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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Red men
open season

Pick 3:
201
Pick 4:

with victory

3385

Buckeye 5:
9-14-15-20-23

Page4

'

~

Vol. 44, NO. 144

'l'lliu 11/30/tl

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PRESIDENT CLINTON, accompanied by .governors who
endorse the Nortb American Free Trade Agreement, pauses dur·
in~ a ceremony al the White House Tuesday. From lel't are Gov.
Mike Lowry or Washillglon; gov. Tommy Thompson or Wis; the
president and Gov. Howard Dean of Vt. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton's full-court press for
votes gives him and Iiis free-trade
allies the upper hand as the House
prepares for a shoWdown vote this
evening on lhe North American
Free Trade Agreement
In a remarkable reversal, supporlers of the pact, who once
trailed badly, moved into a commanding lead in the last few days,
according 10 an Associated Press
survey of lawmakers' publicly
declared positions.
The AP count showed 209
House members. supporting the
pac1 and eight olhers likely to do
so. Declared opponents numbered
183, with 141eaning against
The ,White House and its allies
need 218 votes for passage.
On an issue that defied party
lines, Republicans were behind the
pact by a nearly 3-1 margin; three
O.:mocrats in five were against
Thai left 20 lawmakers undecided about the pact that would eliminale tariffs and other trade barriers
on everylhing from automobile
parts to ziti ingredients between the
United States, Canada and Mexico
over 15 years.

"We can compete and win,"
Clinton told governors attending a
NAFTA pep rally atlhe White
House on Tuesday.
As momentum shifted toward
the agreement, droves of Iawmak ·
ers flocked aboard like a crowd of
commuters leaping onto a depart·
ing 1rain. Twenty-four of them
came out fqr NAFTA on Tuesday
alone - including seven who had
previously said they probably
would vote to kill the compact
Among the converts were several lawmakers from Florida, who
earlier were concerned that
NAFTA would lei Mexican citrus
products, tomatoes and vegetables
flood the U.S. market and batter
Florida growers. Some changed
their minds after studying side
deals aimed at easing the impact of
the Mexican farm products.
The shifts were the product of
dozens of phone calls and meetings
by Clinton himself and countless
others by his Cabinet and chief
aides. Side agreements were cut to
soften the competitive blows to
wheat, lextiles and apparel, all
aimed at securing an agreement
that has gained enormous political

'

· . 9:~- ·~. Pm ', , . . · ·
SATURD~Y, 9:30 am~ pm;. SUNbAY, ' n ain-6 pm
BY MASON

imponance for the president.
Approval would set the stage for
likely Senate passage next week.
Bul the deal-making in the House
was not going down well with
NAFTA critics, including some
from Clinton's own Democratic
Party.
Opponent Rep. Louis Stokes, DOhio, acknowledged that some
lawmakers were apparently getting
administration pledges for proje&lt;:IS
overseen by an Appropriauons
Committee subcommiuee he
chairs.
Billionaire Ross Perot, who has
made a crusade of his opposition to
the agreement, poW¢ up outside
the Capitol once again. He railed
againsl "the biggest purchase of
votes in our countty's history."
He was joined by Rep. Gerald
Solomon, R-N.Y., another leading
opponent. who produced a list of
tradeoffs that he said totaled "billions of dollars in order to buy
votes for the treaty."

Delegation
all decided
onNAFTA
WASHINGTON (AP) Rob Ponman used to be the
president's man on Capitol Hill.
The president was George
Bush and Portman's job was to
line up votes.
Now he's Rep. Portman, ROhio, and he has a vote.
But as the House headed
toward tonight's scheduled vote
on the North American Free
Trade Agreement. he was acting
a lot lilce the presidential lobbyist he used to be.
"It's lilce being back in my
Continued on Page 3

Meigs Board delays action on leaky roof
·By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
·
The leaky roofs at the Harri(!QIIville·llnd PQmeroy Elementary
School$:were &lt;li5cussed at length
by.• ll!e Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday night but no action
on repair was take11 because of a
lack of money.
Harold Graham, a teacher at
Harrisonville, told the hoard that he
had talked with some local roofers
who thought the repairs could be
made for about $600. Several board
members indicaled that further
repairs would just be putting off for
a few more months the need for
replacement. The water is apparently getting underneath the roof
on the mai.n part of the building

and then running clown toward the
auditorium section and leaking
through to the gymnasium floor.
Major leaking is also taking
place at the Pomeroy Elementary
School, Supt. Bill Buct&lt;ley told thci
board members. He said that the
flal roof on that building has "dips"
where warer stands and employees
have to go up and sweep it off. He
said that one day last week when it
rained, the water ran into the building on to a computer and some
books in the library.
The financial problem again
brought up the need for passing a
permanent improvements levy.
Several teaching and other posi·
tions were filled and parenl volunteers were approved for two
schools during the meeting.

Linda Smith was hired to tutor a
sludent with a health handicap, for
five hours per week at S11.72 per
hour. The board also voted to hire
Dorina Wolf to tutor a handic!lllJled
student on an as-nei:ded .OOSls for
up to five hours a week al $11 .72,
and to employ Carolyn Nicholson
as an aide in the severe behavior
handicapped class which meets al
Meigs Junior High School.
Approved to work as parem vol·
unteers for Pomeroy Elementary,
Malinda Strong, Nancy Freeman,
Gina Thomas, Jennifer Krawsczyn,
Cheryl Thomas, Debbie Boring,
Susie Abbott, and Valerie Hanstine; and Salem Center Elementary,
Kim Argabright, Brenda Burnem,
Eva Burnem, Saundra Bush, Pam
Caldwell, Deidra Cross, Tina John·

son, Becky Johnston, Dawn Kopec,
Vickie Metheney, and Teresa Varian.
The resignation of Laura M.
Salser as"a substitute teacher was
accepted,- and maternily leave was
granted to Carol Mahr, a teacher at
Hamsonville Elementary to begin
at or about Jan. 3.
Treasurer Jane Fry talked about
maintaining the school inventory,
new acquisitions and items taken
out of use, and the required
accounlability for lhe slate. She
said that it is time-consuming and
that her office is having difficully
keeping everything updated. She
asked about additional staff as a
possible solution to getting the
work done. No action was taken by
Continued oo Page 3

RETIREES HONORED • Plaques were pnRated to Ted Hatfield, custodian al the Harrisonville Elemenlary sc•ool ror l l
years, and Mary King, bus driver ror 25 years. Both recently
retired. Larry Rupe, board presldenl,left, made the preselllatlons.

Meigs County ~layed crucial role UMW, secretary file suit over guards
.in ratification of solid waste plan
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
A securily firm hired by a
strikebound coal company is operating illegally in West Virginia,
according to a lawsuit' filed by the
United Mine Workers and Secretary of Slate Ken Hechler.
The lawsuit accuses Elite Security of Nonh Carolina Inc. of failing to obtain a license required by
state law for individuals worlcing as
private investigalors or security
guards.
The suit seeks $1 million in
damages from Elite Security and
61 of its employees. The suit was
filed originally in Logan County
Circuit Court, but was moved to
U.S. District Court, where it will be
heard by Judge John T. Copenhaver.
Elite Security is based in Fayetteville, N.C., but a telephone caD to

-

svstem. Tube$ ore l'l'ICide W111'11emQtf6d

•99.9.9

'

-·

. .
Hunter
.

.

2 Sec11ona, 11 Pageo 35 cenla
IIUultlmecla Inc. Newapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 17, 1993

Clinton rides momentum to House vote on NAFTA

•

IISOR

• Bol1om t;eclic:W'I keeps ejected hulls our

501.

.

Multlmadlalno.

