was a victory by the "Fighting · Interesting Sports Traditions,"
Irish."
lhese are lhc All-America monikers
Another version is lhai"Kill the (with leading cumples):
TIGERS: Auburn, Clemson,
, . :·1\ •
Grambling, llckson State, LSU,

back book by Joanne Sloan and
Cheryl WallS.
· Tbey say the "official" story is
that the media give the nickname
to Notre Dame bec;an~e "it cbamc·
terized lhe ~layers' never-say-die
fighting spint and lheir Irish qualities of ~rit, determination, and
tenacity. •
''College Nicknames," published by Vision Press (tel~:
105-339-4518), cites the ongia of
the nicknames of more than 300
schools. It also lists the nic:kliames
of over 1,000 Other colleg~ and
.

College picks ... ·:...---l&lt;.:::Catuinued=·=-=trom=PaBcz;;.:.!S&gt;_ __

(row's Family Restaurant

•

31

• 8M FIAfldloo 8lale
• W....m o..gan

14
. II

llli!W ....

24

40
,.

• Portt.nd .....

14

Eal•m lllno+l

21
35

Fort-

21
26

• Cal Lutt\lran
• C&amp;l Q.llt Chico
• C.WWI'III Waahlnglon
Fott Heyt Sl...

21

·-so
..
st.

22

" W... Vltglnla Wt*YM

j

Super Efficiency

15

20

-

Xl1200

..•

30
16

•

Tuesday
Plliladelphii. end·
in&amp; a ·m:~~06 .sllli&amp;hlain iloubk
'.
·. AI•'P" · Bulleu at Lando
. ¥«,
· Md.. he scored 13 poinll In the
third quarter when New York
extendeCI ill 10-point ~ lead
10:79~1. WuhiDgton got no c1o11er
· than aix poinu llfta thai,
''I'm ttlll aol feellna well. I
have lhe cold or lhe flu, wbalcver
the heck it is," be llid. "I wu able
to get some rest today, and it
helped."
·
)ohn Swu had 17 poiall for
the Knlcb, who never uailed ia
winning their fourth straight pme
without a loss.
Former Knick Kenny Walter
came off the bench wilh 18 .points
and 14 reboundJ for the Bulle11.
Charles Oakley had 19 reboundJ

. By PAth. NEWBERRY
record for most poiats by the losing
APSCWrller
team . That: record stood alone
.
·
h
d'
ClUICtly
lhn:e ~.until BYU fell
Co llege oo lba II IS ell mg.
toward its most prolific offensive to· Utah State S8-S6 bin akgJamhe
showiag ever, which is no surprise where losing quarter ac o n
to MiteGoufried. .
Walsh threw for619 yards.
"It seems no mau.et where I go,
"The increuecl paasinggame,
people are throwing lhe football," with one back or no backs, is
said tbe ESPN analyst, who will spreading people out," said Minanother shootoul when BYU ncsota coach Jim Wacker, whose
S••
~
Th da
offense has .been dubbed Air
.· s
p1ays San D1~0 tale urs Y.
.
'gb
"N
.....
'""
to
Wacker. "Just about everybody
is
n1 L ot o Yn ....,.y ~, .ng
..
win by throwing lhe football, but runniag some of that now.
they ·also want to please their . Overall, NCAA Division I-A
fans."
games are averaaing a total of 49
oints ror bolh teams, said Rick
The old "three yards . and a P
C
.
r .
cloud of dust" philosoph~ died Campbell, N AA dilectoro stallS•
years
, . ago, b.·ut J:islng h-.J!ecn tics. If th11 continues, il would
Delie~ an: brCa1c the marlt of48:s Sc:t in't990. ·
clliiricd
to· a h.
newd el
·
d'
"
· 'th.
Olhcr records on pace to fall
fim mg It ar to ..eep u w1
speedy receivers scooting all over include total yarils per game
lhe field from fonnatioas lite the (73.4:6) and passmg yardS per game
~
,__, d f
(401.8), bolh set ia 1989. This year,
run-and·Shoot, .ast·u•...... an un
·
tal
•n• fUn.
teams are averagmg 742.7 10
nnolna~arda ...me.
• I'm sure tben:'s a real puriSt' cr Yardsand412 ,_....,.-o
,_..
•
ho
·
So
what's
goiag·on
ere?
some old football •an w enJoys a
7·3 ~e. butlhat's pwe nolllal- bro~ghtth~ 'b::.=t~~~:~
gia,' said Auburn's Terry Bowden,
f h
part of lhc new breed of offensiveyards closer 10 the cenler o I e
minded . ~ "There's nothing field, &amp;ivina offenses mere room to
·
work 011 lhc near sideline.
more fun than watchmg a same
"There doesn't seem 10 be any
where one team outscores the
other."
increase in the number of pass
Certainly, no one was bored allem~ls," Campb~ll said. "It ·
when Minnesota rallied to beat looks like that (changmg the hash·
·
Purdue S9-S6 on OcL 9, setting a

Weathertrone·
Heat Pump

11

14
31

KnaJ.viflt
Llrnblllh
LancMr-Rh)'nt
...... Hill
MIM6Ialppl College
Motehoule

..,.,An•k•

.....

~

• Ttxu A I M-f&lt;lngntle
Union, Ky.
Ylltklel•

10

Bomiord

Air·( ...........
Mioh lffidtllcy
Enwu ~·lni ..... Pu•ps

23

• Salilbwy '
SIVIM&amp;h Stilt

"•
"•

Murr~~y Slalt
• Moreh11d Stilt

Fwnecu

·...m.

r

Jhy IWIY frpm 'the ball. I'm n()J
~~to atop ahootin&amp; beciDIO'
'te not aoilla ill. I'D eilbcr be
lhc hcro'for iJ1:e tiam cr lhe pill." ,
. Malono COitiorted a~J~ree;poilu(
play with 1:11left -lll put Utah
ahead for &amp;ODd. 116-85, lllld biltwo
free tllrowa 11'(9thc'Jar.z an 88-115
lead wllh 1811CC011da ranainiila. .
"x.l made the tligjllaya c10wb
lhe SlreiClt llld we did ·· inod JOb
deferisively •a lelm.'l «**I Jeny
SIQIII slld.. ~ ·~-~tlbout
Karl. knowint be -lick. I bad to
k.eep him on~ 10me of lhnec:onil
half and we got burned. Fortunately
we. fought back."
Mookie Blaylock led Atlanta
with 11 points, and Dominique
Wilkins scored 19. Jeff Malone
scored 21 points fd' Ulab.
Ewing scored only eight poiats

Passing heading to ·new.heights
o~ tod'a y's college footb~ll scene

SERVICI:

· INSTALLATION

17

.Ao_......

27
7

Ktntudly &amp;talt

~AI.~S •

31

' NOM Alablrna
Nonl'l Carolina Central

••

SWTIIII
Wagner

27

•

20

Valli

36

'

"

' Huvard

33
23

'
•

7

Valparalto
SoUIMm •1n011

..

·

JWANE··

••

• Hlrdlna

16
10

Nlcholt Sl ...

HEAnNG
· AND
COOLING

41
27

Ha~Sinuncw.

"

' Pralnt VIew
' Vllanova

' SE otdahoma

•

WARNER

20

F~

10
3

'DIIIW.,.Sialt
NMI\MIIetn
• Furman
' NW Loultilna
' s.n Houston
J . C. SMMh

34

.........

•

. .10

' NE Oklahoma
• H*aab
Ntbralb.-Kumty
North O.kola !kale
Notth Dakda u.
• Nol'lhwood
' Pill~ Sl:ata

Emcwy I tt.nry
• Fa,.nevlla

0
7

··P.o -roy, Ohio

992.3671 ·

'•

.,.....:~ "'-" ~ ~·~ ·~ ·

13
12
27

Virginia Tach

11

17
24
23
33

C.nlflll Slalt, Ohio
• Canlrt
..,.Cumbrlfll;nd. Ttnn.

7
17

of sportS:
• Which college team has lhe
most famous nicJauullc?
You would have to say that
Notre Dame holds lhc title.
But it's uncer11in how lhe Fighting Irish got their celebrated
moniker.
"TI)e .mostjf!nerallY ~ted
explanatiOit is
lhe PR8I coinecl
Fighting Irish,'' reports "College
NickiWDJ~s and Other Inlerestiilg
Spons 'l'rlldili9ils.'' a new paper·

ANDERSONrS

21

21

Cai'Kifi·Ntwman

,:•

...

11
14

~~;~~~till
Other Gamet - South
l
'AiaOM!aAIM
21
T......
-..,,Go.
20
Arlllnua-Monliodo
11
• o...c:tiiLI

•

M~Tannen

3i

Wlnanbtrg

10

v~~t

• ManUio
llk:hlgonT...
Millourl So&amp;.tMm

Wlnona~&amp;ll

"

By HOWARD SINER
Today's questions ia the world

We hove'"'
Serlo you want
in tht sin you llllil
· at a pritt you'll Ukt•

7
I

24

'Watlbl.q
• Wlalaton

24
16

1 1 Vlait hCond ·S treit' ~·~-~~~~ "'llllli·~....-'ra . E~••
24
ev...
·
Pomeroy1 Ohio
f~ l::::.~31
..
992-2342
~; =~
-~

31

• Southwe•em. Kan .
WtlbUh

17

o.......

' LYI.n.t

··-

3

..0
30
23

..

'.

• 1ow1 wa•yan

22
20
21
'0
31

·~~~man

7
23

SOuthfin CallforrM

II~

0

2tt
35

w-.,..,..

24

nutpl•

11
11

"

' Mluourl Vahy
MUiklngum
' NE t.tlseouri

21

.

I~

.

on a butct by Worthy wilh !1:!1!1
left.BildleyCOI!Id-noc.._,,
· Sal1tl, Spwa t3
Cbrltl Butley bad 35 poin11
and 20 rcboundlllld JOl bodl of
hla..U..cUin&amp;•9.0foullll.q.-ter run lhll boosted Phoenix over
vililinl S.. Anlooio.
The Spurs scored only nine
pqiJWa in lbe fira 10:21 of lbe fmal
period, wbicll bean wllh the SWII
leadlna 78·73. In tb11 apan, the
S~nopaoeda 98-811ead.
D1vid 'Robinson scored 31
poinll for lhc Spurs, and Dennis
Ro!!m• pulled clown 25 ldlounds
witboutiCGrin&amp; a point.
Balli 91, BIICU 90
Toni Kutoc bit alhrec-poialet
with 1.9II'ICO"dt left, liftina Olica·
go ro victory • MilWIIIbe.
Two free throws by Brad

Jd!••• wilb 5.2 lea.dlleft Jllll
die a.cb..._,9Goal, knra
timeoul. IC.ublc &amp;01 die ,1J1Jhl diD
top of dla key ~ ~ lhc allot
lhll pve 1be IIIJCI'Y ~ m~ Balli

lheirdlirdvieayllllnarpmes. ·
Horlce Gnnl ·lecllbe Balls widl

20 poiallllld Kukoc bad 18 011 8ror-10 allooliiiJ. Blue E4wuds led
the Buc:bwllh 21poillla.
Celllc:l 91, 7~ 19
Sberman J)oop aeored four or
.hiJ 16 poillll in die flllll 1:17, lift·
inJ Bollcn•ID a win a Pllilldelphla.
Kevin Gamble and Xavier
McO.icl CKh llld 17 poinll for
the Celtica, who won lheir lhird
llrligbl pme lfter 111opeaina lola.
Jeff Horucet bad 26 poinUIIICl
ClaJalce WeDelljiCio. 23 fOr lbe
76en, who lolllbeir tllhd llnliJlll
after aiiCIIIIOIKJIICI ¥ic:by.

Notre Dame has most famous nickname among universitie~

7

K.nyon

21
12

' Clomoon
SyraaJH

...M I

•

Other G~!nea.-:

Hllldale

16

Navy

17

24

Gtlclland
• Gtand v. .. _

10
7

Arizona 51810
Air Foroo
loulolana Toch

21

-a&gt;

• Franklin

13

loulo~i~

23

20

' Conc:cwdla, WI&amp;.
' Evangel
Ferrla

15

' 5.M.U.

7

20

Ctnt,.l MIMol.lri

16
10

llnola
Nevada·lal Vegu
T.C.U.
.

DISCOVER WHY
P~OPLE SAY,

' C.ni.IWI Oklahoma

20

AllwliU Slalo

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

• Beroedictlf'll
' e.tnan,. Kan.
C.Pial

7
6

Slanford

20
23
14

Aohlood

•

~51110

27

Baldwin-Walla"'

10

28
22

10

Aleo!Wnr

14

' MIUiMippl Vdty
' Norloll
• C:onnec:llcut
"SUAarya, Calif.
Southtm Utah
• Cal Slat• S.cramento

27
21
20

.........

12

MaJor Coll91- Dlv. 1·AA

o-:jj,ii~;C-"n
~

• WoroeMtr Tech

13

lowli.
lndlona

16

• wtdentr
Wil'-tn PtltrtOn

12

WYoning
' Tulono
Marylord

31

• VII K:tllblh

• Wutilnglon a Jttl'trtof't

16

• Purdue
Norlhom ilinolo
Iowa Slate
' Now Mexico Stale

34
33

~uthann.l

• Trinlw:, Conn.

21

• Konl Slo1o
' Mimncla

28
24
28

• Southem Connec:lk:li

13
10

AuJuoro

23

• N.w Hawn

14

Mluourl
Eaot Corolno
South«n Mluittipp

26

·-. 1-,C:,".~

17
7

• Wako Foroll

29

·~

ICut:dPWn

12

Aubum

17 ·
27

• lnciana U., Pa.

13

Ohio U.
• SOU1h Carolina
• Notro Dlmo
Hawlil

24
33

• Edlreoto
• FraniLiin &amp; a.&amp;lrWI
• H.lmlton

.

Sports Probe

.., w~
••
lll'" f

10
11
10
7

·=oon.Po.
• EUI SuoUiillburg

14
IQ

'

Othtr

CWPOII

• Cailom\11 State , Pa.

20

• Tex.u-El Pno

35

• Memphlt State
• IIIMII
11-. Ohio
Mlolllgan
lllolllgan State
• Mlululppl .