IPS Hunting, ·

Low tonl&amp;ht In 40s, rain.
Thunday, cloudy, blgb In mid

By starr reporiS
While the fate of the GalliaJackson- Meigs. Vinton Solid
Waste Plan is now in tlie hands of
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, Meigs County played
a critical role in ratification of the
plan.
TheGJMV Policy Committee
metTuesdayattheJacksonCounty
Extension Office where it signed a
ratification certificate for the solid
waste plan.
Ratification called for ap·
proval by three of the four counties, three of the four largest municipalities in the district and overall approval by more than 60 per·
cent of the districl's villages and
townships.
Meigs Comty was the only
countv in which everv 2ovemin~

body (commissioners, villages and
townships)votedtoapprove the plan.
In other counties. many local govemments have not yet voted on the
plan.
Approval figures from other
counties were: Gallia,64.75 percent;
Jackson, 53.91 percent, and Vinton,
54.93 percent
Meigs County Litter Control
Director Kenny Wiggins said Meigs
County played a crucial role in ratifying the plan.
"Meigs County was very important," Wiggins said. "Had we not
gone 100 percent. we would stilf be
working on the plan."
Withoul the 100 percent approval from Meigs County, the plan
would not have had the overall 60
nercent necessarv for ratification.

Currently the plan has been approved by 68.68 percent of the
governing bodies in the four-&lt;:ounty
district.
Wiggins speculated that more
than 90 percent of the governing
bodies in the four counties will vore
to ratify the plan. Of those that have
responded to the plan, 97.93 per·
cent support it with the exceptions
being Eagle, Jackson and Madison
townships in Vimon Coumy.
Today, Lance Wilson, executive director of the solid wasle district. is expected to transpon the
plan to OEPA in Columbus for
review. The plan will be implemented as soon as OEPA gives its
approval.
The wge1 date for plan im·
plemencation is Jan. I, 1994.

Board president
backs lawsuit

-NEW LEXINGtoN, Ohio (AP)

-o f

~~=~~:f ~~J~

procedure for financing schools is
un~sidenl Oliver Ocasek testi·

Edge Apartments ror senior citiZens. Here Jlni
Clifl'ord uses a bulldozer to preplll'e the site.

PREPARING SITE - co-.trudlon contln·
ues 1J1 Syr- at the Bite ot the .ruture Water's

l.

'

fied in Perry County Common
Pleas Court Monday during the
fourth week of a civil trial to deter·
mine whether the funding fonnula
is constitutional.
Five school disuicts filed the
lawsuit and a group of 500 school
districts supports it
"If winning the case meant
arguin~ that funding was adequate
ira Oh10, .. . if winning the case
meant saying there was equity this I could not do," he said.
Ocasek, 68, was a Democratic
state senator from the Akron lll'e&amp;
from 1959 to 1986 and for many
years served ·as chairman of the
Senate's Education Committee. ·
" It's something I attempted to
change in my lifetime. The probtern is not solved and it remains,"
. Ocasek said.
He said the Legislature has tried
IO tailor the school financing for·
mula to satisfy 611 districts but has
mMP. nrrn-er di!O:trirt~ c.:nff'P.r

l

its offices was not answered Tuesday afternoon.
Also Tuesday, negotiators for
the union and the Bituminous Coal
Opera1ors Association continued
their bargaining sessions in Washington, D.C.
.
The UMW began its strike May
I 0 against selected members of the
operalors' association in what it
says is a dispute over job security
and future employment for the
union 's members.
Both sides have adhered 10 8
mediator's request for 8 media
blackout on the status of talks, and
UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld
declined Tuesday to comment on
the talks other than to say that they
were ongoing.
Mediator Bill Usery, appointed
by U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert
Reich, said Monday that he

believed "a total agreement is
whhin reach.''
According to the lawsuit filed
by membm of UMW Local 5958,
Elite Security employees have been
working for Arch Mineral Corp.
and its subsidiary. Apogee Coal, m
Logan County since May without
obtaining stale licenses.
Working without a license is a
misdemeanor, the lawsuit said.
The miners who brought the
lawsuit contend Elite Security
employees have harassed UMW
membm, videotaping them at public resl8urants, at their homes and
at legal picket sites.
In addition, the lawsuit alleges
Elite Security workers have illegal.
ly carried guns, confiscated UMW
members' property and filed false
police reports about strike incidents.

.r-----State briefs--Woman dies from forklift accident

LANCASTER, Ohio (AP) - A woman run over by a forklift
Tuesday at the Anchor-Hoclcing Glass Co. has died and the plant
wiD remain closed until further notice, the company said.
Sandra Bush, 45, of Lancaster was pronounced dead at Lancaster
Fairfield Community Hospital about an hour after the 12:30 p.m.
accidenl, the company said in a news release.
The accident- under investigation, the company said.
The poliCe: dcpanment declined comment

Commlsswner
• •
'
pleads mnocent

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Franklin County Commissioner
Jack Foulk will plead il)nocent to a charge of fleeing the scene of a
Nov. 6 traffic accident, his attorney said Tuesday. •
Larry H. James would not say how he will defend Foulk if the
case goes to trial.
Foulk also is charged with failing to yield the right of way and
will plead no contest to that charge "at the appropriate time,"
James said.
Foulk was charJed after his car coUided with another car ncar
downtown, injuring ill three occupants. Investigators said they
found Foulk siuina in his car about a half mile from the scene.
Foulk ldmiaed hiuina the other car and leaving the scene, according to a police repon.

p lC
• kaway }QI
• 'll.oses money

CIRCLEVILLE Ohio (AP) - In iiS first 10 months of operation, Pickaway Co.irny's uew jail1?St $~70 a day because il wasn't
run at
capacity. the colinty sbenff wd.
The jail is becoming·flnancially stable, Sheriff Dwight E. Radcliff said Monday. It wasn't run at capacity until October because
the slaff needed trlinin11 and experience.

run

•

�Wednesday, November 11, 1993

Commentary

Fear of crime may bring the
country a big anti-crime bill

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday,
November 17,1993
.
. . ..

WASiflNGTON {AP) - With
.many voters ranking crime the
nation's top problem, the Senate is
set to approve a ban on 19 types of
!f!il•tary-style assault weapons as it
mches toward final passage of a
$22 billion anti-crime bill.
The Senate resumes work on the
measure just two days after a
Washington Post-ABC News poll
·focused on the fear of crime . .:-"ith 2 ~ p~rcent of respondents
IdentJfymg tl as the most important
problem, well uhead of unemployment and health care.

~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
•

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION m welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters m subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address 011d telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

Rollins talks his
way into trouble

Los Alamos lab rethinks the · future
LOS ALAMOS , N.M. - The
nation's ·largest collection of nuclear experts here has given new
meaning to " beating swords into
plowshares.''
We have learned of confidential
talks for joint projects between the
Los Alamos Nal!onal Laboratory
and the Agriculture Department.
The plan is to use " Star Wars,"
supercomputers and other sophisticated technology to give a boost ~
American farmers in any way possible. Among the projects being
discussed are development of:
- a device to be mounted in
front of tractors that would sniff
out nitrogen compounds and adjust
the rate of fertilizer applied for
every square foot of f~eld;
- another device mounted on
the front of tracto~S that would hunt
out each weed and apply the right
amount and type of pesticide to
them, instead of blanket spraying
of the toxic chemicals by plane.
- highly-accurate agricultural

maps using gco-positioriing satel- ronmental impact statement. That's
lites.
not to say it's good or bad. It just
But these new projecls are only says that the world has changed."
the tip of the iceberg. SiXty perCent . Part of the big ch:inge was the
election of President Clinton. As
we reported previously, Clinton is
reinventing government research at
labs like this to .convert them to
civilian applications, partnerships
with private business and advance
both ecological and energy-conservation programs.
qf the lab's ~ 1.1 billion Iitidget is
To cheers and applause last
nuclear weapons-related, so the May, Clinton gpoke 10 the assembreakup of the Soviet Union forced bled employees among the high
scientists here to shift their priori- mountain range here. He expressed
ties - lest the lab.s days be num. his appreciation for the lab's long
bered.
service 10 the ci&gt;untry by caUing it
"The world has changed so dra· a ··great national mind treasure, the
matically that everything we do as world's finest scientists and engian institution has 10 be looked at neers - more Ph .D.s per capita
carefully," the lab's fifth director, here in Los Alamos than any other
Dr. Siegfried Hecker, admitted to place on the planet.
us. "Fifty years ago, our forbearers
"You are our crown jewel in
here at Los Alamos did the Man- science and technology," said
hattan Project in 27 months. Toda.Y Clinton. "Thank you for the contriils takes 27 months to do an env•- butions you have made to the