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN
MUSSER
.
.
INSURANCE

'PI-

29

'-Slalo

MIDDtEPOIT, OHIO
992-6611

Rice

21
26

Geuvla'Toch

555 PAll ST.

8
24
21
10
10
IQ

' Aklon

23
20
24
28

·~

VALLEY LUMBER

loliuilli&gt;ol Slalo
LaloylltO

22
27
31
16

' Eu1om Mk:hlgan
Florldo
Florldo Slo1o
• Fr81110 Slate

• Konluoky

14

• Calllunll
Tulu •

33
14
20
34

• Bajlor

Alwa~s

!!rlgloori Young

Sat., Nov. 13

• AJ-.a
' Al1zono

Dignity and Service

21

' .

'

·made dleir opponeall feel oven ·
worse. .', ·"
•
· ·
Tho two .1991 Olympians,
w~a wilh .eold or flu aympto.mso liouDC,ed ,back ·Wedueadly
night"from 111q. Jl""'' ~ ia
the week. .Ewi!l&amp; bad 28 poiniiiJICl ··
14 rebou.nds· In ·the New York'
Knicks' 91-84 victory over 'tiuhing1011, while Milon;e hld26 points
· and 10 reboundl ~ IICored eiahl
poiats ia lhc fmilllwO lllinulea of
Ulab's 91-88 decision over AtlaniJI.
"My .last two pmes have probbeen the WQI'Sll've ever liad,"
.· · Malone, who missed 18 ot;bis
fint 23 shots against lhe Hawb
and was 7-for-11 ia a loss to Seal·
Ue on Monday nighL "But I don't

I

992-2635

'

''. Bj''l'lle 4'1Ddefei!...... •
. Pllrkk Ewlq IDI\ Klrl Malone
bpc!l ~ tidlnl a lildc low. 1bey

992-6669
253 IIOITH SECOND
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

~

Ewi,ng, Ma~Jipe return from snimes to hurt Bullets, Hawks.

P.rescrip,tion
Shop

FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

In the NBA,

1

Catch All Tlie
iteJ:tleJlt!

INGELS

.

Thu,.ct.y, November 11, 19e3

Thurtday, Nc&gt;vember 11,1993~

• :

• ·, . ' l•

·" ' .

~r.t

v

"!, ·

'7

A.M

~ ·

'., ..

KIDIU (rlu151/l)
at No.l Coliii'IClo
Buffaloes have bealen Jayhawb
eight straight times ... COLORADO 34-17.
No. 22 BOlllon College
(mlnu16) at Pl111burgb
Campbell leads nation in scoring ... BOSTON COlLEGE 44-21.
·
No. 23 Wyomln1
(miau1) at New Mulco
Cowboys lead WAC with S-0
record ... WYOMING 31-18.
· Mlnourl (plua 12)
'at No. 24 Kilnaas SL
Wildcats ~bound from loss 10
Iowa Stale .,/ KANSAS ST.17-14.
Soutben Cal (plus 2)
It No. ~ Wublnpoa
Huskies knock Trojans out of
Rose Bowl race ... WASHINGTON11-17.

~~!:n!::e~:tf:!;

=~~£=:

marks) niay have somelhina to do ~w Missouri State and
Bru·
with iL I can't think. o~ any!)li,~g •ns.BULLDOGS: Citadel, Fresno
elseBut
dialBowden,
would affecl1tlike
· Lo u1s1ana
· ·
Tec·b,
who callsIbis.
all of · s ~te1 G•eo~gta,
1ss.ISSippl Slate, Redlands and
Auburn's plays, doesn't buy lhat MYalc
argumenL
WILDCATS: Arizona. Kansas
"From an oullide passing stand- State, Kentucky, Northwestern,
point. it's made a little bit or dilfer- Villanova and Weber State.
ence,'' be said. "But I'm 1101 c:all·
. plays a w"-1· .Jot .., .._
mg
'""" wu....,... oL-uou•
I did be~ore J'ust beca"- the hashmarks have been,moved ia."
Gottfried, former colch at Pitt,
a--' wilh Bowdat.
... ~
"I've talked to a lot of defensive coaches, and lhey don't feel
it'slhal b~!i'of a deal.'' Gottfried
said ,__
""--In ••""'-"e. ·•·•···
uuu
'""'"'
muuu ,...,
"I lltint the maw
thing is the ever
·-·
incn:uing factlhal the pro offenses
an: havimr an influence on coli
fOOibaD.'r
.
ege
Teams are not afraid to line up
'lh ,
WI •Our receivers- and send
·"all
u"""
"Thedeep.
~ game has gotten
very verlicallhc last few years as
opposed to horizontal," Bowden
explained. "Teams are 1101 throw·
ing to lhe flats as much. They're
running four or five people vcrti·
cally up the field beyond the
bac
line ken and making the deep
safeties cover all oflbem."
Bowden, die 37-yaro()Jd son of
Florida Slate c:o~th Bobby Bow•
den, doe8n 't have motJgh lalent to
run lhalldnd of offense. In fact. lhe .
Tigen an: more productive on the
ground (111.3 yards per_~) tban
lhey are tltroulh lbe air (206, 1).

BBYFL tournament
set for tonight

The Bi$ Bend Youlh Foo1bal1
League will hold its tournament
this week at Southcm HiP School.
The first contcll will begin
loday at 6 p.m. and will pul the
Veterans Memorial Hospital Dol·
h'ns against the McDonald's
es. Theevcning'uecondpmc
gel underway • 7:45 p.m. and
will pil the D.D. Blake Consttuc·
tion Browns against the Multanp,
a leanlllpollson:d by lhe American
Legion Post 111111 of Middlepon.
"fhe losers of lhe twO games will
meet for lhird place on Sundar.,
14 at1 p.m. The winners will
Last week: 14-3 (slllight); 7-6 Nov.
roJiow
II 3:45 p.m. in the cbampi·
(spread). •
.
. onship game. Those games will
Season: 144-31 (suaight); 80-73 also be played at Southern High
(spread).
School'.s"Roger Lee Adams Field

EAGU!S: Boston College, Eaa.

em Wubin&amp;ton, Cleorlia ~·
Morehead Swe, Souihern Milaiasippi.
COUGARS: BYU, Houston and
Wuhin&amp;ton Sllle.
PAN'I'HERS: Butern Illinois,
Northern lowalllld Pitlllburgh.
INDIANS: Artanaaa Slate,
Florida State Scminolea and Miami
of Ohio Redskins. (Note: Because
or controversy, various colleges
have dlopped lhe name Indians or
relaled tams).
'
• Do lhese colleges bave the
most c:oklrful nic:tnlrJiel?
The Akron Zips, Aluta·Fair·
banks Nanoots, Alfred Saxons,
Amhem Lord Jeffs. ArkansiS·
MonticeUo BoD Weevils, Bllndeis

Judt:ea, Califomia.Jrvine Antellen,

Caflforini1-Santa Cruz Banana
Slugs, Centenary CoUege Gendemen, Ilellwan: Jli&amp;hlin' Blue Hens.
Erskine Flying Peel, Ennaville
Ac:es, Georgetown Hoyu, Hawaii
Rainbows, Winola Fqhling Illini,
Indiana Hoosien, Indian• Slate
Sycamores, Jamestown Colle1e
Jimmies, Kansas Jayhawu, La
Salle Explorers, Mary Baldwin

Squinels and Maryland TrmpinL
A110, the ~-l'tnMI City
Kang1roos, Nazuelb Moles,
Nebratka Cornh11sten, New
Hanl_p&amp;hin: Colle&amp;e Pcamcn, New

Mexico l.oboa, !'{Ow Yen Univer-

aity Violeta, North Carolioa Tit
Heels, ()g1elhorpe Stllrllly Pare~~,
Ohio Stite Buc"'teyes, Oklahoma
Sooners, Our Lady of the Like
Armadillos, Penn State Nittany
Lions, Pill State Gorillu, Purdue
Boilennatera, Richmond Spiders,
St Cllhaine Katiea, SL LouiJ Bil·
likens and Southern Arkaasu
MuleriderL

Alao, the Southem Illinois
Salukis, Southwestem Moundbuilden, SW Louisiana Ra&amp;in •
CaJuns, Stetson H1ttera, Sweet
Brw Vixeaa, Texu Loagborna,
Texu A.ll Javelinll, TCUlfomed
Froaa. Trinity Christian Trolls,
Tufll Jumbos, Vanderbilt Commodores, Virginia Tech Holdes,
Wlke Forest Deamon Deacons,
Wuhbum lchabodl, WubiJIIton
and Jeft'e11011 Preaidenll, W011aa
Maryland Tenon, Wlliai« Poeca.
Wicllill State Shoctera 1nd
Williln Purple Cowl.

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P11g1

The Dally Sentinel

Thuraday, Novtm.b er 11, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

Redwomen prepare for defen:se
of Mid-Ohio Conference crown
Tile p'
.. of bciDs chlmpi- 10 repeat as conference champion,
on of 1116 Mid-aliD CooftRnCe ll'C because of the parity within our
evenlllllly counllliwl•oced by die conference," he added, "but I feel
conceltil olllllilllllninl a gnp on we !Ire a strong preseason candi •
the lille for anodler-year, a cllal- date for winning the MOC. I'm
lenp die Univeni~ of Rio Grinde excited thst the conference games
- · · bp~ ICIIII will COil· are more competitive and I sincerefiord lhia r r M
ly believe the winner will have
The Redwomen, under the two, maybe three losses becanse of
direction of FeCOIId-season Coach the overall strength of the conferDavid Smalley, open die 1993-94 ence this year."
campaign at home Saturdl): at 2
Boosling the Redwomen's
p.m. 111inst Cumberland (Ky.). chances, hnwever, are 13 votes the
Smalley's club, bolstered by the team received towanl a spot on the
return of eight veterans, looks 10 NAIA's Division I preseason poll.
matdl ill 26-S ovenll teeenl from MOC coaches have already picked
Jut season and 13-1 finish in the Rio Grande 10 repeat as the cham· MOC that netted tile Redwomen pion, but Smalley, like o!llcr coach·
their rust sole confeRncc Iitle after es in the same Situation, is guanled
~it with Tiffm in 1991.
in his assessment of the upcoming
"Wmning the championship last campaign.
year was a pleuant surprise and
"There's plenty of enthusiasm
I'm cutainly proud of our team's and enough experience, but we 'II
accomplishments," commented be tested every night by competing
Smalley, 1993's District 22 Divi- against what is undoubtedly the
sion I and MOC coach oldie year. most challenging 30-games-plus
"This season we will II')' 10 dupli- schedule in the program's history,"
cate what we did, but our main he said.
thrust is 10 go 10 the national tourThe season will take Rio Grande
nament
into three tournaments besides the
"I think it's going 10 be diffteult annual Bevo Francis Classic la!er

this month - at David Lipscomb
(Tenn.), Shawnee State and Ohio
Northern, all prior 10 the conference schedule that begins in Jan.
uary. New opponents include Cumberland (with whom Rio Grande
closes its season in Februarr.).
IUPU-Indianapolis and West Liberty (W.Va.).
''We're pleased with the overall
athleticism we've assembled for
this year's roster," Smalley said.
"We are very quiet at the auard
position, we shoot the three-point
well, and we have a very strong
inside awict. With the overall talent and depth of our bench, we plan
10 create 40 minutes of uptempo
basketball through a variety of
defenses, combined with a controlled ttansition style on offense."
Making that brand of basketball
wort will be the task of returning
starters Lori Hamil10n (6-0, senior,
Gallipolis), Michelle Crouse (5-6,
senior, McArthur), Gena Norris (53, senior, Kingston) and Tricia
Collins (6-0, junior, Carlisle), as
well as Stacey Rilter (5-5. sophomore, Sidney), the MOC' s top
fiCslunan for last season. Hamilton,

Redmen expect to maintain

REDWOMEN FOR 1993-94 - Members or
the University or Rio Grande womea'a bulcetball team are, sealed from left, Shannon MOler,
Stacey Ritter, Gena Norrla, Michelle Crouse,
Kim Sowers and Jaana Kellou&amp;h; standing f'rom
a Kodak All-American, and Crouse
will be co-captains.
Also making conb'ibutions will
be veterans Kim Sowers (5-4,
junior, Frankfort), Shannon Miller
(5-5, junior, CaldweU) and Ginger
Smith (5-9, junior, Botkins).
Miller, a redshirt for most of last
year, gained some seasoning in the

left, trainer Brett Hoffman, ·Assistant Coacb
Kate Sayder, Connie Fazio, Glacer Smith,
Megaa Winters, Lori U..llton, Trkla CoiUns,
Stacy RDeyand Coaeb David SmaUey.

postseason, while Sowers and
Sn!ith came to be depended on for ~
strong backup.
Added 10 this mixture of experience will be three freshman recruits
-Megan Winters (6-0, London),
Connie Fazio (5-7, Chillicothe) and
Stacy Riley (54, Mechar!icsburg),
as well as Janna Kellough (5-3,
.
·

Chillicothe), who signed on with
the Redwomen earlier this fall.
"It's important that we ·have
leadership step forward early,"
Smalley said. "Lori's and
Michelle's maturity and experience, along with a new team defeRsive attitude, will pia~ Vital !Illes in
the degree of our success this season."

in season

few.'~'

While Freeman believes the pre·
season prediction of Marshall fin·
ishing third in the conference is
realistic, he said that won't stop
him and the Hehf.from shooting for
a Southern Conference crown.
He also believes the Herd has
the potentiaiiO win the league tournament despite the departure of
leading scorer Tyrone PhiDips, who
averaged 22.3 points as a senior

Rio Grande schedules
Redwomen

Red men
Date

OpJIOIMIIt
Nov. !6 ...................Wilberfon:e
Ncr/. 19-20..........................
oooouo

•••••••••....Bevo Francis~

Nov; 23 ..................... .11 Findlay
Nov. 26.27 ..11 Pibville a-it
·J)ei:. 1 .............W.VL Wesleyan

Dec. 3-4 .at ShaWnee St ~
Dec. 6 .....................W.VL Stile
Dec: 7..............Melcyhunt (PL)
J)cc. 11 ............................WIIsll
Dec. 14 ...............- Wilberfon:e
Ilec• .17..2() ..................... - ...........
1,\al lfaWiii Plcif'IC Shooloul

Date
Opponent
Nov. 13 .........Curnberllnd (Ky.)
Nov. 16 ...............M WUberforce
Nov. 19-2().~ ............................... ...
.............Bevo Francis Classic
No¥. 23 ..............a Fainnont St
Nov. 'n .. .at W. Liberty (W.Va.)
I)oc. 3-4 .....................................
a David I ipmn~b,Toumament
l)ec. 9 ................... W"llniington
J)ec. 11~ ........................ at Walsh .
l;)cc. 14 ..................Cenrral Stlde

I&gt;oc. 17-18 .................................
•..:: .... .at Sliawnee St C1assic

last season.
The Herd (16-11 overall last
season, 11-7 league) may be
SII'OIIgest at guard.
Junior Tink Brown, who had 81
assists and averaged 5.9 points per
game, returns as the starter at point
guard.
"last year, my overall attitude
was that I didn't take (basketball)
seriously," Brown said . "I shot
poorly and played poorly and I
wasn't mentally ready. Now, I feel

"'

"ft&amp;-

JIIl.. 15...........~.................... I WUI

Jan. 18 ........ .:..................!U"*-.