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein

'

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASiflNGTON -In the intertwined leagues of campaign consulting
and political commentary, Ed Rollins was a major player until he turned
himself into an object of the game.
Now the talk shows that used to feature him are talking about him.
Put another Republican in the fix he's in, and there would be no readier source of comments no one likelier 10 be making the rounds of the TV
shows than Rollins.ln;read, he's self-silenced, a campaign manager who
incredibly boasted of paid efforts to hold down black voter turnout m
New Jersey, then awkwardly said he'd exaggerated and it wasn't~·
Democrats won a court order entitling them to 9ues11on Rollms about
what was done in the campaign for Gov.-elect Christine Todd Whiunan,
embroiled in controversy since RoUins made the statement at a breakfast
with Washington reporterS a week ago.
RoUins managed Whitman's comeback cam.paign, from a 21:point iJOll
deficit to a.one-point victory over a DemocratJc governor, and 1t was JUSt
what he needed on a resume short on victories. There hadn't been a major
win since his 1984 credit as campaign director for Ronald Reagan, and
that was a no·lose task, a 49-state re-election sweep that dido 't need much
management
·
There had been more controversies than victories, even before the latest, and perhaps last, gaffe. Rollins always overcame them, with skills that
rival 'any in a fiCid of high-prortle managers and politicians. He talked a
winning game; he put his name out front with television appearances and
observations that kept it in print
It is a technique that has made other consultants, managers and spokesmen as widely recognized as the ~didates th:y serve.
.
Indeed, conservative columrust and commentator Patnck Buchanan
tqok much the same route to presidential candidacy. He'd served two
tours as a While Hopse adviser, to two Republican presidents, before
challenging a third in 1992.
Rolltns said that with James CarviUe and Paul Begala working on the .__ _ _ _ __
Democratic side in New Jersey, it became almost a campaign of consultants. Carville and Begala were top campaign aides to President Clinton in
1992
David
Ge,gen was a Republican commentator then. Now he IS
.
· a coun· selor to Democrat Clinton, and a lonely defender of Rollins. In an mter'
.
·
view with TV host John McLaughlin recorded Friday, Gergen said
WASHINGTON (NEA) _
RoUini had been "ace~ unfairly of a lot of things in the last few days
·
Republican political guru Edward
by ........,le who are running away from him.''
,.....,.
· th R
Wh · H
G
Rollins had been reborn by the vtcRollins and Gergen worked together m .e eagan
tte ouse. ertory of his New Jersey gubernatorigen said RoUins is an honcst man and no raciSt
al candidate, Christine Todd Whit·
Rollins was about to sign on for periodic appearances as a Republican
man. But in the course of discommentator on the NBC '"Today" program. The New Jetsey uproar has
delayed and probably derailed thaL
cussing his tactics with political
Rollins who had talked his way to prominence, may now have talked reporters, Rollins let loose a porenhis wav o~t of the lineup when Republican candidates seek campaign
tially explosive political story.
'
Rollins became a prominent
s~g~~\reak.rast on Nov. 9, RoUins said the Whitman campaign had GOP campaigner by orchestrating
spent about $500,000 to hold down the Democratic vote by malcing con- Ronald Reagan's 1984 49-state
trihutions to black clergymen and their favorite charities, and by matching landslide. But after Rollins maothe payments the Democrats made to party workers. Within hours, he was aged the presidential campaign of
rated Th a1
Ross Perot for a while in 1992, he
trying 10 back off, saying his comments had been exagge
· ey so was not exactly welcomed back
had been tape-recorded.
Next day, Rollins said he'd~ trying to put his spin on events and
with open arms by the Republicans.
had "crossed the line from an honest discussion of my views to an exagBy steering Whitman to victory
geration that turned out to be inaccurate. ••
over incumbent Democrat Jim FloHe said it was the ftrst time that had happened. But he'd told the story
rio, Rollins not only ha~ the
before, at a dinner party four days earlier, according to another guest at biggest win of 1993 bpt a vtctory
·
over the Clinton campaign ream of
thatff.:i. it sounded like self-promotion gone haywire. At worst, there James .Carville and faul Begala,
are state and federal criminal inv~tigations .
. ... . . .. .
_ . strategists for Flono s Cru:J:Ipatgn.
Rollins had told 'Washington Post gossip columnist two days after the
Clearly, Rollins was feeling h1s
election that he was back in the Republican loop, no small feat after his
oats when he sat down for ~rcakdefection to Ross Perot during the 1992 campaign, which ended in argo- .fas! ,wtth a group of Washmgton
ment after 45 days.
.
poliuc~~;I reporters.
.
Losing New Jersey "could have been a career-ender for me," he said.
Dunng that breakfast, Ro!hns
That may be the outcome anyhow.
·
drof.~ wha.t !Ivery repo~ at the
.
tab e Immediately recognized as a
bombshell. He said that the WhitEDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum·
man
campaign had paid out signifinlst ror The Associated Press, has reported oo Washingtoo aod
cant
sums of money 10 try to hold
national politics for more lhao 30 years.
down Florio's turnout.
Whitman defeated Democratic
incumbent Jim Florio by an eye-

...

progress of the American dream.
May it never stop."
But then Clinton told the
employees that he needed them to
turn their attention 10 helping him
with his domestic and economic
agenda. "So we've had to re-tool
our laboratory," says Hecker. "to
re-examine and re-en~neer.''
Among their proJects already.
underway are:
·
- a cooperative effort with the
Big Three auto companies to Jl!Oc
duce in a decade a non-pollutJng
vehicle that gets 82 1/2 miles per
gallon using "Star Wars"-type
technolo~;
.
.
.
- a JOint project wtth oil and
gas companies to extract more of
the oil and gas that's .left in the
ground using computer-driven

Delegation•••
Continued from Page 1
White House days again, on the
lobbying front," said Portman,
who s been trying to persuade ·
fellow Republicans to vote for
the treaty negotiated mostly by
the Bush administration.
"Every district in America is
different," he said. "It's just
like reverting back to the old
days, where you have to see
things through their perspective,
walk a mile m their m~asins."
Portman's work has been
behind the scenes. Ohio also has
had high-profile people in -the
NAFrA debate.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a Democrat, has been working for
months to try to defeat the trade
deal. She staged debates, news
conferences and road shows.
She also has joined Ross Perot
at anti-NAFT A rallies.
Freshman Rep. Sherrod
Brown, D-Ohio, also has been a
top deputy in the anti-NAFrA
battle, volunteering to compile
the newsletter that kept the
opponents informed of progress
along the way.
As momentum started to shift
against them Tuesday, Brown
· and Kaptur went to the House
floor to try to capture the attention of colleagues and the public.
"There are two trade agreements going on. One is NAFrA
and the other is trading votes for
pork, which is now going on in
·. the ... White House," Kaptur
said.

tools.