Jill. 22 .......;.,..~ ••...•.. ~. .~
Jan. 25 ~ ............tMOuntrVemon
Jan. 'n ....................
Stale
Jan.• 29 ......:.. - ..............lt Wlllll

ce.r.a

NATIONAL
GUARD
ARMORY

NEW REDMEN EDITION - Memben or
the University or Rio Grinde men's basketball
team for 1!193-94 laclude, seated from left, Benjie Lewis, Walter Stephens, Larry Caudill,
Craig Kerns, Matt Powell, Jason Curtis, Lance
Ream and Jack Morsan; standing from len,

the
played last year

.Assistant Coaebea Jeff Lanbam and Earl
Thomas, Jeff Hoeppner, Shan Snyder, Erie
Burris, Brett Coreno, Tobey Schreck, trainer
·Brett Hoffman, Coach Jolm Lawhorn and man·
ager Tbad Haines.

State, West Virginia Wesleyan,
Georgetown (Ky.) and Mercyhutst
;ii;~:.::i"' (Pa.). ·The lmproveme·nt of all .
Shawnee MOC teams will present another
8acll,on .. challenge·(or the Redmen.
·R'edinen'"'
"Offensively, we won't change
West Virginia

much," Lawhorn said. "We'U'shoot
tl]e lhree.:-JK&gt;int a lot. Defensively,
we shoufil be all 'right, but what
concerns me now is the· rebounding. That's an area that needs 10 be
improved."
·

like I can go out and cio the job."
Doug Schieppe, a transfer from
Bellevill~ Community College in
Illinois, probably will gel plenty of
playing lime at shootin~ guanl. The
6-foot-2, 180-pound JUnior made
124 of 254 three-point goals last
year for 49 percent.
Also competing for lime at thst
spot will be 6-S, 190-pound junior
Malilc Hightower (10.6 points per
game) and 6-I, !SO-pound Frank
Martin (7 .6 ppg), one of two

seniors on the squad.
Stuff Lynch, a 6-2, 210..pound
junior who scored nearly five
points a game last season, also will
compete for plar!"g lime at guard
Freeman satd Hightower also
will compete for playing time at
small forwanl. ffis,competitors will
beJ'unior Shawn Moore (6.3 ppg)
an 6-7, 195-poundjunior Curtis
Raymond, who transferred .to Marshall froiD Neosho County Community COllege in Kansas.

Raymond also will baUie for a

spot at power forward, along with

fellow Neosho transfer Troy Gray,
a 6-6, 215-pound"junior, and junior
Milce Peck (3;8 ppg}.
Wes Hardin, Marshall's firstever seven-footer, will compete for
playing time at center with Shawn
Brailsford (1.7 ppg), the team's
other senior. Hllfdin, a transfer
from Mississipp~ will need 10 provide the Herd rebounding power it
lacked last year. ·

has designated us to play on Sunday night for national TV and
ESPN's contracL We tried diligently to have it changed to·Monday
afJernoon, but with no success."
Major league baseball·officials

said the Reds vohmteered for the
Sunday opener, then tried 10 back
OUL

'

"The Reds had been major
league b~seb~ll's open.~r forever

until the iasl few years," National
League spokeswoman Katy Feeney
said. "They volunteered 10 do thst
to regain thst position.

POMEROY - Drew Webster
·Post #39 will hold a meeting concerning proposed changes to the
Post Constitution and By-Laws.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The annual turkey dinner at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Department will swt at
4:30p.m. at the f!I'Chouse. The cost
is $5.

POMEROY • Sacred Heart
Catholic Church will have their
1111nual fall bazaar with dinner swtinl! at4:30 ~.m. Cost for the dinner
w1ll i!Q.SS. or.adultund .$.2.5.0 for
children 12 and under. There will
also be games, a fancy stand and a
baked goods stand.

CHESTER • The Eastern High
School ·Band,Boostcn 'WiD:Sponsor-a craft show from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m.
in the high school cafeteria. There
will be a large variety of crafts,
food and entertainment.
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus
Weslern Style Sqwire Dance Club
will sponsor and open dance at the
Senior Citizens Center from 8 to II
p.m. Call will be Ed Pabst. All
western style square dancers are
cordially tnvited. Refreshments
will be served.

MASON • Dolly Holland, Presi·
dent of Honing Women's Minisuy
of Huntington, W.Va., will be at
Liberty Assembly of God at 7 p.m.
Pastor Gregory A. Johnson welcomes all to this special night of
minisuy.
POMEROY • Pomeroy AA will
meet at the Pomeroy Municipal
Building Auditorium at 7 p.m. For
more information call 992-5763.

MILLFIELD • There will be a
round and square dance at the Russell Building from 8 to II p.m.
with music by Out of the Blue.
Caller will be John Russell.

POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
Beta will meet at Episcopal Parish
Social Room at 7:30 p.m. HosleSScs ·will be Charlotte Elberfeld,
Ruby Bacr and Jane Walton.
FRIDAY ·

MD..TON • Mountaineer Opery
House will present "Lost and
Found" and the "McPeake Brothers" at 8 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 9053 Ladies Auxiliary
from 8-11:30 p.m. at the post.
Music by CJ. and the County Gentlemen with Red Carr and Melvin
Cross calling. All welcome.

SlJNDAY
POMEROY • All Meigs ar~a
singles· are invited to a Thanksgiving dinner sponsored by SOWS at
7 p.m. at Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Bring a dish.10
· share. For more information or
reservation call Sharon at 98.54312.

LONG BOITOM • Faith Full
Gospel Church iq Long Bottom
will have a hymn sing at 7 p.m.
Pas1or Steve Reed invileS the public. Fellowship will follow.

:1

SAVINGS

SAVE I5CJ :.:=.
Til'- n.:~==IIIIIIIIC
111, ....... a 111111111 ._.

HENDERSON • C.J . and the
Counuy Gentlemen will play at the
Henderson Community Building
from 8 to II p.m. featuring Frank
Bowles on the fiddle.

55

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WEHAVE THIS YEAR'S HOTTEST TOYS!

90 II. Polsltetl ~ralor Fallffc

''

Waha11111 High School Home Economics Classes
GFWC-Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club

Girls who sat on dry ice get burned

Solid Color lull Ends

Feb. l ..................shl- State ·
Feb. 5 .............Qido ~~ '*

OOHOHOOOoooo.al

Saturday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Sunday,12 noon - 5 p.m.

CLIFI'ON • There wiD be a benefit hymn sing at the Clifton Taber·
nacle Church at 7 p.m. The Mountain Top Singers will be the featured group. Pastor M.C. McDaniel
invileS the public.

For R~~g Buketa
R~~g. S2.25

Ja II .;......... ~·..........at Ul'bana
JilL 22 ..... _,_ ..~... C6vlll•
. ' . Jill. 25·•'o•··....:..:••• JttOum. Vernon
J•. . 29....... ;~.... ..:Jia ............."'"'•b
nam '

M. 12 ...........................Urbina
Feb. 19............at Mouat Vernon
M. 22
Cpmbeiland
r M. 2Ao .............o
.....Wilberfort.c

November 13 &amp; 14, 1993

MIDDLEPORT • There will be
a revival at the First Baptist Church
from Nov. 13 • 17 at 7 n.m. niohl!v
and at 10: 15 a.m. Sunday with the
Rev. Charles Norris of Racine.

ROCK SPRINGS ·Rocksprings
Grange meeting at 8 p.m. Members
encouraged to allCnd.

0

'

CRAFT SHOW

Sll..VERTON, Ore. (AP)- Six pep assembly stunt
HARRISONVILLE - Har- high school students suffered
"We pulled a brain-deader, and
risonville Lodge #411 will meet at se~;ere bums on their buuocks from we will make sure we don't do il
7:30 p.m. Work in Enter Pr~ntice sitlins on blocks of
ice for a again," said Dicit KromminJ!a.
Degree. Refreshments will follow.
All master masons are welcome.

_. ..

Ja'4 ...........:...............~e
JilL I ___::_;, .,. Sha.-.State
-! r,w';':"":"
·""""'born'
Jan •• 1.-...
, ,uucan
Ju. 15 ...~ .... J4.,................Tiffin

•W

such as rental fees lor a reception testified her law practice suffered, dence showl, turned into a niPt·
mare," her law)w, TC'I'CDCC Plynn,
hall - not the costs assoctated and she could blrcly speak.
laid
in closing arguments.
"The 'great adventure,' the eYiwith pain and suffering.
"I think the awarded damages
were in error," said Schiller, who
wasn't involved in the case.
HANDMADE HOLIDAY TREASURES ,
The two divorced 50..ycar-olds
were introduced by a friend in January 1992 and chau.cd occasionally ·
on the phone before meeting over
dinner that month. She proooscd at
an Orlando airport in Man:h after a
brief vacation in Florida. He
agreed, singing love sonss 10 ber as
they jet!cd back to Ch~o.
He lavished $24,000 m gifts on
his bride-to-be - including a
$t9,000 engagement ring- and
promised her a "great adventure,"
according to testimony.
But the divorced father o£ three
from Adrian, Ore., had second
thoughts and broke off the engagement by leiter. He claimed that
Wildey hid aspects of her past from
him, including psychiatric problems.
He offered to let Wildey keep
the ring and to use $10.000 in his
Route 62 North
bank account "to help you through
these times."
Point Pleasant
She sued under Illinois' Breach
of Promise Acl
Sponsored by:
Wildey said the breakup left her
Mason County Extension Homemakers
immobilized and depressed. She

~ SCI¥~,

Jan• .t.;.......MOeula t)WII(Ky.) ' Dec. 21 .......dUPU-Indiimapolis
Ilec. 29-30 •. ..;••~ ..........................
Jan. 8 .....l ........a Shajineo Stile
..C*io Nc!Rbem ToWaamen~
Jlli•., i ~.;.;... Cillo J);lmlak,a
'f

By SARAH NORDGREN
.Assotlated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Here's a
romance story for the '90s: She
. · proposes. He accepts. Seven weeks
mto the engagement, he changes
his mind. She sues.
She wins $178,000.
On Tuesday, a federal jury of
seven men and one woman said
Sharon Wildey, a lawyer, was
wronged by her former fiance,
rancher Richard Austin Springs.
The jury awarded her $93,000
for pain and suffering, $60,000 for
the resulting loss of income from
her law practice, and $25,000 £or
· psychiatric counseling that she
underwent after the engagement
was broken.
"It is a serious women's issue
and one that hasn't received too
much attention," she said. "This
has been a very painful experience
for me and my family, and I'm
very tired."
Springs' attorney, Bernard
Nussbaum, said he would ask U.S.
District Judge Suzanne Conlon to
throw oill the verdict
Matrimonial attorney Donald
Schiller said the 194 7 state law
under which Wildey sued was
intended to allow brides or bridegrooms to recover actual damages,

SATURDAY

. CHESTER - Regular meeting of
:· the Shade River Lodge #453
; F&amp;AM. All master Masons inviied
.•to atteftll . Refreshments will be

Cincinnati Reds to open 1994 se'ason on April's first Sunday
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds are going 10 have
an opening night and an opening
day next season.
The team has decided to celebrate opening day, complete with a
downtown parade, on Monday,
April 4. The Reds open die season
on Sunday night, April 3, against
the SL Louis Catdinals.
The Sunday night game is a new ·
feature under baseball's new television contract. Reds owner Marge
Schou, in her ftrat ~blic act since
returning from an etght-DKinth suspension, said Mondad that the team
will treat its seton game as the
opener.
'"Sunday, April 3, is Easter, a
day for families to be together,''
Schott said. "We have had many
let!ers and calla from fans encouraging us 10 keep opening day and
the parade on Monday.
"We would prefer to play only
the !raditional MOnday opening day
game. But maj~r league !laseball

--Community calendar

THURSDAY

.

In fact, head coach Dwight
Freeman says Marshall's tough
schedule is a major concern.
"We play at Wake Forest, at
Kansas State, we play WVU and
are at Oral Roberts and national
champion North Carolina," he said
during the team's media day
Wednesday. "To be successful, we
must make sure we win at home
and 20 on the road and take a

OBSERVES BIRTHDAY - A famUy party wu held at the
· Extended Care Facility at VeteraDS Memorial H01pltal Wednesday
: · afternoon In observanee of the 90th birthday of Loshla B. Mitchell.
: : Mrs. Mltcbell, who rormerly resided In Mklclleport, bas el&amp;bt chll·
~: dren.

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
pnd the day or that event. Items
· must be received In advance to
; assure publication in tbe calen·
: flar.

It's not too early for Marshall to dream of March Madness
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- November ian 't 100 early for
Marsllall's basketball team to be
dreamin~ of Match Madness.
"I thtnk this season we're very
talented. I expect us to be real
good. We've been ~han! in
.practice and I think we hive a lot
of leaders. Everythina is going well .
·and I expect a Joe.
''I would like 10 soc us go 10 the
bill dance." laid junior luard Stuff
Lynch, referring 10 ~NCAA tour·IIIIIICIIL ''I think we haYC the lalent
·and enoush discipline and good
·coaching to win the conference.
They say you can never set your
•goals 100 high and my aoal, per.'sonaUy, is 10 get 10 the biB dance."
If Marshall makes it to the
natlon•l tournament, tlie Herd
should have plenty of experience in
playinslop-notch teams.