- · key participation in the
human genome project, which
seeks to map all 3 billion-plus
chemical pair~ of DNA types in
humans, the better 10 separate the
defects that produce about 4,000
genetic diseases;
•
- establishing themselves
already as the world's leading data:
base on mv, the virus that causes
AIDS, already counting some; ·
2,000 users worldwide as customers by modem to the computer
database·
.
- and• assistance, as the world •S
top super-computing center, in
building a •'national information
infrastructure," a so-called "superhigh way" of information passing
between computers at high rates,
roughly equivalent 10 transmitting
50 Bibles per ~d.
But the lab's ability 10 further
these achievments may be hindered
by a bloated bureaucracy and a
decades-old obsession with secrecy
that obstructs cooperative efforts
with civilian panners.
"We, as large laboratories, have
suffered the same problems that
corporate America suffered," says
Hecker. "We got lact~e. We got
stiff. We got bureaucrauc."
But he concluded by saying that
he bad "absolutely no qualms that ,
we can help this country in the ·
civilian areas the way that we have :
helped it in the defense area."
:
Jack Anderson and Michael .
Binstein are writers ror United ·
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
'

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS JJ.l.90t)

a

Berry•s World

1NFORMA'TlON HlGHWA.Y 1
0
0

H\GHWAY!
OOMT'

AS~
DIRE'CTION~
0

·'

'•

Robert J. Wagman
end, though, Florio did n&lt;it pile up
the kind of vote totals his campaign
brain trust had expected in places
like Camden, Newark and Jersey
City.
The unexpectedly light turnout
in these heavily Democratic areas
, surprised Democratic operatives. In
a number of key inner-city
precincts, turnout was about 50
percent, compared to suburban
Republican districts where turnout
was between 70 percent and 80
percent.
At breakfast Rollins supplied a
partial answer. He said the Whitman campaign had-.spread around
$500,000 10 ~litically active black
inner-city mlllist,ers and 10 largely
black Democratic political worken
10 effectively sit out the final dar.s
of the campaign. They were spectfically asked to halt any get-out-thevote activities on behalf of Florio.
Rollins said the payouts come
from "walking around money,"
which is normally used 10 by parties to increase the voter turnout for
their candidates. It's a common and

though many ministers endorsed:
Florio, they weren't as enthusiastic:
as they had been."
But it is difficult 10 recant state·,
ments made on the record to 30·
reporters.
Already many people -rang- .
ing from the New Jersey Demo- ·
cratic Central Committee to the .
NAACP Legal Defense Fund and ;
Rep. Robert Torricelli, D-N.J. - '
are calling for federal, state or con- :
gressional investigations. New Jersey law requires disclosure of the ,
names of workers who receive $25 ·
or more for Election Day services,
as well as listings of any contributions made by a campaign to a
charity or church. These reportS do ,
riot have to be filed for several
months.
One of the more interesting
questions is, if the stories are true, .
what laws, if any, were broken. 1\
spokesman for the New Jersey state :
Election Law Enforcement Com: ·
mission said they are starting to :
research the matter. But, he mused, ,
if it is common practice to give •
walking around money to get the :
vote out, why is it illegal to do the :
same to hold down your oppo- •
nent's vote?
!
Robert Waaman Is • syndical· :
ed writer for Newspaper Enter· ·.
prise Association.
:

'

I'

·"-'

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OfJ[ SO URCE FOR

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--'----:-;-----,;-

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!hat.
m.n

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_.,.., .•.

·•

. , ... ·.~to:·

I'

Douglas Canny
Douglas Halliday Canny, 70, of
6225 North 36th Drive, Phoenix,
Ariz. died Monday, Nov. I, 1993 at
a Phoenix Hospital.
Born on March 16, 1923 at J;lexter. he was the son of the late Virgil
Canny and Elsie Emily Halliday
Canny McCaskey. He was a school

Continued from Page 1
....:..=:=:.:..:..:.::..::..::!:...:...--board to discuss the "buy local"
programs which are being considered. They .said that the proposed
cash coupon for local purchases
program is moving forward but
will probably not go into effect for
several months. They asked when
the list of items purchased by the
schools will be available to the
merchants.
Graham also reported to the
board that the Harrisonville Alumni
Association has purchased six new
desks and chairs for the teachers.
The board will send a letter of
appreciation to the group.
Two retirees, Ted Hatfield and
Mary King, were presented
plaques .. Hatfield has been custodian at the HarrisonviUe School for
21 years and King has driven bus
for 25 years.
Attending the meeting were
Larry Rupe, president, John Hood,
Bob Barton, Roger Abbott, and
Randy Humphreys, and Supt.
Buckley.

Glendine Holstein
Glendine "Dee" Holstein, 57, of
Middlebourne, died Sunday, Nov.
14, 1993, at the Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital , Parkersburg.
W.Va.
Born in Yolin, she , wa s the
daughter of the late Callie and Ivy
Fannin Holstein. She wa s a
licensed practical nurse at Lower
Bucks County Hospital for 10
years.
Surviving are a daughter, Sandra
Messing of Middlebourne; a son,
Paul Hill of Port Hueneme, Calif.;
five sisters, Connie Primavera of
Morrisville, Pa.; Barbara Dunfee
and Judy Morrison, both of Little
Hocking; Sue Uhl of Fowlersville,
Mich .; and Drema Morrison of
Woodbridge, Va.; three brothers,
Larry Hol stein of Parkersburg,
Lowell ljolstein of Gennany, and
Roy Holstein of Waverly; four

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday admissions- None .
Tuesday discharges - Thomas
Tucker, Racine.

Color Console
Television
• 25" diag. screen
• Remote Control
•Pecan or Oak
cabinet finish
Portable Color
Television
• 19" diag . screen
• Remote Control

her husband of 51 years, Carl
Moore, in 1985.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funml
Home in Pomeroy. Burial will be
in Gilmore Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home Thursday
from 2 1!14 and 7 to 9 p.m. Eastern
Star Memorial Services will be
held at7 p.m. Thursday.

grandchildren; and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Thursday at the Wh ite
Funeral Home, Coolville, The Rev.
Wesley Thatcher will officiate .
Friends may call at the funeral
home. 7 to 9 p.m, Wednesday.

Mabel Moore
Mabel V. Moore, 76 , of
Pomeroy, died Wednesday , Nov .
17, 1993 at the Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
She was a homemaker. Born on
Jan. 9, 1918 at Pomeroy, she was
the daughter of the late Verne
Davis and Florence Smith Davis.
She was a member of the Enterprise United Methodist Church, a
charter member of the Nifty Stitchers Sewing Club , a member of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, the Big Bend C. B.
Club, and the C. B. Club Ladies
Auxiliary.
She is survived by two daugh ters and a son-in-law, Marlene and
Geoffrey Wilson , and Linda lett; a
granddaughter and her husband,
Kelley and Jacob Roush, a granddaughter, Lisa K. len, ali of
Pomeroy, and another granddaughter, Terri Jo Wilson. Malta; an
aunt, Mynle Monzfelt of Kenosha,
Wi se., and several aunts, uncles,
and cousins.
She was preceded in death by

Daniel F. McNaughtan
Daniel F. McNaughtan, 85, of
Waverly; Ohio, died Friday,
November 12, 1993, at Pike com.
munity Hospital in Waverly.
Born Au!IUSI 19, 1908 in
Syracuse, Oh10, he was a son of the
late Charles E. and Josephine (Ervin) McNaughtan. He was retired
from American Electric Power, and
was a member of Masonic Lodge
321 of Waver! y.
Survivors include his wife, Ruth
(Thomas) McNaughtan of Waverly:
two sisters, Helen Long and Hilda
Mcintire, both of Springfield, Ohio;
a brother-in-law and sister-in-law
Theodore C. and Margaret T. Wil:
son of Columbus, OH.
Memorial service will be held
Monday, November 22, 1993. at 1
p.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant with Rev. Sam
Hobson officiating. Burial will be
at Suncrest Cemetery in Point
Pleasant.

EMS responds to 10 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to 10 calls for assistance
Monday , Tuesday and Wednesday
morning. Units responding includ ed:
Monday- 12:26 p.m. Syracuse
to Bridgeman Street for Fred Crow
who was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 3:02 p.m. Middleport to Middleport Police
Department for Raymond Litchfield who was trapsported to VMH;
7:14 p.m. Middleport to Second
Street for Earl Glass who was
transported to VMH.
Tuesday - 12:49 a.m. Rutland
to Crouser Road for Bengy Rhodes
who was transported to VMH; 6:05
a.m Syracuse to Fisher Street for
William Stivers who was transponed to VMH; 8:14 a.m. Syracuse to

Rock Springs Road lor Willard
Hines who was transported to
Holzer Medical Center; 12:22 p.m.
Rutland to State Route 124 for
Patty Cremeans who ws transported to HMC; 7:25 p.m. Pomeroy to
Pomeroy Parking Lot for Tim
Herdman who refused treatment;
11 :22 p.m. Middleport to Page
Street for Charles McElroy who
was transported 10 VMH.
WedCICsday - 8:02 a.m. Mid·
dleport to Bradbury Road for Anne
Frank who was treated at the scene.
SPRING VALLEY Cl~E~A
446·4524
. " ,,

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PUBLIC AUCTION

have the "face of a little lizard."
Uppity buggers, ain't they? .
Don't feed the dogs, either.
Remember when they chased away

3

Glen "Lefty" Baker, 68, of
Reedsville, died Wednesday, Nov .
17, 1993 at the Arcadia Nursing
Center ip Coolville.
Born on July 8, 1925 to the late
Samuel and Mary Swank Baker, he
was a member of the Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ, Tuppers
Plains VFW Post 9053, laborers'
union, brick layers' union and carpenters' union. He was a Navy vet·
eran of World War II and worked
as a self-employed brick layer.
Sitrvivors are a son and daughter-in -law, Robert and Karen
Baker, Reedsville; daughters and
sons-in-law, Nancy and Augie
Altadonna, Guhanna, and Sandra
and Mike Corbett, St. Louisville;
four grandchildren, three great·
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Mary Baker in 1990.
Services will be Friday at 1 p.m.
at the White-Blower Funeral Home
in Coolville. Burial will follow at
the Pleasant Grove Cemetery in
Reedsville with military $f8Veside
services by Tuppers Plruns VFW
Post9053.
Friends inay caU Thursday from
3 to S and 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

teacher, painter, a nd writer, and
was an employee of the State of
Arizona.
·
He served four years in the U. S.
Navy during World War II and had
32 years of service with the U. S.
Coast Guard Reserves and Ready
Reserves with·numerous short tours
of active duty. He retired as a commander in 1983. He was a member
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars
and the Ohio Education Association.
A descendarU of the Frerleh SOO
of Gallipolis, Mr. Canny graduated
from Rutland High School where
he played with the Red Devil ream
for three years. He attended Ohio
University at Athens where he
earned a bachelor of science degree
in education in 1947 and a master's
degree in ,1951. His teaching career
included that of varsity basketball
coach at Pennsville High School
for four years.
He is survived by Mildred Marcella Barnes of Carpenter, his wife
of 43 years; sons, Douglas Brian
Canny and Steven Gregory Canny,
both of Phoenix; ,aunts, Anna G.
Halliday of Dexter and Faerie
Louise Halliday of Washington C.
H. and an uncle, Vernon Canny ,
McArthur.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his grandparents,
William Ross and Martha Matilda
Bowles Halliday of Dexter, and a
step-brother, Emmett McCaskey of
Rutland.
Graveside services were held
Nov. 5 at the National Memorial
Cemetery of Arizona.

Gas or Ele&lt;:tric

~:

Joseph Spea:·

.

PRICE

...
...

Just FYI, this tip is solid gold. It •'bossy old billionaire bully .•:;
comes from an anonymous caller William Safue- write it down.
~
who heard it from a guy who
I'm talkin' Mary McGrory, ..
doesn't~ English who has reiwrites for the Washington Post. :
atives in Florida who got it from She said I'm a "terrible-tempered ~
theirCubangrocer's6-year-oldson tycoon." And Anna Quindlen. ~
who picked it up from his soceer writes for the New York Times.
ream's goalie whose older sister is She said I'm full the "kind of •
that assassination team the Viet- datin' a guy who buys cocaine aphorisms you'd expect to lind in a ~ .
narnesesentafterrne1 The llogs got from a street dude whose brother is fortune cookie at a Tex-Mex ~
em as they were comin' across the in a prison in Oaxaca where he's restaurant." I'm sick and tired of ~
front yard. You know why the wired intb everything. Very reli- these women reporters try.in' 10 =
Dobennans were so feisty? We for- able stuli. ·
·
prove their manhood by pickin' on ~
got to feed em that (lay. I keep
DOn't tell the media where the Old Ross. Take their names and ~
telliii' you fellas a hungry dog will tip came from, though. They'll we'll send them to Timbultru.
~ ·hunL
•
·
write some damn gotcha story
I'm talkin' this .Cohen Cella, :
Nlake sure my Uzi is oiled up, about my alleged instability. Hey, Richlrd, writes foc the Washington '
too. And leak the word to the somebody ·put tllat Patsy Cline tape PosL He's got facial hair, d&amp;i't he? E
media about this new hit squad. .on, .will ya1 "Crazy." I want to And this Spear fella, writes for a :
And quote me as sayin.' our' P.f&lt;!ple hear a little or~at. "Crazy" song.
bunch of papers. He's sot ltair :
shoilld not mourn a .mmitte if they
OK, now whtch one of you undec his nose, too, doil't he1 Let's
get me. Not one minute. ·They · oveipa\d pencil-pushers is keepin' give em a d,ry slJave.in 96. :
•.
should just reilouble their efforts to' · the enenucs list? Whoever,listen
Wait a miljutel I'm setu.·n• a
clean. up Washinatoo 111d dedicate up, I been watchin' the news and . message from the miniature' radiO ·
thejob ·IO this Old'Patriot; ·
, . readin' papers and lakin' names, the spooks planted in my molar. I
Hey, somebody put on a Sousa. OK? When this· ~·s in the White knew it! The Republicans and the ; .
tape, ,wfll ya? The one .~ith the House, these people are goin' to · Democrats ire consplrlil' to disrupt ~
duck-may-be-somebody's-mother pay. Whi~h one. of my ove!')lai.d · Aunt Nellie:s 80th birtbd&amp;y'plrty ~
march 011 iL ·
·
attorneys ts working on tiW Mcidia and t)ley're goin' to show a doc· =
---=------.---=--~-....,.:.~·
~ozos Deponatibn Act? Don't droP · tared-up plioto of Old Nel in her ~·
Today's ~irthdays: Olympian-~ed-=:an Boll MalhlU is 63. tile ball orl
CBUSCi here's .,me . knickers. Get 11 rally aoiU,'felllli,
Actor-comedian'~ Coot is 56. Siilaer
~001)1 55. Movie .people whore gonna get a c.lose- We'll stomp this sn~ilt:e before It ·
director Martin Scaseao is Sl, Ac~ ·Lauten HliiiO!i ls.49. Aetor-direc- up look II
Bator come 1996. • learns 10 slither.
·
~•
tor Danoy DeViro ja 49. Bn bllll{all-ot'·llamer Tom 'sea-ls '49, Vez- ·
I'm talkin' about that Cella
lOJtph Spear Ia a IJIIditated•
mont Governor Howai'd Dean ii4S. Actreal Mary Elizabeth Maatrantonio William Safue, writes (or the New . writer for Ntl'IJI8per' Eaterprlse
is 35.
. .
•
.
Y otk Times . He ~~~lied me. a · Assoctalloll. ·
· '
,
·
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·ooe. wm................................................. ..st .60