Thu,..Y, November 11,1tl3

Ex{iancee awarded $178,000 over broken romance

The loss of five aenion from the

According to Freeman,

Sentin~l .
Page 8

compet~tive · edge

by the Redmen coaches during the Brett Coreno (6-5, North Olmsted)
and Larry Caudill (6-3, Beaver).
Univenity of Rio .Grande men's summer.
basketball team, among them two
Improvement will be on Rio lack Morgan (5-9, Barberton), who
of its best scoms in recent history, Grande's mind, and the team has made a solid impression in the
would present difficul!ies for any started in that direction by being point guard slot last year, is one of
college coach, but the Redmen' s chosen 21st of the 25 teams listed two sophomores on the team, the
JoU Lawhom believes his 1993-94 on the NAJA's Division I presea- other being Shawn Snyder (6-5,
edltlon will hold its competitive son poll. MOG coaches also chose Mount Vernon), a transfer from
cdae·
"
the Redmen and Urbana to tie £or Youngstown State. ·
"l don't know bow successful second place in their recent poll.
LeadiDJ the freshmen will be
we'll be because of our schedule,
While the Redmen had depend- Eric Burns, the 6-7 post player
b!it we need 10 play a IChcdule as eel in the past upon Jeff Brown and from Logan who redshirted last
rouaf1 as thai w.,ltl it's a fun way Troy Donaldson to carry the year. Burris is one of the best
to play, and for our players and offense, their departure due to 1mproved people Lawhorn said
fans, it's more enjoyable," lll'8duation has left the field open. he's seen due 10 conditioning and
Lawhom noted prior 10 launchins f:onunately for Rio Grande, junior practice since the end of the past
his 14th season at Rio Grande. Matt Powell (6-4, Barnesville), season.
"Also, our conference will be out- who bested Brown and Donaldson
"Eric has come a mile, and he
Sllllding."
,
in overall scoring last season with demonsb'ales what hard work and
The Redmen open die cam~gn an average of 23.5 markers a game, getting after things can do," the
Nov. 16 at home against Wilber- will top this season's returnees 10 coach said.
force. At 25-8 overall in 1992-93, the program
New 10 the program are freshthe Redmen were third in District
Backing 'up Powell will be the men Lance Ream (5-10, Akron),
22's Division I and tied with team's lone senior, Jeff Hoeppner Benjie Lewis (5-9, Oak Hill), Craig
Cedarville for third place in the . (6-4, Mansfield), who C311e to Rio Kerns (6-5, Chillicothe) and Tobey
Mid-Ohio Conference 819·5.
Grande this fall from Ohio Univer- Schreck (6-6, Bucr.rus).
This season, the Redmen travel sity, when: as a freshman he played
"This is primarily a fun group of
beyond the conlinentll U.S. for the for Larry Hunter's Bobcats. kids 10 coach and a
, that's
fllll,~.evct.,wl!en they ,~pete • Hoeppner, al!uard• possesses the
noted
in lbc Hawaii f'al:if~e. $~t .in d~fei:~c sktlls ,the
lt9!1olul1i l)~.i@-~1 •.\Haw!lll Law liilkl;•WU
..
Pacific finished last season third leadership.
wins.
team
work
~ aa··N~.o.Di~ IIIIIDI. · ~ ~ Rtumiag to the IIIJigram•.•. ,l!ard,~
·
. , ~J'
The lfiP was made ~le tluot!Bh !Ire Juniors Walter. Stephens (6-4, 10 play."
··
a succe,ssliiJ fund-l'llllng camp111gn Akron), Jason Curus (6-2, Akron),
The typically tough schedule

The Daily

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• 't7 or 49 MHz RC.

MILLS.END FABRIC

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Reg.

We ·re BIG on Servtr.e!

'

,270'MILL. IIPDL~. ott.
.· .;
Hra.: Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00; Sill 8:30-4:30

~fld bl'~l

we r't' l'JQht rr.

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til .111

~our· nr·rQhtltli'~,~~H11

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Plgl 10-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
•,

Thurtday,
November 11, .\193 :
. .
'

....

onortn·
·ase
ho Serve
Our hearts and sincerest gratitude go out to
every man and woman who has served this great
la:.id. Their devotion to duty and country does not go
unrecognized. On Veterans Day we remember and honor
these heros. Please join us in this~pecial salute.

Throughout our history, it was through the efforts and
sacrifices of those who served their country, that enabled
Americans to .live as a free and peaceful nation.
On Veterans Day and every day, we''re proud to be
of service to the Veterans of our area
..
In Honor Of

~*

Clair A. Turner, E-5

• •

Army 8/66 - 8/68

*
~
•
,

,.

.

·~·

.•.

Vietnam

.•
'.

Love,
Your Family

'
•'

.. " .•. ""

In Honor Of
Delbert W. Fridley
Spec. EH
Army 1969 to 1971
Vietnam
Love,
Mom &amp; Emmett

In Honor Of
MSGT.
James A. Gheen
Ft. Hood, TX
Army 1986-current
Desert Storm
Love,
Mom &amp; Dad
&amp; Family

In Honor Of
Captain
· Thomas R. Rue
Army 1942-1949
World War II
Love,
Your Family

In Honor Of
. '
John F. Boyd
Tech 4
Army 1942 • 1946
World War II
Love,
Wife Marie,
Daughters Kathy &amp; Joni

.

·'

VALLEY
LUMBER &amp;

Fruth
TRAOOR
Pharmacy SALES AND SERVICE

lSI BRAVELY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
. 992-6491

K&amp;C
Jewelers

SUPPLY
,.
COMPANY

YOUR BEST BUY FOR
THEWNGRUN"

MIDDUPORT, OHIO

INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO
'992·2342

992·6611

992·2975

,,,,

'

.

QUALITY
PRINT
·SHOP

SUGAR RUN EWING
FUNERAL
FLOUR
.
HOME
MILLS
'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.' 992·5141
'

CHESTER, OHIO
985·3301

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2121

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2115

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992·3345

I.

ADOLPH'S ·cRows· INGElS
THE SHOE
i P.IAEE ,·
RIAL . 'D
' -~~ntiiJ .FURNitURE
' .AND . .
HOSPITAl VALLEY Restaurant JEWELRY. ·. LOCkER 21
I

'

'

'

"

'

'

~

OHIO .
I

•

'

'

•

~-

992•2104
• "'

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2556

· POMEROY, OHIO
992:5432

t •

.f

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
. ~992.:.2635
..
'

f

I

Your Family
In Honor Of
Perry F. Hoffman
S.Sgt.
Army Nov. 42 • Dec. 45
W.W. II

Love,
Daughters, Sons,
Brother &amp; Sister
&amp; Friends

In Honor Of
' SP4
Paul A. Simpson, Jr.
United States Army
Oct. 1963-Sept. 1966
Love,
Wife Janet Simpson &amp;
Daughters Valerie,
Joanie &amp; Teresa

In Honor Of
R'Obert B. Black
Navy 1952-1956
Korean Conflict
Love,
Your Family

In Honor Of
Thomas E. Turner
PFC,Army
June 1917 to
April1919
World War I
Love,
Your Family

•

'

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2955

..

'

In Honor Of'
SP 4 "
••.'
,,
'

Gene Humphrey
Army 1952-55

•

'

Love,

'

'

BAUM
TRUE
VALUE

Desert Storm

In Honor Of
The lowa47
Navy April19, 1989
USS Iowa 8861
Love,
Shelly &amp; Hollyrhea
White

'

•

FISHER
FUNERAL
HOME

Army 1/91 • 3/91

Love,
Bro. Virgil Walker;
Sis, Helen Cline; Son,
Butch; Daughter Sharon

.

POMEROY, OHIO
992·2955

'

POMEROY, OHIO

DOWNING· SWISHER &amp;
LOHSE
CHILDS
MULLEN-MUSSER PHARMACY

Larry W. Parsons, E-4

ww 2 12-22-44

************************•***************************************************************************

•'

.

~

In Honor Of

In Honor Of
P.F.C. Lewis F. Walker
Army
Killed Battle of Bulge

I

RIDENOUR

TVAND

APPLIANCE·:·
· CHESTER, OHIO
915-3307

Korean War
Love,

'f

Your Family

,,,•'

.

&gt;'.

l

T/5
Edward R. Martin
Army 1945-47

WWII
Love,
Your Children
&amp;Grandchildren

In Honor Of
Sergeant
Jeff Holtz
Air Force
1987-1993
Desert Storm
Love,
Your Family

In Honor Of
Corporal Alfred
"Toby'.' Young
Army
11/12/41·10/14/45
WWII
Love,
The Family

In Honor Of

In Honor Of

Sgt. Lewis Long

Donald Arthur Cottrill,

US Air Force

Seaman-1st Class

Jan. 1942-0ct. 1945

US Navy 1942-1946

WWII

WWII

Love,

Love,

Wife Dorothy Long .

Sadly missed by family

****************************************************************************************************

•

:•
'•(

·&lt;

..

'l

&lt;:

,.'•

'.

••

..••

.,
.·'•
,.,

..••,.
,

"

In Honor Of
Victor A. Bahr
· · . "Greaser"
Army Air Corps
1942-45
World War II

L,.

'I

.·!

love, ..
Your Girls

,

In Honor Of "

In Honor Of
PFC Earl S. Shaffer
453rd Medical ·
Colectlng Co.
Army, Aug. 42 to Dec. 45
WW II, Normandy,

In Honor Of
Staff Sergeant
Sandra K. Taylor
Air For.ce

499o-91
Desert Storm

In Honor Of
Yeom·an 2nd Class
Gemlna Girolami
CaseI
WAVE (US Navy)
1943-1944 &amp; 1945

WWII

In Honor Of
Staff Sgt.
Royce A. Bissell
US Army
Dec. 1986 ·Nov. 1993

In Honor Of
Sgt. E-7

Roy (Frank) Riffle
Army
1954-1971

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 11, .1993
•

Study says,: eat .better,
li.YJL{rz!!gl}!;.~s_q,r..~Jt:!!.t!ey

FUND RAISING PROJECT • Tlie Meigs
unit of the American Cancer Society traditional·
ly has a sale of Christmas items as a fund raising
projecl. This year they have tins of cookies,
Christmas cards, and gold tree ornaments, all

available at the Meigs County Healtb Depart·
ment, the Farmers Bank, Bank One, K lit C.
Jewelers, Crow and Crow Law Offices. Here
board members, Norma Torres, Pat Carson, and
Scott Dillon look over the sale items.

AP Science Writer
ATLANTA (AP)- Want to
liv~ longer and save mone~, too7
Switch to a low-cholesterol dieL
A new study challenges the
widely held belief that healthy food
is more expensive. In fact, it ~neludes that people wh~ adopt diets
that are good for tbeu hearts can
cut their grocery bills by about 75
cents a day.
The reason is obvious, even
though the study is the fust to try 10
prove it: Lean beef costs less than
prime; chicken costs less than beef;
made-from-scratch dishes cost less
than packaged foods.
A heart-healthy diet includes
plenty of fruits, vegetables, pasta,
ri ce and beans . And these are

sidered frugal dining, things like
. '1\amburger bologna, microwave
ii':'Hilild f,;,zen french fries.
.~ The study was directe!l by Dr.
Tli9\nas A. Pearson of the Basselt
· Hospital Research Institute in
, Cooperstown, N.Y. He pre~nted
' his fmdings Wednesday atll'flleet·
ing of the American Hean Association.
Other physicians agreed with
Pearson that doctors should stress
the lower cost of healthy eating to
get the ir patients to change their
_ ways.
" It's ju~t chea~r to pick this
kind of food," S81d Dr. K. Lance
Gould of the University of Texas at
Houston. " This is important to
emphasize, because it is reachable

HAULING
UMESTONE,
GRAVEl. TOPSOIL
&amp;_(OAL

In the study, Pearso~ and c~Ileagues checked the eaung habits
of 29 1 patients with hig~ cholestcrollevels. Each was advised to_go
on a standard cholcsterol-lo~cnng
diet intended to lim it the1r fat
intak~ to 30 percent of tolal dally
calones.
.
.
The researchers mterv1ewed the
patients before and six months after
the dietary counselmg. Then tb~y
used a standard fo!""ul~ to Prcd!ct
how the pallents. eatmg hab11s
would change theu blood cholestcrol. Finally, th~y calculated the
grocery, store pnces of the foods
people ate.
They found that the more people
lowered tbeu cholesterol, the less
they spent on food.

RIIIOIIIIble.Ratn
Joe N. Sayre

Dar Au l•nden: A mothec
tell you that 110111e or 11er
children's friends had been ticked
out of their homea. Wben you llid
thole tidl and their flmiliea should
seet COIIIseling, you were rip. oo
the nwt. ,.. I retired probation
officer, may I "'W ldllt you migbt
abo have addressed~ point?
Children who have been on the
run and are living on the s~Re~S
can come up with some very
convincing Slaies. A teen.ager who
tells you dial his or ber parents were
cruel and their home life was
terrible may in fact be a ttuant,
beyolld Jlll1lllll( cOniiOI. When you
lib in IUCb I younpler without the
tnowlcclae or CDIIIellt or his parent
or guardian, you may not only
be contributing to that child's
delinquency but be violaling the law.
A runaway or street youth is
oflen the subject or an ouiSIInding
w.-t or 1 JDisslng penon's report.
A flmily dill~ to help should
flllt c:ontact the child's school, the
local 80Cial welfare agency or the
police..
Silllllions 111e not always what
they seem. Too many families
wrote 10

believe they can solve the problem
by simply taking the child in for a
few days or weeks. In the vast
majority of cases,_they can't, and

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1993, L01 Anaeltt
Timu S)'lldlcale

Creaton SyncUcate"

.

they end up doing more harm than
good.- J.S.
DEAR J.S.: While your advice
may be good for the long haul, I fail
to see bow it would be blnnfu1 10
lake in a kid for a day or two and
give him or her a clean bed, 110111e
bome-criftl food and I little good

advice.
I ape, however, dtat the police
should be notified since IWIIWIYI
rould also be in trouble with die law,
and by housing them, a person could
get in ttouble, too.
The next ktter suppons your
positioo. Keep reading.
·
Dar Ann Landers: Before you

Pentagon releases
nearly all Vietnam
POW records
By MARCY GORDON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGlON (AP) - Keeping a promise by President Clinton,
the Pentagon says it has released
nearly all U.S. military records
related to missing Americans in
Vietnam in time for a Veterans Day
deadline.
The Defense Department
announced that it had declassified
and made public an estimated 1.5
million pages of documents related
to POWs and MIAs from the Viet·
nam War. They include Pentagon
reports on interviews with refugees
from Southeast Asia, information
provided by formor POWs and
other subjects.
In a Memorial Day speech last
spring at the Vietnam Veterans
~emorial, Clinton drew loud
applause ~hen he annou~ced he
was ordermg that the VIetnam
POW-MIA documents be declass1fled and released by Veterans Day.
Clinton said he wanted to
"renew a pledge to those ~amilies
whose names are not on th1s wall,
because their sons and daughters
did not come home."
.
The documents have been giVen
to the Lib~ of Congress, w.here
they are bemg transferred to m1crofilm, Marine Corps Maj. Steve Lit·
tie, a Pentagon spokesman, sa1d
. Wednesday.
"Everything.~ can J?e declas·
sifled has been, Lmle sa1d.
He said only a small number of
documents were not declas~ified,
describing them as "~e lctnd of
intelligence that we sun ~ave to
protect ," such as surveillance

CG!demn paren111 who have ticked
out dleir teen-agers, )OU'd be wise
10 get the whok IIOry.
When my daughter wu in ber
early leCIIS,Ihe 1111 away &amp;om heme
in a fit or anger. I lcamed almost
immedialely dtat she had been lltal
in by the family of one of her
IChoolmatea.
When I called to thank them for
giving ber a place 10 118)' IDIIil lbe
cooled down, I enoountmc1 a level
or hostility )011 woutd not believe.
She had lllld them I ordered ber out
of the house and wouldn't let her

come back.

Fortunately, they believed me
when I told them llhe had 1101 been
lllllhful. I then wonden:d how many
others llhe had fed the ll8llle line.
Ann, rm sianing my twne, but
please don't use iL My daughter and
I have fmally become friends, and
I'd like to keep it that way...
ACWORTH, GA.
DEAR AC: Your point .. check
out a runaway's 110ry before you
OIJIICbnn die pmnll - is a good
one. 1'lllak you for adding some
"'lance 10 the pic:~~R
Dear Au Ludera: May we

It's your world
_Meigs .Co.Qnty.
Special to The Dally Sentinel
Meigs County
•
Health Deparunent
112 East Memorial Drive
P.O. Box 63 Pomeroy
By Keith R. Little, R.S.
Most people go to their kitchen
faucet, turn it on and obtain a
sparlclinl! clear glass of water, .drink
it and never th1nk of how 11 got
there or the process used in supplying iL It is something that is taken
for granted thousands and th9U·
sands of times each·day right here
is Meigs Cowny.
•
For those people who are fortu·
nate enough to livq in villages with
public water systems, and areas
supplied by rural water system~.
· there is little concern. I say th1s
because these water systems are
under Ohio Environmental Protec·
lion Agency jurisdiction and must
submit water samples monthly for
bacteriolopcal analysis. They must
also submit samples bi-ann~ly, or
annually for mineral analySIS.
The other Jl?flion of our county
population w1tb private .water sys·
terns must learn to care for their
own water sources, including
drinking water.
The Meigs Cbunty Health
De~artment is mandated by the
OhiO Department of Health to
license inspect and tO enforce the
rules aNI regulations of the private
water systems. The Health Depart·

ment also does water testing (pri·
marily potable water) to determine
the presence or coliform bacterin.
Health Department Sani·
tarians come to the property on
request by a resident, take a water
sam pie in a sterilized bottle, and
send it to the Ohio Department of
Health Laboratory for analysis. The
results are usually known within
one week or less. The charge for
this service is $10.
Many other tests can be per·
formed on residential water sup·
plies. Tests for nitrates, nitrate
choloridest tlourides, calcium, iron
lead, sodium magnesium and alb·
ers too numerous to list in this arti·
cle can be run. Costs for teats are
detennined by the laboratory.
Private water systems are more
likely to become cootaminated by
animals, surface water, or other /
pollutants. That is why it is recommended that private water systems
be checked annually. The Health
Department Sanitarians are also
able to give information or the use
of springs, ponds, and lakes as a
source or drinking water and safe
ways to chlorinate and filter iL
Questions about drinldng water
safety should be directed to Sanitarians at the Meigs County Health
DepartmenL Our phone number is
992-62. Remember. it is better to
be safe than sorry.

re~r.~notr:rsuadedthey'reall Mundy•.pledges to

improve
•
•
b
• M '
mlnOrlty num erS ln arzneS

declassified,' said Bill Bennelt, a
spokesman for tbe·National Viet·
nam Veterans Coalition, a coalition
of7Sgroupsnationwide.·
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) Library of Congress employees Marine Corps Commandant Gen.
are indexing the d~um.ents a~d Carl Mundy pledged t~da~ .to
pulling them on mtcrofllm, satd increase the number of mmon~
library spokeswoman Jeanne " in the Marine Corps. saying ~~.s
Smith. She said 25,000 to 30,000 recent remarks about the capahil1·
documents have been completed so ties of blacks had been inlsconrar.
strued.
The library is closed on Thurs"Although my words oo anoth·
day VelelliiiS Day.
cr occasion have given the impres·
The documents are in addition sian that I believe that some
to a huge body of government Viet· Marines, because of dleir color, are
nam POW-MIA documents. that not as capable as others ... those
were declassirtcd under a July 1992 were not the thoughts in my mind,
order by former President Bush. nor are they or have they ever been,
Those documents are available at the thoughts of my heart,'' Mundy
the main Nllional Archives build·
in1 in WashiJIIIOII and die National
Archives facility in Suitland, Md.
Both flcilitiea .-e closed on Thursday.
TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - The
Yellow rever killed over s,ooo people makers of a salad dressing called
in New Orleans between 1853 and "Wok this Way" n chaftJing ill
1855.
label because or complaints from
On March 2, 1917, the Jones Act was Asian-Americans.
··
pused, which made. Pue~o Rico a
The label inclucjes carica1ures or
U.S. territory and 1ts mhab1tanta U.S. barefoot dancers in what appear 10
citizens.
be Chinese "coolies" outfitS com-

said.
Last week, Mundy apologized
for remarks that were quoted in a
"60 Minutes" interview, in which
he said test scores show minority
officers do not shoot, swim or use
compasses as well as whites.
The comments had set off a
round of criticism from black lead·
crs.
Of the 1S9,000 enlisted men and
women in the Marine Corps, about
18 percent are ·black. Of the ser·
vice's 29,000 officers, about 5.4
percent are black.
•

address the problem or the
"starving" photographer? Your
readers delene 10 hear both sides.
We are paying $80 a plate for our
reception or 120 people. We me also
going to employ, besides the
photographer, a deejay and his
helper, 1 minister, a videogmpher
and a few others. AJ you can aee,
this adds up. We're 1101 the kind to
point 01111 problem without
of·
fcring a solutioo. Here it is. Dear
Pholographer: Take $10 out of your
$1,000 pio6t and fltiCk. a /IUlclt! TAMPA
OBAR TAMPA: I received
several ktten from readers who
sh8led your view, but mOSl of them
had language dtat WIS unprintable.
Thanks for one J.oould use.

Is life pauillg )1011 by? Wlllll 10
lmprow your &amp;Oclal skills? Write for
AM L.aNJers' MW boolckt, "How 10
Mate Friettds and Stop' Beirtg
l..cM/y. • Send a u/f-addressed,lollg,

bNSilless-siu ellvtiOfH! aNl a check
or mtmey ortkr for $4J5 (litis ill·
clwks postage and halldlirtg) to:
Fritllds, c/o AM LtwJers, P.O. Box
11562, Chicago.IU. 6061 UJ562. (/11
CIJNJtiD, send $5.05.)

(

I

614-742·2138

CARPENTER' SERVICE

POLICIES

w•UOt•

• Ad. oullide the eouaty your ad t'WLI Mu.t he prepaid
• Bee••• cliecownfor act.. paid ia aclftaee.
• Free Ad.: Giweaway aDd Fou.ad _. uad• 15 word. will b.

nHI3ftJ1alaoebarp.
• • Price of oul r.. aU capitalletl&lt;ln II do...le price ol..t coot
• 1 polat liDo type onlyuoed
• Seat.iDel il .a ot hlllpouible for erron ...... rJI'It day (chock
lor errorollrot day..t rum ia paper)•.C.U heton MO p.m.
clay after· puM~tion to make eOrrectioa
• Ad. th..t MUll be paid in adnace are:

I
I
I
I
I

Card of Thoako

Happy Ada

In Mentoriul
Yard Sale.
• A cl-illed oul.,rtioeJnent placed ill the The Doily Seatiael
(except Cluoirled llioplay, Buoia- Card or Lop!
Noticeo) wUioloo appear ia the PoiDt Pleuaat R.p.ter 0111d
the Callipello Daily TrihiiDe, reachi"' over 18,000 ho ....

I

.

l

OASS'D•I£'·,..1fi£';,..11S

I
I
I
1 Tables are $10 each number of tables needed _ _ I
1
I
Mail to:
I
I
1
Southern High ~chool
I
I
P.O. Box 98, State Route 124
I
I
I
,
Racine, Ohio 45771
I
I
I
Attention: Melissa Stewart
I
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 ·.

:ciTY___________ STAT~E--------

GET RESIJLTS • J'AST!

WOik
andPiumbln9

5

• t:xt.rlot

Adl

l'lllnllng
(FREE ESnMATU)

Happy

V.C. YOUNG Ill

35th

Pomwoy, Ohio

992-6215

..,_....,

.

Birthday
Mick
Davenport

AUTO
NITS
Spaclallzlng In CUllom
Frame Repair
IIW&amp; . . . NIIIIOI '
AUIUIU&amp;IIOIIU

992·701Jer

l

992·5551

er TOlL flEE

1400..1410070
DAIWII, OHIO

GUN SHOOT

CALL

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
F8CioryChoke
12 Glluge Shot
Strictly Enforced

304-n3-5533
Open 8 Day'sA Week

Now has beautWul Cocker Spaniel P~i... Also
featuring a 2 ft. convnon Black· Tequ. Layaway• are
now available for Christmas. Sale on our entire atock
of large aquariums.
new ~ams.

11flcr1 .... pd.

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone.
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878

DK's

EXCAVAnNG

Farm Toys

BUll ~f!i! 1 !J~CIOIOE
andt~WORK

AT THE
QUAliTY PRINT SHOP
111~1lhp a"- Ohio

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC IYI'IEMS,
HOlE llrTEI n1

TRAI~~

GREAT SELECTION AND

DRI=~
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

VAAIETV OF OUAUTY

FREE ESnMATES

METAl TOYS.
112-33M 1:30-4 ilotDn.-Fri.

' 992-3838

Pedol Tntetora Av......

7424020 Allow 5:00

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

Craft show scheduled.:
The Southern High School
Choir will sponsor a Craft Show
and a Breakfast with Santa on Sat·
urday, December 4, 1993 at South·
ern High School. The craft show
will be from 9:00 a.m. until 4:00
p.m. while the breakfast With Santa
will be from 9:00a.m . until 11:00
a.m.
Craft tables are $10 each. Any·

one interested can send th~;~
attached form with the money
before Novembet 24 to Southern
High School, Allention: Melissa
Stewart, P.O. Box 98, State Route
124, Racine, Ohio 45771.
Proceeds for the Craft Show
will go toward the Choir's trip to ·
Aorida.

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - .New Hanky Panky Lid. of "1anhauan, a
York state's awarding of a $25,000 lingerie company that wants to sell
grant to a lingerie company has its line of intimate apparel to Mex1·
.some people all hot and bothered.
co, E~ and l8J1811.,. .
. .
Gov. Mario Cuomo announced
Using state money to help sell
Tuesday that the state had awarded G-strings and lacey underwear
$513,000 in grants, mostly to help makes Robert Schulz see red.
New York businesses boosttheir .. , "It's
of this is
~xports. Included was $25,000 for

er activist wh!J has taken the state
to court numerous times over its.
spending pfl!Ctices.
"Over the years, the governor.
has provided us with so much fiscal
hanley panky that we .now have
Hanky Panlcy for export," Schulz
toldTheGazetteofSchenectady. .
·

BULLI IR BOARD

Announcemenls

NOW
AVAILABLE
.

.

Relhodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

IN THE-

FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473
7~

"Eaate~n ·CI'Ift

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
. HEADNG &amp;
COOJ.ING

Show

Nov. 13 9:00 am-4:00 pm
EHS gym SR 7 • Quills, Baskets,

CALL

'l

Now ·

THIS SPACE
$8.00

'

THIS SPACE
$16.00

~

.,
')

·'

Rugs, Food, Entertainment
·For Info: 985·4231
Come and Support the Band!

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 882-7474 '

Coming To

-

Vera's Natural Images
6 Martin Street f.Aaeon
,
Computer Imaging SlyiBII on Video
Tueadlly November 23 V am-11 pm
Call For Ap~tmant 304-773-51137

POMEROy, OHIO

Inside Estate Sale
Saturday Nov. 13th 8:00 am

334 Palmer Street
Middleport, Oh

THIS SPACE
$12.00

l&amp;l111E UIN
331SIPitMhel...
•••45771
614..f92.sst4
1-100-714·1111

992·2156'
1
',
.

m011 in the 18001.
Clayton Chinn, a ~ Times
research director, objected to the
label and met Tucaday with Carl
Spencer, l!l'llelal ~er of John·
ny's Fine l'oodl in Tacoma. .
Spencer said he expects to mtroduce a new label by January.

Call 992-2156

Maker of sexy lingerie gets state grant .

e ·

..

FOR MORE INFORMATION .·

Company working on new salad
dressing ·label after complaints

,

1NAM~----------------------ADDRESS._____________________

I
1

SAYRE.TRUCKING

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

,
...................... .
Runaways may weave an untruthful story
I
I

To place an ad

Coma bY 1111d register
far free Battery to .,.
given IWI)' O.C.mber
24, tm. No'ioJ~::
raqubd toN
don'th-

...
"'

.."',
'I

.,,"'
I

' Call By 2:~0

•&lt;

10 Win.

..••

··:Friday for Sunday Edition

..

"',,

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

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
loll 189

Middleport, o•1o 45760
(614) 143•5264 · 5114111311fn

j '

'•

CIIPU &amp; UPIOLSTIRY CLEIIIIIG
We give carpal end

WV013372

upholatery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they dnervell

We OlpBClalla In:
ARE It WATER
DAMAGE

alte)

RESTOAAmNINSURANCE CLAIMS

Z4Hour
Emergency Service
Gary Bany, OwnerfTlm F-*, Manager
Cer111ied technician&amp; on
Job.

Mobile and Doublewlcle owners ...

FURNACES
lnelltlled

Memory Mates - Portraits

THE
PHOTO PLACE
Pomeroy

'·

_,....with

11......... -Illite.

Special Occasions

-

C•IIIEIIIEn'S MOilLE

Hllftll liD COOLIII

Qalllpolla, Ott.

Shophord,

,..........,36.

2T COf'llaola TV, nHd• rtp~lr
114-tiZ.ss&amp;e.
•

446-9515

aUMaJr•8Modela!