. ODC Month. ...........................,...................$6.95
Ooe Year....................... ...................- ..S83.20

,

• • '

Am Ele Power ...................36 1/4
Ashland Oil..... ..... ..............34 1/4
AT&amp;T .............................. :.S6 3/4
Bank One ...........................36 3/8
Bob Evans ......................... .l9 3/8
Channing Shop ........... ....... 13 314
Champion Ind..........................15
City Holding ............................32
Federal Mogul .........................26
Goodyear T&amp;R ................. .41 3/4
Lands End ..........................41 3/4
Limited Inc................. ....... 22 3/8
Multimedia Inc........................37
Point Bancorp .......................... 15
Reliance Electric.. ....... ..... .. 17 I /8
Robbins&amp;Myers .................... ..17
Shoney's Inc......................21 1/4
Star Bank ................................ .34
Wendy Int'l. ...................... .l6 1/4
Worthington Ind................ 18 1/2
Stoc.k reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

SUBSCIUPTION RATES
81 Carrla- or Motor Route
SINGLE COPY

I '

Stocks

4S'769 .

.

Glen Baker

the board.
Fry reported that $19,682 in
drug f~ee grant nwn.ies. will be
coming into the dtstriCI m 1994.
She also noted I)Jat there is a balance in last year's Rural Demonstration Grant of $1,539.71 and m
the Carl Perkins Grant of $501.27,
both of which will be refunded. .
The board signed a coopcratJve
agreement with the Callia-Meig s
Community Action Agency wh•ch
provides employment for some students during 'the summer months.
Tom Dooley of the Middlepon
Community Association and Ann
Chapman of the Pome-ro~ Merchants AssociatiOn met w1th the

POSTMASTER: Send address changes 10 The
Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Memo from a concerned citizen
Secret Eyes Only
From: RP
To: Immediate Staff
I'm dictatin' this from the corporate jet while flyin' over.. .
where are we, anyway? ... Over
Upper Mud Lake, La. So stay with
me now and don't go diagrammin'
my sentences, OK?
I just got word that a Mexican
hit squad is on the way 10 Dallas to
take me out, so make sure the
surveillance cameras imd the movement sensors are working. And tell
the guards to cancel all vacations
and doctors appoinunents and the
like.
.
I ~. the MeXicans didn't like
what I had to say about their. piddlin' little economy and so-called
democracy during that so-called
debate with the Wobden Indian.
They didn'tlike it when l· tOld the
truth llbout how they have WOJ'Se
lives than the livestock and dream
ofownin' outhouses' some day.
Did you hear what tliey called
me on Mexican radio? They called
me a "little dwarf." They said I

.

Member: The Auociated Preu, and the Ohio
Newspaper Alloclatiou, Nation! Advertiliq
RepreseDlative, Braoham Newapaper Salea,
733 Third Avenue, New York. New York
10017.

•

rears

Mel'gs board

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

_ _.;.,___ _ _ _ Area deaths------•

The assault gun amendment of
Sen. Dianne Feinstein is tough, but
not a blanket ban. While prohibiting 19 specified semiautomatic
weapons, it would prptect 650
named guns used ·by hunters and
sportsmen.
The former San FranciscQ
mayor's prOposal won a erucialtest
vote last week when the Senate
voted S1-49 againsta motion 10 kill
it
In an emotional debate, the California Democrat solemnly reminded colleagues that she became
mayor . after her predecessor,
George MoscoCIC, was assassinated.
The senator recalled that she
learned how to shoot because of
terrorist threals and the ftrebombing of her home.
·
The entire crime bill could
receive a final vote today and head
for a conference with the House which has approved a scaled-down
version.
The Senate measure's key component would authorize $8.9 billion
to hire 100.000 new police officers
over five-years. New prisons would
be built. Financing would come
from reductions in federal employ·
ment during 1994-98.
The bill would expand the death
penalty to cover nearly SO offenses
including murder of a law enforcement officer, drive-by shootings
and carjackings in which a victim
is killed.
.To address crime by young people, llie measure would prohibit the
sale or transfer of a gun to a juvenile. Possession of a gun by a juvenile would be barred.

•Joe., Pomeroy, Ohio 4j:769, Ph. 992-2156.
Secoad clau polt18e paid at Pomeroy, CXllo.

.

legal practice in several states, particularly in the Northeast. Over the
the activity has spread to givtng money to institutions like
churches and social clubs to compel them 10 get their members to
the polls. Effectively, Rollins said
the Whiunan campaign used walking around money to reverse·the
process.
.
Rollins defended the action as
just normal politics in New Jersey:
"We played the game the way the
game is played in New Jersey."
Within a matter of hours the
story was all over Washington.
Calls poured into Whil!nan headquarters in Trenton where campaign spokesman Carl Golden
quickly denied that the governorelect had any knowledge that such
puymenls had been made.
Later in the day Whil!nan blasted her foaner campaign manager.
She said Rollins was ''off the
wall," and said the payouts "did
not happen." She even displayed a
faxed leuer from him renouncing
the story.
Meanwhile in Washington,
Rollins told the Associated Press
that his remarks at the breakfast
had been "exaggerated" by the
reporters at the·meeting. "What I
said was we had street money,
which is legal. We had a program
in the black community, and even

•

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,Friday, 11l Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by tl!e
·Ohio VaUey f\!blilhing Compuy/Multlmedia

Dt.d Wh1·tman camp pay to kt.ll votes?
lash. On Election Day. right up to
the time the official vote totals
starred rolling in, the Florio camp
was confident of victory. In the

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SATURI)AY, NOVEMBER 20TH
EASTERNLOCALSCHQOLS

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ROCKERS

SALE

Huge selection of styles and fabnes.
These chairs would make wonderful gilts
for Christmas. Buy now or Layaway:
Reg. 269 Glider Rockers SALE
Reg. 359 Glider Rockers SALE
Reg. 469 Glider Rockers SA~
Reg. 489 Glider Rockers SALE

ng Air Besl Rest
Warranty

Sertapedlc
yr. Warranty

$219
$309
$399

Perfect Sleeper

yr. Warranty

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Notice of ~le of v.ehlclea and rtllscellanioul equipment.

$88"' Twin ·ea.

$1 08" Full ea.
$119" Twin ea.
$169" Full ea.
$349"' Twin ea.
$479"' Full ea.

· The Eutem Local School Dla1rlct wlll conduct a Public Auction
. on the premlne of Ee_.ern .,.lgh Schoolloceted e1 381100 SL Rt.
.7, Reedavllle, OhiO, In ...lp COuilty on s.turdly, November 20,
1993, et10:00 A.M. The auetlon.,r wjll be Mec llc:COy.
·The Board reserves the right to reject a'ny and all.auction ~Ids. Bids
: are not to be w~hdrawn qnce accepted and are final and binding. Ail
1~ems advel11sed will be placed for bid. All Chacka need pos~ive ID
· and should be made out to, Treasurer, Eliatern Local · Schools.
Payment In lull must be made before any equipment Ia removed.
Equipment will be accepted In ".as it condhlon•. All equipment must be
: removed within (3) days ol the' nle unless apeclal arrangements are
, made or the equipment revel1s back to the Eutem l!oard. Houra for
, pickup are from 8:00 A.M. to 3:30 P,M., Monday th r.ough Fridsy. The ·
:following it a list of hems for sale but 1hould ne!, .ba de,lned, all
inclu1ive.
'
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•Library deek, 40 hanging gym lights, 16nim · projector, 2 IBM
:typewri\era, laminator, .sRA reading Taba, old athletic unKorme, ditto
machl.ne, adding mach1ne, TV '(black &amp; whle) with atan~. old boob,
chairs, teacher &amp; student deska,, •lactnc molora, 1,ok! dllhwuher,·
'umace control box, elac)rlc hedge trlmmera. old teldDOOka, old llnry
booka electric stenell cutter, marquette welder, 346 IHC !lflllln• ~ 5
: apeed' tritnanliaalon, Ford tractoi, g11 htater, ~nhquu, 1aX30;
aehpol 'bua 1978 IHC; 6,5 pueenger; duplicator machine, old ,alnka,
OeHa ben Hnder, old bess drum, 111eer drum, upright pl111o, wUhlng
'machine, 16 qt. pre88ure cooller, electric stand mixer.

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�•

Wednesday, November 17, 1993

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

Redmen put leash on Bulldogs 106-85

Lebanpn results

The University of Rio Grande
Redmen; in their first basketball
outing of the 1993-94 seaso n,
re lied not onl y on their tried and
true performers but upon everyone
Tuesday in defeating Wilberforce
106-85 at Lyne Cenler.
"O ur bench played well and
what our guys need to realize is
that we don't have just five starters,
but 10 starters," Redm en Coach
John Law horn remark ed as he
commenced his 14th season at Rio
Grande. "We need to utilize our
bench more."
Everyone on Rio Grande's side
of the court got into the action as a
rejuvenated Bulldogs team under
th e direc tion of Moses Gnffm
matched the hosts with athleticism
during the first half. Rio Grande
neued five unanswered points within the first few minutes of the game
before Wilberforce unleashed its
style of play and led 17-14 by lhe
13-minute mark, !hanks in part to a
25-point performance from 6-4 forward Clifford Brown and similarly
high-scoring games from teammates Brian Copeland, Brian Han-

WilberfOrCe
falls to Rio
·ladies 120-43
The University of Rio Grande
women' s basketball team crushed
Wilberforce 120-43 on the Lady
Bulldogs' court Tuesday behind
double-figure performances by
seven of David Smalley's Redwomen team.
Lori Hamilton scored 22 points
to lead Rio Grande, followed by 16
from Kim Sowers, 14 by Shannon
• Miller 12 each from Michelle
: Crouse' and Connie Fazio, II by
' Stacey Ritter and 10 from Stacy
Riley.
Additional details on the game,
including Wilberforce's scoring.
were not available as of presstime.
The Redwomen (2-0) play West
Virginia Wesleyan at6 p.m. F~y
in Lyne Centet in the Bevo FranciS
Classic.

.,

a,no_._.w,_

•'

IMRIIN CONFERENCE
AIIMikDIW L PeL GIJ
7 0 1.000
Y~
~ uu.
3 I .7SO 2 1/1
lo.ton
.... ..... 4 2 -~~ ~z
Orllndo
......... 4 2 .
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New Je:ncy ....... 3 4 .429
4
.. Walh.in~ ...... 2 3 .400
5
l'hiaddphio ....... 2 l
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2 4 .333
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1 ~ 11111
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MID&amp; IIGI' 111. Mil~91
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, 7:30pm.

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Ullb ...... 7:J0p.a .
...., ' ·0 •
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0

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cock and Korey Deriso.
The Redmen, banking on the
tenacity of starters Matt Powell and
Jeff Hoeppner and bench conlributors Eric Burris and Larry CaudiU,
wreslled back a slim lead but found
themselves unable to shake off lhe
Bulldogs for very long, ending the
half with a single-point margin
between them and the visitors.
Tile closeness or the batlle was
seen in the halfs shooting percentages: the Redmen posted 47.5 on
19 of 40 attempts and Wilberforte
netted47.2 (17-36).
But as in the past with thei r
home games. the Redmen saved lhe
best for the second half, shrugging
off Wilberforce for an eight-point
lead (74-66) by 10:18 and then
exploding for a 24 -point margin
(100·76) by 4:25 - at which point
Lawhorn began substituting freely
to fmish the job.
"You really have to give
Wilberforte credit," Lawhorn said.
"They looked like a ream that had
played three games and we looked
like a young ball club. But our
bench played well. and it was the
work of Caudill and Burris that
kept us in during the ftrst half."
Powell, .Rio Grande's top scorer
last season. got a start on maintaining that position with 23 points,
while newcomer Hoeppner added
22 to the effort. Caudill, a 6-2
junior from Beaver, notched 15
points and starters Walter Stephens
and Brett Coreno ended with 14
an&lt;fll, respectively.
The Redmen made sure they
dominated on the boards, recording
38 to Wilberforce's 23, and out of
fairly balanced rebounding output
from the team, sophomore Shawn
Snyder led the way with eight Jack
Morgan had eight assists to lead lhe
team and Stephens added seven.
Brown was Wilberforce's top
rebounder for the game with eigh~
while Deriso led in assists with
five.
Overall. Rio Grande emerged on
top in shooting by sinking 36 or 77
attempts for 46.8 percent (11-19
from the three-point range for 57 .9)
and kept its free throw tosses close
to the ~ain when it hit on 23 of 27

LEBANON, Ohi o (AP) Muskie went virtuall y un challenged in winning the feature race
Tuesday night at Lebanon Raceway.
Muskie paced the mile in 2:00
4-5 and paid $2.40, $2.20 and
$2.60. Pass The Torch finished second, returning $7 and $13.80. and
third-place Vogue Vogue Vogue
paid $4.
The daily double combination of
2-9 was worth $29.00.
A crowd of 1,553 wagered
$192,337.

'

Model Home Located at
Intersection of Rls. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992,2478

•

•

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The annual Meigs High School
Fall Sports Banquet was held Tuesday in the school cafeteria. Master
of ceremonies was Athletic Booster
President Jim Soulsby.
John Krawsczyn introduced
. members of the reserve golf team
-and the Tri-Valley Conference
champion varsity team. The varsity
nailed down its fourth straight conference crown this past season.
The reserve ream finished with
an 8-4 record. Team members
included Mike Franclcowial&lt;, Jere: my Hartson, David Heighton, Scou
·Mitch and Matt O'BryaoL
· The varsity team finished with a
119-31 record overall and a 65-7
·mark in the TVC. Team members
included Brad Anderson, Jerod
·Cook, Jerrod Douglas. Ben Ewing,
Travis Grate, Jason Hart, Adam
Krawsczyn, Reggie Pratt, Jason
Taylor and manager Joe HiD.
Krawsczyn presented special
awards to George Nesselroad, representing the Meigs County Golf
Course. and Rit~ Slavin for the
Riverside Golf Course . Also
receiving awards from Krawsczyn
were Jack Slavin for his help with
the reserve team and Warren Hart
for his fan support.
Ali-TVC performers were Adam
: Krawsczyn and Jason Hart, first
team All-TVC. Han won all con·
ference honors for his third year in
a row and Krawsczyn WS$ selected
·:· the conference' s Most Valuable
·· Golfer for the third straight year.
: Joe Hill was presented the Coaches
: Award for his inspiration and
: Krawsczyn won the Parker Long: Rodd Harrison Memorial Award
for golfer of the year.
·: Reserve volleyball awards were
; presented by Dale Harri~on to
. Nikki Bentley, Jennr. Chfford,
~ Cynthia Cotterill, Emtly Fackler.
; April Hawley. Betsy Houdashelt,
• Julie King, Ltbby Kmg, Letgh
~ Mash, Heather McClain, Jessica
' McElroy. Brandi Meadows. Stacey
; Novak, Stephanie Stewart, Jaclyn
· Swartz and An~ie Walters. The
; reserve team ftmshed with a 19-1
; m;u-k and were TVC reserve cham·
; pions._Because of the lar~ number
.- of girls on t)le team thts year. a
~ reserve/freshman team also played
' some matches. They finished with
· an ouiSlanding 14-2 mark.
Coach Rick Ash presented
: awards to the varsity volleyball