108 High Street

Giveaway

2 112 Yoor Old llolo, Blac:l! &amp; Rod

CERTIFIED MKHANK
OUnOAID MOTOR s32"
INIOARD/OUTIOARD saoWINTER STORAGE AVAilABLE

Bob and Charlene Hoeflich
I

4

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS

'

"

-n

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURMICE COMPANY

........11 or Toiii',..1:·10N72-1117

llno.aiiii~, IOgood ........

-3CM ~2001
-•. ...., .• -lonola:
4 a.g~o P,pa, 2 -.tho 1

"-ti lleoglo Oog; 1 Smal Mix
~ lllontha, IM2!11 IIOZ

4 Kltlono, 114-311-2!125.

I "-'DDioo, Pon Bugle &amp; llothor ·
F-· ~o Good Homo, 114-25/1.
1434.

Calico klnono, 10 only, will dollvor, !IOW7S-5110.

I'M -

old ........ 31157
Rocbpnngo Rd. , wyon Sam
Rllhll'd.

�ThtDIIIy~11

NJ:A Cro••word Puzzle
ACIIOII

PHILLIP

ALDER

aaC:,

1~t.-.

40Honl.-t
42YN-QFIIIINd

._,_

5 ..........

44-~

12 lltlrllthtM

47

'*'CIIeriCter

Laol: ...... doD,
ol floiloln Colllot', IM·7C-2833.

NOIITB
tKIUS
.A 10
.AK4

EEKANDMEEK
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

. WHPIT 'WE HE.Q:.

tAQ4

•u

.106U
• KIOIS

SOVTB

tJI75Z

.KQU2

7

•·..

Ut7

Yard Sale
Snook /Soda Rio. $1,2110 IWk

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

West

Put

BARNEY
IS LOWEEZY
HOME,_SNUFFY?
All ruJ """ortlllng In
ll'lia n e - l l oubjoa IO
1118 Fodelal F'!lr Hauling A,_
ol1968 which- lllogol
to -loo "'nyPflll......,.,

Pau
Put
Put

SHE'S GONE

OUR MAILMAN AN'
TH' WIDDER ARE
SWINGIN' IN HER
SWING AG'IN II

SIGHT·
SEEIN' I!

- o n race, color, r.lglon,

44

lmltallon or dac:rlmlnelton.·

This nDW!papar wll not
lolowlng~ . . _ .
advertlsemerta for real eetale
which Is In altho
law.
norot&gt;y

Apartment
for Rent

=

1br. opl,, . poo~ ..lly

lumlohocf, 1 :;,:.::;:.::_ _ _ _ __

2200 bloet. Pl. PleMint,
$20CIImo.
UIIIHIM. 304-8'151098 .....

Our.-,.. ..

au ct.ellngl
advertlled In this OIWIJPIPW

•

QIIPOIIurily-

Pomeroy,

2bdrm. opta., IIIII -...., opp l - lurnllhod,

lou"""

--~-toiiChoOI
In lawn.
ten. ovolllble
II: '1111-. . ,_, Alllo. 141 or
OIII.IM.ft:l-mt. EOH.

Real Estate

Middleport
&amp; VIcinitY'

...............
.,.,tdni:' ..,.'

. Antiques

1-.

-y.

luy or Hft. R - Ant~
1124 E. lloln St-. on At. 124.
Houn: II.T.W. 10:tld
...,., to t:OD P.'!!;,.,lunclor 1:00
to I :DO p.m. IM- "21

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
11~.

-·no.

bOot, lumlturo,

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

.

..

0~-,...
~
F. .
- .....,
IIIIM!!"Y._f!ov.
12 I
11
__

noodo
do,a.

-

....., ""'!".]!,

repohd; - -

.PEANUTS

QUeen .au Wlillr . . ., new mill·

,,... .,....;, hMd ' loot '
iiOOid, $1~; ~h .... • ...,
bod "!~Mot•. 175, 114-112-2143.

·~

ON VETERANS DAY I
ALWAYS 60 OVER TO
61LL MAULDIN'S ~OU5E
TO QUAFF A FEW
ROOT 6EER5 ..

Qultto All ~ Frario lolly To
!&lt;Ina Prl- From $10~ Nice
ChriOI.,.. Glfto, IM 3ooo... llll.
Rabbi hulall 3 DDmplllmont'o.
130.00 ICII lftDI' 7:pm 114-24$.
115U
,
Rula.tlc aar .tereo power amp,
eo wotto, 11u ,_, su, 114-tm·

BILL KNEW Ml'
t.IERO, AUDIE
MURP!-11' ..

1

1VE TOLD BILL I-lOW I MET
CAPTAIN I-IARRI' TRUMAN
IN FRANCE ...

~

BUT BILL NEVER
BELIEVES MF

2354.

Rocldna Ohoi!L Anltq• lbrfy
Amerlain In uoollont Condl-

'

no

...... -.

loertoor o1oota. Fumll1119,
Nl 8 a.... , top.

50UNI&gt;S GLII tNOVG~.

,UT .I ~AVt TO
DO AI,.L ~15

....

$2DOoo. S04-ni-'121S.
·---~-

-··too.
~·

T~INICING
fOil ~IM.

. _ ....... lloh l IIOo
SIIDM. 1•7lgll. ..

~~111DIIIlrllo8,

Good ~Mion, UO; ~~- ........ ~ Oold,

Allfntion:
-edot-ro,wolllofe.

Wlna Chrlot.,..

.......... l*f lompo old lhor"*' II ... old : ~ •nltq~.~e

1 At.U:&gt; IT

---d """'"h.

\""f·OO!!t- ......

f'li!£rER YOU,

(~'!:'100 10 ~"''(

Brtdol • Wocfd!nl Drwo, Stu
'118, 114 441 1321.
.
C h - r-1 T.. t- ,_,
cut $11, dug t311, .. St.
All.
GoodFarm, 304-171-4041,Thomoo
,.,_
'

\oO}t.()

~t;#oJ~

1327. 114441 113S.

- . -. Antiqull.
R
-. a:IUI.W.buy'oot-.

eur r

~. ·

AmnaomOnla - F"""
-·
Klono11111, Rarliunio
W-ndo, 114-:zA.

,_T~

55

BulkllnQ .

~rrumL

D€51(.

N'TER U.w4

Tl\RD.X.II Til£

TO GO CNER

L~f\OUR

~~~

ef'EC.I/l.U.'(
IF '(OO'Ile
EATit.lu

Wonlod To luy: Junk Auloo
With Or WllhoUI llol- Coli

=-m.':u ,
PI--.

,......, t

I

AAt&gt;:£U..'f
5AADWI(JIE!)!

50'(00~

Supplies

WOitK. 'MILt

nw..d, $4150.

-·-·

1171 F - mobllo homoo,
12xl5, 114-MH:tM.

!ap , _

'tQ..l KNOW ~T YOUR
·Til.a.l"L! I~ Wli'J'T'Hra:::JP~

Rooms

1$-3073.

rot Colt~ Throughout. noSod-.., Two Bolli. 0...
den Tub In llulor Balli. OVer
1200 Sq. Ft. Loto Of Slorofll.
Hu All Tht Exlru. UYocf In
LOoo Than ono Y-. Excellonl
CondHian, lluet Soo To Ap-lalo.
Colt 114-247-2032

111 _ . . . A-!llfllpoll_o.

mobllo

11 110

-10.10. .

II ·rinG _ , . wlh -na.
Aloo INlier-· All hoofc.upo.

Ex...ll lluL No ~. lluet
Sell 1114o441-1ots.

11181,11ooon WY.

Flrwoocllor -,11f4.1112 1114.

CIII ahr 2:00 p.m.,

-773-

1

11M Rodmon Mo70, 3bdrm., lnc l - oklrtlna ..,., blocko,
&amp;yr. w1rranty, homeown•,. Inaur~nce, and 1 ~ of tr• kiC
oont, dlor ontr "TIImo., ooH 1·
-4231.
For or rDI'II· 2 bocfrooon,
~ - - ond dryo&lt;,

OIIIINiolr,--.

11

2 IIIDIIICI Up

32111nute
IIDDYI
34 Vlttqe
35 Slippery lhh
3&amp; lloumlul cry

3 lalawed

37 Confecllflll

7 TWO-diOI

4"-HIIo

IIIUIIc
5 Cllnlnt-

· tOWidlll

11 ()ompotlf -

Ror-

12 2, 100,

ROIIIIO

Paa

llbl.

Openillg lead: • A

Flnwood- h&amp;n:lw C:C dl, f30 I
pickup loocf, lf4.11lL3f71,

llobllo Homo 8 - For R.,.,ln
Gall-~ SohOol Oletncr,
114 ..._.11

lor rDI'II oto~lna 11
tl5/lno., lf4.MN117.

&amp;poceo

Trollor loll lor rDI'II, c!IY WIIDI' I
-· ~' '

I

Of the eeven deadly silll, gluttoay
appears at the bridae table more oflell JH,....-1-+--+thao the otbers. Alld tblit Ia detplte the .,
lust for victory, the pride Ill one's perfonnance, an1er at errors, both com·
OUIIIell lllld eavy Of otbers' IIIOC
I,
lllld sloth late at Dllbt.
.
Rapacity Ia particularly rampant
durin&amp; matchpolnted pair tourna·
meats. Ho-. I am pad to report,
usually the avaricious player ends up
with ao overdraft at tbe baok.
Today's deal occurred durlnc tbe
Life Maator Pain at
Summer
North American Bridge
ships in Washington, nC. It &amp;ave
of
SutberUn and Dao Morse a lood boost
'
lour ocrombled -d•
toward lint place.
low 10 fOIIII '""' -c~s
StitberUn's three-diamond rebid
called a ,help-suit 1ame-try. It ex} HABEDE
presllel 1ame IDterest and shows losers Ill diamonds . .SutherUn knew tbat
his band wu potentially strooa, despite its meaaer point-count, but be
wanted to lei to game oaly If his part·
[ FWITS
ner could cover thOle diamDDd loeen.
East, wbo greedily thoupt he had
three black..Wt tricu, knew tbat his
...
new
opponents were atretcblng to reach
game. Expectlllg his partoer to supply
-1 0 0 L I I IITI8lllf'I'OI'IIn llil
at least one trick, East doubled.
SutberliD· ruffed the club-ace lead.
L.....J..-L.....J......L-..J
would IUC~ lid In srnalltllingllf
Us1D1 dummy's two top diiDIOIIds and
heart ace, SutherUn ruffed dummy's
..
,-M-O_N_O_I_D_
~~ -~
will!
other three low clubl Ill his band. He
I cootlnued with the heart kin&amp; and
1
heart queen, discardln&amp; dummy's last
dlamolld. Eut ruffed. but be had 110
defeme. He couldn't score more thaD
2
• A PRINT NUMIHfD
his two remainlnc trump tricks.
11:11' LETTUS
East paid for his debatable, desirous

I II fI

I
rI I I t

~

-. r I t I ~ =--=.::::.:.r.._

\ ____

- ···.., ~ .. ~~ 111,11.'1

t CAN'r ~Dl.E
CONS'IRL.ICTIVE
CRITICISM.

I
~--

. ..

K LX
S L N X

Z X

ploe

Tol

IAVKAVX

muet - ·
Gonnon s...--

~ld,

Transportal1on
Serv 1ces

Dew Clawo,

Toklna
Oop8111o,
., nmo
""""'""·
flilrn: Rllldr
For Chrlitmooi 8tud Blr&lt;loo
Aloo Avallablo. lfoW71m8.
. '
AKC~I-Lab .....
plao, MijO a 411--.

NIO; llo\-

llolgo -~· ,..,., ""'' lf4.)a-71M.

SEVERAL 7- ACRE PARCELS:
Molal Count\', Solom Twp.
M50I acr~~. Remote, bMutltul
lind; - ., paotuoo ond hlllo.
Coil lor goo,~! .""'P· 1414--

TAURUS (April »*y 20) This is one or
those lortunale days where close friends
may be looking out lor your interests and
doing so more effecti..ly than you could do
yourse~ .
BERNICE
GEMINI (llty 21-June 20) You ".ighl be
able to enhance your rale or progress at
BEDEOSOL
this time wyou increase lha number ol your
ambilious objectives. There's no law that
h!tiP Y"\1·
. says you can slm lor only one or two .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 11) It's impor· ; CANCER (June 21-July 22) II you are a
lant in this time frame lhat you begin lo 1 member ol some special organization. be il
asse~ yoursall more socially. Friends and sodal 'or oommercial, and you're osked to
contacts you establish in this period can be run lor a poortlcular poat or position. do so.
some ollhe best booslars you've ever hed. It equid lead lo sometltlng big.
AQUARIUS (Jiit. ,2D'Fib. 1t) Be pelienl, LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Before moving an
because the r~ards you've been anlici· to new enterprises or endeavors a! this
i
•
paling should be forthcoming : Outside : lime, be sure you gain all that you possibly
h should bl mucn ·~ in lhe yell lheld evenla wil H1ablllh lha lime table lind tilly can from your old one. There could be
lor you to flnd ways !o ~your peteonal · COUld be a bit ~~oWer than you are.
some hidden payolfs.
.
.
lnlareall. 1~ coukl,be l_ri ~reu wttere you PISCEI (Fib. 2D-Mtrch 20) SkiiJ• ,and VIRGO (Aug; p llpC 22) Oont de~l r n
• fii8Yioully mat lailurellnd rejeCtiOn.
knowledge you've acquired over lhe RUt you'fl a skilled or knowledgeable Vorgo
..,.'11, ICII'JIG (~ .24:'"1!•:II)
~xci'::'aeila!
t II a.~. who~ ,-h~~h ~ lalldb lhahlypo of
·• 1ieo\lillll you oonceiW or diNCI at thla irlll'tlt •~ .
l1tW • .,..... Y001f IJifiiiiiM . po1.,,..n or w oc you ve 110 opmg .
·oeillld be evan more clyMmlc lhtn you wll1itd pdve IPPiica!IOM: .
• ' ,a. 1g11 are stirring and so Ia your ,luck.
think. vau m!'Y have a tiger b)' the tall, so ARI~S (Marc~ _21 ·Aprll It) $om_lll!lno .uiRA ~· .23-0et. 23) PI'OCied with
pean each move careluMy. G1t a jump 911 might develop on one or your ,bu11n1-. : both caulfOh and hOpe II thla lime where
life by
the inftU..C. wi1ich · dealings iod~y thai ~ould 'ha,ve greater;_., wUu&lt; oqmmarclal or llrlanc:lal dealings ~re
·are ~IJII:you In 1111 yMr ahN!1 Send , 1191Uiva ramiiiClltiona than you IQitlall~; ~~ICimed. You could do tnormOIIIIy wtll
tor ·yoor "tirO-Graph prealclions today b)' think. Be alen at alltlmtlll.
'
IIi these aoeas.

ASTRO·GRAPB

r.1erchandise

8545, AIMno,OH.

•

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Household

GoOcll

YI'RA fURNITURE
1-IIOrlll 1414421
'tO OlYIWIEAB CMH
OR ~..-(NO DEP08IT)
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mallina $1 .25 and a long, sail-addressed,
slamped envelope 1o As!ro-Grapll, c/o this
newspaper , P.O. Box 4465 , New York,
N. Y. 10163. Be sure to slate your zodiac
sign .
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0.C. 21) The key .
1o your success in this cycle is predicated
IJPC1" your selftessness. II you're wilting to .
othere. there will be persons willing lo

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Picker - Crush - Whifk • Climax • SICK of Hlfll
1 had read wllere • politician 1eliitg. My coworker says lie was retiring because of ill lleallh. Tile
voters finally got SICK of HIM.

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AKC Gok1on _ _, fiom
Oct 10, 11111 . $110 Each.
D1p •••
wt•' HOld .i For
Chrlotmaal 11WIH24S ....

Spoc'- Roomo Wilh c.lhooil-

PoW: All Old U.S.

I KNON! MY -m.ot.e"-E 15

WHAT M.Y1'ROl.BLE IS!

1H2 Norritl •r10 Troltor. 11ugo

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Gold Co1no. ti.T.s. Coin Shop,

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Dealer: South

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16-llle o.lly Sentinel

Thursday, Novemt~er 11, 1993

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Long to be
honored with
reception

Sisters make career move

By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Associated Press Writer
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (AP)
-They've lllllde a career move at
age 100-plus- and the Delany sistcrscouldn'tbehappier.
Retired educator Sarah "Sadie"
Delany 104 and retired dentist
Elizabeth "Bessie" Delany, 102.
have become authors.
These proud daughters of a
freed slave share their wit. wisdom
and observations in a lively, literary reminiscence called "Having
Our
Say: The Delany Sisrers' First
SEN. JAN M. LONG
100 Years."
Miss Sadie and Dr. Bessie
coaxed
from suburban obscurity b '
opportunity for those who have
co-author
Amy Hill Hearth,
never met Sen. Long, as well as for
his Meigs County friends to see have found their sudden splash of
fame most bracinf.
him again."
"Ooooooh!!! 'm enjoying it!"
proclaims Dr. Bessie, who loves
being known as the "Little Sister."
"We're havinjl the time of our
lives!" chimes m the matriarch,
Miss Sadie. "We're tickled to
death!"
Their boolc, already being used
by Bob Hoeflich
as a hi~ school and coUege text, is
brimmmg with historical commenbJtY from their own, platinum per·
I'm pleased with the efforts of N.C.
spective;
it's br turns touchmg,
some membcn of die Meigs Local
Nancy will hold beginning and thought-provoking, playful, proBoard of Education dlese days in advanced beginner classes for girls
.
.
.
pressing for a more "buy .at home" six and older. Registration will be round.
The•r
words
conwn
almost
eenauitude in the school sysrem.
at I p.m. this Saturday 81 the Mid- ly matter-of-fact references to the
I don't believe the local mer- dleport Arts Council quarters. If degradation
they have wi1nessed:
e hants are asking for any special you have any questions on the pro- the post-slavery years, lynchings,
considerations. They just want an gram just give Nancy a ring at 992- "Jim Crow" segregation laws.
equal shot at the business and, of 3796.
course, boliOm line is that if local
businesses aren't supported as
The Women's Auxiliary at Vet·
much as possible, then one day crans Memorial sends big thanks to
dley are no more. And we've seen Elaine Ralston, Middleport, who
this happen.
dropped off a bag of toys to the
By "the way. speaking of the hospital for use in the Urgent
Meigs Local· Dislrict, students did Care/Emergency Center for chilwell in die IIIIIUII ~ origi· dren. The toys ease some of the
na1 story writing conleSl conducted trauma involved for the kids.
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
by an Athens newspaper. Three
Associated Press Writer
juniors r.ught by Joy Bentley aldie
Joan and Charles McLain were
MOSCOW (AP) - A hard-line
hi~h school took fust, second and guests of honor at a reception held
opposition leader accused President
th1td plac. e' honors. They are Walt at their Racine home on Oct. 17 by Boris Yeltsin's government today
Williams, Jamie Ord, and Jason their children, Beverly Moore of of blocking his party from running
Dellavalle. At the Meigs Junior Racine; Mike of Cheshire, and Jim in parliamentary elections even
High, a student of Gay Perrin's, of Pomeroy. in observance of their though it has substantial popular
Bonnie Smith, won second place 40th wedding anniversary. It was a support
prize money.
Sergei Baburin, leader of the
pleasant event and Joan and
Charles extend thanks for all of the Russian Popular Union, claimed
Nancb!,allacc Swartz who has cards and other kindnesses you that authorities had cut off phone
been in
since die age of 6ve extended to diem.
lines and seized offices belonging
is launching a program to teach
to the party. He told a news conferb8lon at the Middlcpou Arts CounTalk about gelling ready in ence that lists of supporters' signacil headquarrers on N. Second Ave. plenty of time. Cindy and Joe tures to get die party !1'1 ~ ballot
in Middleport.
Fields have the interior of their disappeared after a police i'aid.
Nancy \VIS a membeJ !lf the West Main SL bome in Pomerpy
Police and government officials
Glo-Ettc5, the group's dirice twirl extensively decorated for the have not 'i:oinmented on Baburin's
team and die parade corps over the Christmas season. T.he tree was claims.
years. The Glo-Eues were state decorated and lighted Tuesday
The Russian Po~ular Union was
champs several times and won . evenin~. Next come the outside amon~ eight parttes the Central
11ational honors at Notre Dame decorations.
Eleclton Commission dropeed
University several times also.
from elections because they fatled
Nancy twirled competitively with
Dan Thompson of 3255 25th
the Glo-Ettets and individually SL, Rock Island, Dlinois, 61201, is
.winning numerous awards. In 1977 looking for you for some help in
she won die title of Miss Crescendo locati~ aome facts on his genealoThe names of Jimmy Eakins and
lu majorelt.c camp held 81 die Uni- gy.
Kasey
Roach of the D. H. primary
He s ~ng for information
'versity of Rio Grande. She was a on the family of John or James class and Jason Autherson and
Meigs High School majorette for
born in the mid-1800's Jason Caplinger of die S.D.H. class
all four yeara of her high school Thompson
in Pennsylvania and living in at the Letart Falls school were
work and was featured twirler in Meigs County in die 1900's. If you omitted from a list of students malc1980. Later she taught baton, gymoffer any help please wrire Dan ing the honor roll for tlie ftrst nine
nastics and tap dancing at the Bar- can
week grading period.
at
the
above address.
ret Arts Workshop in Washington,

3?,

Beat of the Bend...

But they are buoyed, too, by lhe
triumphs - from their own
impressive family sa'a to their
pride in the 1960s c1 vii rights
movement.
And , most recently, they're
buoyed by daily fistfuls of fan
mail. " Lots of them were my
patients; they .thought I ~as dead, I
1magme," says Dr. Besste.
Don't be fooled by her prim
appcaran~e: Dr. Bessie is the spit·
fire. Siuing ramrod-straight, she
hol~s coli!' in a n!ece's living room
wh1le Mtss Sadte - tactful and
mild-mannered yet clearly
nobody ' s fool- chuckles and
interjects from the easy-chair.
Miss Sadie is'"the sweetest.
most loving sisrer you'd find anywhere," says Dr. Bessie. To which
the sweetest' replies: "Don't lay it
on too thick."
As usual, they've walked to
their niece's place from their house
do I'll! the street. Miss Sadie,
slowed only slightly by a June hip
injury, got a sturdy boost up the
front slep from Little Sister.
These "best friends from Day
One" grew up on a North Carolina
college campus. Their father. freed
from slavery at age 7, became a
vice principal and America's ftrst
elected black Episcopal bishop.
Their mother helped run the school
while instilling 10 offspring with
self-dis'cipline, compassion and
confidence.
·
The school taught reading and
·

writing to former slaves. all
"grown people." That impressed
th~ Delany children: all "10 later
worked and saved their way
through college.
,Eventually, the Delany sisters
migrated 10 New York City. Along
the way, they rubbed. shoulders
~ith intellectuals Booker~- Wash·
mfOn alld W.E.B. DuBoiS, entertatners Cab Calloway and Lena
Home and actor Paul Robeson.
Miss Sadie g_ot her master's
degree at Columb~ and.became the
ftrslblack. ~mesbC-SCJence teac~er in the pubhc schools. Dr; Besste
openedaHarlemdentaloffice.
T~eir ~other's e;'lample
notwithstanding, women m those
days lial! !'&gt;choose between.careers
and famthes. There were suttors, to
be. sure. But common sense prevailed.
''Wh~n people ask me how
we've hved past 100. I say,
'Honey, we never married; we
never had husbands ~ .worry us to
death,"_' says pr. B~lll;,
•
~VJS:CS Miss Sadie: Don t get
mamed JUSt because he looks pretty, He's got to have good genes,
and have so~e sen~." .
Dr. Bess.te ~e.ured m !~SO _to
cart: for thetr w_hng m,other, Mtss
Sadie kept teaching un!!ll960.
In I ~~7, ~eary of CJI~ ,hfe, they
~aused a btt_ of a sh~k by buyID$ a house m a w~1te _subu.rban
netghborhood. They ve ~JVed tn~
pendently there ev~r smce. Mt~s
Sadie does the cooking, Dr. Besste
·'the servin_g.''

Government accused
ofblocking election

--

to present the 100,000 signatures
required to get on the ballot.
Baburin said his party had collected the necessary signatures, but
22,000 disappeared after the raid
two days before last weekend's
deadline. Thirteen parties did qualify for the Dec. 12 election.
But Baburin stopped short of
directly accusing police of talting
the missing signatures.
"I wouldn't blame our worlcers,
many of them women, for the lack
or vtgilance, since they have never
before dealt with riot police armed
with assault rifles," Baburin said.
Baburin said police !Old him the
raid was carried out to search for
Alexander Barkashov, a fascist
leader hiding from lhe authorities.
The Russian Popular Union is
an ultra-nationalist group opposed
to Yeltsin's political and economic
refonns.

· 'rhey ha~e .~~time housek~r wbo IS
. as,?ld as :-ve
are. says ~~- Besste. We hke
.
herl~~:
d bl'
. ~ , ~a 10 an. pu •c 11\1evtston ~. MacNed-Leh~er News
Hour keep !hem meticulously
abreasTh t.ofhtheale
1!"11 n Jsliup·to e~r_
:,egdi
1
dale,li?D- a ow-.at et, gar c, c011
hveroilanduptosevenvegelables
a day.
..
. Ex~ when others draw atten·
Ito~ to •!· the belany_s seldom
~ouc~ thetr age. That trail could be
tnhen~ : ·
.
~~age 90, thetr mother raced
t~etr b~othe~ do'f." the Sta_tue ~!
Lt!Jerty s ~~- I was funous,
Slid Dr. Bessie. .
No~, the shoe ts, on ~e other
foot. I te\1 them. pon two~
about mel I 1_1 be all nlll!~ And .if I
~rop dead .nght now, Jill be all
nght there II be somebody else 10
carry on."'
The concern of loved ones. she
says, "tickles me. I hayen't bec:n
afraid to live and I won t be afraid
Ill die."

Photographer finds her niche in a blind
By D.W. PAGE
long·time fascination With animals
AMpclated Preu Writer
and photography. When she :.vas in
, · RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
third grade, her father had given
Elbows and egos made Lynda her her first camera, a small box
:Richardson reassess her career in camera. and she'd promptly begtm
:news and cooporllle photop~Jlhy.
!skin$ pktures of everything and
: In 1986, she trailed ill die rush anythmg.
and fla')' of daily picture delld1ines
"My eyes and mind would suck
:for die patience and auiJe needed to all the wildlife pictures out of mag"wait nearly a monih in a watery azines and books I!IY parents got
:blind to gel a picture of a timid me," she said. "Those visual
Central American duct.
images reinforced my feeling for
Now the 34-year-old Richmond animals. Animals are so depend:resident is considered one of the able.~ give me a feeling of ful·
risin11 stars of wildlife photOIIfll· fillment.
.
.
;phy. wilh a current exhibition tour- . On weekends. away from_poh·
mg natural history museums.
tiCS and sports, Richanlson Slid she
After sraduatin• from Mary found her love of the outdoors and
:w~ Collcce m FmJericb- . her ~vocation for photography
'burl with a dcliee in an. Richard- meshm11.
'101111J1l11:1lticed with sevm1 SIUdio
''I realized I was tired of the
photOgraphers. That led to a job • h • and buslle, die SlleSS, all the
an amiiiCIIICIIt p.t phocographer
politicians, CEOs, star athletes and
In her spare time she worked~ their attitudes. I got tired of the
a stringer for The AsiOCiated Press ep and die elbows,'' she said,
in the early 1980s, shootin11 everyHer h!l'band, l'ree-lance phojOgthinJ from collele basketball to the raphcr Ttm Wright, encouraged her
Genml Assembly.
to 111111 full time to wildlife photog"It wu lliah III'CU rush rush raphy·
·
rush .•.. Maybe bec:a~se I im
Smce then ~job has taltcn ~er
short, I was llways JCUina elbowed all over die Untted States, to Mrica
out o1 the way by the othc:r photoa· and to Central America. She· has
raphctl," aid die !1-foot-2 photoara~.
. l'f'H.
At weekend&amp; she puraued her

shot for National Geographic publications, the Smithsonian Institution, the National Wildlife Fedenttion, the Sieq'll Club, and news and
wildlife magazines and publications in this country and overseas.
John Nuhn, photo editor of
National Wildlife magazine, says
Richardson has a style of her own.
"Lynda ... maps out what she
wants to shoot to illustrate the
story. She researches the animals
and the people involved," he said.
"She can make things hap~en
without dislurbing the animals.'
Richlrdsonls work has brought
her face 10 face wilh a rare canebrake rattlesnake at a range of 18
inches. And in Africa, she met a
bull ele~hant on a very personal
basis: • We crawled out on our
hands.. and knees to within S feet of
hi

m.

Her guide suggested she not
move, no matler what - as long as
she and die guide remained on their
hands and knees, the elephant
would take diem for warthogs,
"I was somewhat offended by
that characterization," she said,
laughing.

s0

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p
F
E
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Unions try to
deter Streisand
LAS VEO~!~AP) - Blll'bra
Stteluad ref
to cancel two
New Ye.'l Ilion II die Ullin&amp; of
unloa• ilaat say the 'new )COM
Grind Hoco1 It llllkln&amp;it ,bird for

allow worten 10 exerei10 their
riaJ!t to YOIC (or 1llioll. lcpiiUICI·
lion.
The ailiJet said ia 1 · llltemenl
thai p 1111· ''cleVOfOCI macb of my
life 10 01-int the !UIIIepl rl&amp;h•
ol wortcen" and ''lhll remaiu my
'commitment today and for the

At The .

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Vol. 44, NO, 141
Multimedia Inc.

'if
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CHURCH

CLASSIFIED ADS

·November 13th - November 17th

First Baptist Church
6th &amp; Palmer
Sts. Middleport
.

EVERYONE WELCOME

..

'

the observance which was held on the 7 Sth
anniversary of tbe armistice which ended
World War I. Here, Joe Struble of Drew
Webster Post 39 fires off a round from his
rille.
.
fl

Speaker defends free enterprise

l!!i

1:00 A.M.
TO
6:00P.M.

,

~

a•~..;1J•~
COMPLETE LINE OF PROVlCO BIG·H FEEDS

Orand Opening No,emher
•Bird Feeders &amp; Bll(d Seed
•Applegate Round Bale Feeders &amp; Gates
•Farm Supplies &amp; Medicines
•Pet Supplies
•15 Different Kinds of Dog Food
•Horse Tack, Saddles &amp; Wormer

GUND OPENING SPECIALS

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
"Let us honor and remember, each with our own
silent prayer."
Jerry Gust of the University of Rio Grande made
that appeal as featured speaker at Thursday's Veterans
Day observance in front of the Meigs County Courthouse.
Recognizing the service that ve~erans have done
for the country, Gust urged those present Ill also remember the families and friends of veterans.
Veterans have fought for individual libcny and
freedom. Gull said, and will likely be called upon again
to fight a different SOl"\ Of battle: the battle Ill support the
funcrican free en~erprise system.
''The battlefields of the future will know no bounds ...
with the objectives being people's minds, their apathy
and votes," he explained.
Gust, a U.S. Air Force veteran of the Korean
Conflict, contended the American free enterprise system is already under attack on the nation's campuses
and maintained many students are indocUinated inlll
socialism by instructors who disavow free enterprise.
"Can we sit back and leave the preservation of
America to someone else? Let veterans bear the standards and protcct the rights of Americans.
"We must preserve the individuallrccdom and dignity of all Americans so the American experiment can
survive and become better.
"With increasing gifts from Washingllln, come increasing burdens on our individual liberty," Gust cautioned.
To illustrate, Gust portrayed two different images
of America: one depicting the traditional American

dream, the other warning of a dystopian future where
downtrodden families, overburdened with laws and
taxes, become spineless servants of big government.
No democracy has ever survived more than 200
years before
being brought
down by cor•
ruption, Gust
said.
"Become involved," he
concluded.
Gust, a frequent speaker
on subjects including management by objectives, leadership, motivatiOn,communications, safety,
self and subordin81e development as well as
JERRY GUST
threats to the
American free
enterprise system, has spoken Ill groups throughout
Oh1o and other areas including New Yorlc City
Dallas and Chicago.
·
Approximately 75 people attended the Veterans
Day observance on the 75th anniversary of the World
War I armistice. Participating were American Legion
members representing several local posts.

yeteran recalls day shooting stopped

•50 lbs. Tri-Biend 21% Dog Food $9.00
•Sale On All Pet Foods
•Free Brass Printed Name Plate with Purchase Of
Any Dog Collar
•Zimecterln Horse Wormer $11.95 ea.
or $11;00 w/addltlonal purchase
•50 lb. Salt Block $4.00
•50 lb. TM Block. $4.75

NITE
·LIGHT DEALER
.
.

34562 ST. RT. 124
RU1UND, OH. 45775
'

J

ClEAN It Willi

'S FEED STORE·

..'

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SALUTE_- L!JClll American Legion members ~ecogn•zed vete~ans Thursday morning
by fll"mg a salute durmg a ceremony in front
of the Meies County Courthouse Thursday
. mo':!li.!'g. '\.PPrD19mtltely 100 people attended

· 61.1.1r.1.•

RECEIVES MEDAL- Thomas Turner ot Middleport, seated·, received the World War I Service Medal Thursday during
the Veterans Day dinner at tile Feeney-Bennett Post 128 or lbe
American Legion hi Middleport Thursday. Preseatlng tbe
medal were,l'rllm left: Charles Carr, post commander; Dominic
Belton, past dept. commander; Jay M. ElliS, past district commander, and Jim Colllas. lst vice commander or the 8th dls-

trlcL

·

·

1 Section, 10 . . . . . - A 11u1t1mec1a 111c. Haw r r

Nelsonville shootout

'Let us honor and remember. .. '

HOUSE DVERFLOWIIIC?

Evenings 7:00 pm Sunday 10:15 am

&lt;loudy, blp In upper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frlday,.November 12, 1993

EDITOR'S NOTE: The Delany
sisters • book is published by
Kodansha America; cost is $20.

Evangelist Rev. Charles Norris

Low lonllliht lr'Ollnd 58,
&lt;bu.. of raTa. Saturd:l;.IIIOit)y

•

SALE$ tHROUGHOUT ·tHE STORE
LAYAWAY
NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
.,

REEDSVILLE .
NAZARENE
.
Friday, November 12th
7:00P.M.

Page4

RftiVAL

CHA·P
FEED STORE

'

'

F

~=:rrvr~y
lhe
hu bcell auared the botel will

In Concert

Pick 3:
533
Pick 4:
1982
Buckeye 5:
5-7-12-35-36

:es.. .

Names omitted

future."

Petrovic
honored

Authors at 100-plus have full life

A Meip County recqMion bonorin&amp; Sr.tc Sena10r Jan Micllael
Lona (D-Circleville) will be lleld
Friday evenins lldle Meigs County Senior Cenrer ll 6 p.m.
Democratic Party Chainnan Sue
Maison aid that a donllia1 of $IS
will be taken II the door.
Sen. Long, • native of Middleport, wiD scdl: rc-eleclion to a dlin:l
term in 1994. He was fust elected
to die offiU in 1986.
"We're looking forward to a
fun, informal eveni":~ether,"
Maison said. "We are
of Sen.
Long's accoml'lishmcnts. The fact
that he is a nabve of Mei_g;s County
make us even more proud."
"It'a imponantto oote that die
reception ts open to the public,"
Maison said. 'This will be a perfect

Ohio Lottery

By JIM FREEMAN
Thomas Turner was 21 years
old when he was shipped to
France during World War 1 and
although the years have dimmed
some memories, Turner, now
97, recoUected the day the fighttng stopped 75 years ago Thursday.
Turner recalled he and some
other soldier.; were sleeping in a
deserted German hou se the
morning of the armistice.
His daughter Sonia Parsons
helped recall: "When they woke
up it was quiet; they didn't
know what had happened."
Turner, Middleport, was recognized Thursday night at a
Veterans Day dinn~r at the
Feeney-Bennelt Post 128 of the
American Legion. He was presented with the newly issued
World War I Service Medal on
the 75th anniversary of the
armistice which ended the war.
Of the tens of millions of
World War I soldiers ~ only
about 10,000 are still alive. The
youngest are in their 90s.
Back home, Turner's family
Continued on 1'111e 3

Three remain hospitalized

NELSONVILLE, Ohio (AP) Two pobc.e officers and a juvenile
wounded tn a gun battle outside a
convenience store remained hospitalized today'
One man was killed in th e
shooting that began about 1:15 a.m.
Thursilay when police approached
a car suspected in a hit-and-run
accident.
Scan McFall, 19, of Nelsonville
was killed after he ftred on office~
outside a convenience store on U.S.
33, Nelsonville police said.
Nelsonville Officer Jody Kin~ ,
30, and Buchtel Police Chief Kevtn
Clawson, 26, were injured. King
was in serious condition with a
head wound and Clawson was in
fair condition with shoulder and leg
wounds, both at Grant Medical
Center_ in Columbus, Nursing
Superv1sor Beverly Haffken said
today.
, A 15-year-old whose name
wasn't released was in fair condition with a hip wound today at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
Athens, said a nursing supervisor
who would not give her name.
Bill Biddlestone, the Athens
County prosecutor, said two Nelsonville juveniles were in the back
seat of McFall's car. They were
released to their parents because
they were not involved in the
I

'"\

·

'·

AliTERMA TH - Authorities examine the body or a suspert
shot Tb~rsday during a gunfight outside a convenience store in
!"'elso~vdle. o.n~ suspect was killed and two police oflkers and a
JUVenile were InJUred. (AP)
.·
shooting, he said.
Nelsonville Police Chief David
Valltinburg said McFall ftrSt fired a
9mm fistol at police officers. That
set of the battle in which the juvenile also fired at officers, police
said.
"It was the scariest thing I ever
went through," Officer Miles Wolf

Jr. said. ' "You think three to six
minures is no time whatsoever. But
when you're trying to survive, it's
a long time. •'
At least 30 shots were fired,
Biddlestone said.
Nelsonville is about 50 miles
southeast of Columbus.

Harrison accepts honors as
Meigs County person ofthe _year ·
Twelve community leaders from
the 10-county Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council were recognized
Thursday night at the council's
25th annual Person of the Year
awards banquet
Businessman Phil Harrison or
Pomeroy accepted honors as the
Meigs County Person of the Year,
citing family and community commitment as the ingredie nt ror
growth.
"We want to rry Ill keep Meigs
County growing and hopefully we
can do that," he said.
Harrison is part owner or PDK
Construction Inc . of Pomeroy
which employees 55-60 people .
Harrison distinguished himse lf
in scholarship and athletics while a
student at Pomeroy High School
where he was a member of the
National Honor Society and named
most valuable bas ketball player in

,,,.

.,

•••
'•

Pffil HARRISON
southeastern Ohio basketball All
State.
After graduating from Pomeroy
High School in 1960. Harrison
attended Bethany College in
Bethany, W.Va., and graduated in
1964 with a bachelor of arts degree
in education with a minor in economics.

Remaining active in athletics
while at Bethany College lfarrisori
was selected three times to die All
Conference Team in basketball and
named Most Valuable Player in
1964.
He was also named outstanding
sent or ath Jete, honorable mention
All American and was inducted
mlo the Bethany College Athletic
Hall of Fame in 1981.
Arter graduation, Harrison
worlced for American Oil Company
in Baltimore, M.D., from 19641967, St Regis Paper Company in
Columbus from 1967-1971 and die
Ben Tom Corporation in Columbus
and Pomeroy from 1971-1985.
In 1985, Harrison started with
PDK Construction Inc. of Pomeroy
as pan owner.
. PDK Construction Inc . is in the
h1ghway construction business
Continued on Page 3

Racine council discusses water project
·. A recycling grant and water proJects were again topics of disc usSton dunng a recent meeting of the
Racine Village Council.
During discussion of a recycling
grant,-council members expressed
concern of what the village would
have to do to participate in recycling.
It was learned that items to be
recycled have to be baled and that
the baler costs $7,800 and the glass
breaker costs $2,000.
It was reponed by Thornton that
a company from Cleveland would
buy the material, however council
members became concerned ot

where·this material would be slllred
until the company came.
The mayor was requested by
council to contact Liller Control
Officer Kenny Wiggins and inquire
tf the Galha. Jackson, Meigs and
Vinton Solid Waste Plan will take
care of the village's requirement to
recycle 30 percent by 1996.
Th&lt;;~rnton "?PDrted that a grant
for domg the nve!iJank has a filing
dare of July. He advises that a boat
doclc requires a 30 percent incline
but because a boat_ramp already
eJUsts, the grant, whiCh requires 25
percent matching funds from the
village, could be grandfathcred.

No actian was talten.
Thornton reported he had talked
with the Buckeye HillS/Hocking
Valley Regional Development Dis trict and that die three-in-one projects have to be bid. He reported
the waterline along Yellowbush
Road will be the first_project as
soon as n passes environmental
review .
The new water well wiU be die
second project slated for spring
while the water meters will be a
sum!"er project. The village has
rccetved a Sl56.100 Small Cities
Development Block Grant. The viiContinued on Page 3

Problems continue forM as on Co. schools
Four Mason County schools
should Continue on probation for a
third year because of poor attendance and test scores, a repon to
the State Board Of Education will
recommend today.
According 10 a story in
Thursday's Huntington HeraldDispetcll, the report Slates the West
V"trginia Department of Education
is "panicularly concerned" about
the attendance rare at Point
Pleasan~ Hi~ School and Point
Pleasantlumor High.
During an inspection team's follow-up visit on Seprember 28, they
concluded the overaU attendance
rate at the two schools has been
below 90 percent for four consecutive years.
Because of test score below SO
.percent, Hannan Hi.rlh School and
Central Elementary have also been
recommended for continued probationary IIIXmlilation.
The rejlorl also recommends the
county school system continue on

probationary accreditation status.
According to the Dispatch,
.critics of the local system plan Ill
make a public appeal for better
financial accountability rather than
academic
standards
during
Thursday's session of the state
board in Charleston.
"The problem with these followup reports is that they don't go far
enough," said Shirley Gue of Ashton, a parent and executive
chairwoman of the West Virginia
Taxpayers Action Group (TAG).
Gue told the Dispatch that she
and Sharon Holley, another Mason
County parent who lives near MillOll, wiU BlleDd IOday's meeting Ill
discuss the problem of "overnll accountability" in the county school
system. Holley will address the
boartl during the public comment
period. Oue said.
Thursday morning. the Register
attem~ 10 ctlnlacl Mason County
Supenntendent of Schools Michael
Whalen. Attempts were unsuccess-

ful.
The on-site inspection of each
county school disUict is a pan of
the public education reform enacted
in 1988. Mason County is one of22
counties that have been inspected
so far, the Dispatch reponed.
All counties have been graded on
attendance and test scores and 23
other counties arc on probationary
approval. Atrendance of less that 90
percent and test scores below die .
50th peroentile automatically bring
probationary accreditation.
Mason County schools' original
on-sire inspection was May 12-17,
1991. The first follow-up visit in
!00 county last November resulted
m a February report that continued
probationary status.
The Dispatch said today's repon
to the SIBle board is a result or die
second follow-up visit there since
II of the county's 16 schools
remained on probation last
February.

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