A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features

* Andersen Windows
* Georgia Pacific Doors
* 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 In. On Center

* Armstrong Solarian Floor Tile
* Kitc.hen Compact Cabinets

GOING IN FOR THE SCORE - The University of Rio
Grande's Eric Burris (52) goes in for a Jaynp during first-half
action in the Redmen's season opener with Wilberforce Tuesday at
Lyne Center. The Redmen won 106·85.
tries for 85.2 percent. The Bulldogs
were 43.8 percent on field goals
(35-80, seven of 13 from lhe three
for 53.8) and connected on eight of
12 at the line for 66.7 percenL
Wilh its ftrst win behind Ihem,
the Redmen return to action Friday
at 8 p.m. in Lyne Center against
Daemen (N.Y.) in the Bevo Francis
Classic . Wilberforce enters the
Cedarville College Toornament
Friday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (106) - Jeff
Hoeppner, 11 -0-22; Walter
Stephens, 2-2-4-14; Brett Coreno,

* 8 Foot Ceiling
* 2x!O Floor Joist, 16In. On Center

2-1-4-11; Jack Morgan,0-1-1; Matt
Powell, 2-5-4-23; Lance Ream, 10-2; Benjie Lewis, 0-2-2; Jason
Curtis. 0-2-2; Craig Kerns, 1-0-2;
Larry Caudill, 2-3-2-15; Shawn
Snyder, 2-4-8; Eric Burris, 2-0-4.
TOTALS 2.5-11-23·106.
WILBERFORCE (85) Lionel Taylor, 3-0-6; Brian Hancock, 2-3-2-15; Chris DaCosta, 20-4; Brian Copeland, 5-2-1-17;
Clifford Brown, 12-1-25; Korey
Deriso, 3-1-2-11; Harry Colson, 11-2-7. TOTALS 28-7-8-85.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
46, Wilberforce 45.

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Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.
'

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1 ..-.11a,

~

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-5:00 p.m.
Tue-Sat. or by appointment Call614-992· 2478

J: ""(1-tJNK

W~'t,t...- IAK~ IT

team. The Lady Marauders were
tri-champs in the Tri-Valley Conference and finished with an 14· 7
mark overall and 11-3 in the TVC.
Awards were presented to Amber
Blackwell, Billie Butcher, Bobbie
Butcher, Melissa Clifford, Vanessa
Compston, Lissa Fackler. Lee Henderso'lo Ginger Holcomb, Mandy
Jones, Sarah Pullins. Erica Robie
and Chrissy Taylor.
Sarah Pullins was selected honorable mentio.n All-TVC, while

VOLLEYBALL AWARDS - Receiving awards for all confer·
ence selections at the annual fall sports banquet were, from leh,
Chrissy Taylor and Sarah Pullins. Taylor was a first team AllConference selection and PuUins was an honorable mention selection,

Columbus l!lltmOOr (ttJ..O) VI . s~ .

Mmo M.....W(II-0),7:30p.m

At twln~biiiJ Tlpr stadium
o-buq a;... (10.1) ...
(11-3), 7,30 p.m.
DIVISIONm
R'lkoiiiiPI ....
Allpma....._J
At Mkldl &amp;uwa 8ar'nll.l Stadium
OeunlllloWn ValltY View (l l -0) VI.
Hunil""' llt.W. (10.1),'? !'-"'AI Portlmou.. Mulltlpal Stadium
lranton (11 -0) Yl. McAnhu&amp;: Vinton

a......

CCI.Uil)' (10-.1). 1 p.m.

Al Fremont H-on Sladlum
w.~ (11..0) vs. WOOI&amp;Cir Triw•y

(9· 2). 7 p.m. .
AI AUIIl•IOWit Flldt Sbcl.hnn
YCJWtlllOWn UJ'IUlirle (9-2) va. Wu"" a.-;.. (11-0). 1 p.m.

FOOTBALL AWARDS - All TVC selection Ia football were
introduced at the Meigs FaD Sports Banquet From left are Scott
Peterson, second team All-TVC and Heath Hudson, first team AUTVC.

BIRCHFIELD
FUNERAL HOME
Main Street. P.O. Box 188

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· moving in the-classified$. ·

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WHII iW (t-0) · ,.,, Now art

1.1&gt;0117 0.0.19-2) ... CniiiUie (9-

The Daily Sentinel
.

ilill:r'-~-·Siadlutll
• . ,.c.dmHD (9·2) n. Lonia
n

'

Call Joanie or Debbie at 992-2155

eta':'~~ ~:~p.m.

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Rutland, Oh, 45775

Plimning ah.eaJ wfiife you're sti[[
worfjng 17Ul!&lt;is sense ...
· wfi£n you retire you'{[ /(.now everytfiing
is ~n care of ... caf£ us totfay!

V....W.. (10-1) vo. CAPE (9· 2),
7:30p.m.
c..ou.111o 19-2), 7:30 pm.
At 0,... Oar M_.lal Slldlum
(9·2) ••· -lpelier (I 0.1),
, ,30,...
AUW'ltna
5 7 Ftl[~~(l
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loillolk-(10-1~ 7:30pm.

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'

Reserve football awards were
presented by Chancey to Travis
Abbott. Adam Barrett, DJ. Blanks,
Chad Burton, Brian Colwell, Donald Goheen , Tim Helton, Trav is
Lipscomb, Potong Madsuree, Mike
Marshall, Nick Mills, Jayson Parsons, Paul Pullins, Robert Qualls,
Tim Roush and Paul Searles.
Chancey then presented mem bers of his varsity football team.
They included Matt Clark, Shawn
Cremeans, Tom Cremeans, Travis
Curtis, Chad Deskins, Jeff Dowell,
Chad Duncan , David Fetty, Jason
George, ISrael Grimm, Jeremy
Grimm, Brent Hanson, Jered Hill,
Heath Hudson, Mitch Jacks. Mike
· Jarvis, Jake Kennedy, Bert Mash.
Scott Peterson. Shawn Petrie,
Corey Seymour, Shannon Staats,
James White, Walt Williams and
Adam Wyatt
All-TVC awards went to the
senior co-captains. Heath Hudson
was selected by the coaches to lhe
fllSt team All-Conference and Scott
Peterson 10 the second team .
Chancey also announced his tricar.tain s for next season: Walt
Wtlliams, Shannon Staats and
Shawn Petrie . The three were
selected the last week of the season
by a vote of the underclassman.
Mike Kennedy, coach for the
Marauder cross country team, was
unable to attend, so Athletic Diractor Rick Ash presented awardS to
his team. They included: Phillip
Edmonds. Todd McDade. Mike
Parker and Crockett Roush. Roush
was a second team All-TVC per-

former and Edmonds a first team James White and Mike Jarvis from •
football, Mandy Jones in volleybiJJ :
All· Conference selection.
Edwards then presented member and Jason Taylor in golf.
of the Ali -TVC All-Academic
Tbe Rev. Lamar O'Bryant pvc
team. They inCluded Mau Clark, the invocation and bencdicliop.
•
•

NOTICE!
WE WELCOME
AIJA

WEST
COMPENSATION
PRESCRIPTIONS!
y
All 3 locations
Gallipolis

Middleport

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786 N. 2nd.

446-6620

992-6491

2501 Jackson Ave.
675-2303
'

BULLETIN BOARD

IN THE

DIV1$10NIV

(9-1)

Golfer of the Year Award recipient; Re1t1e
Pratt, second team All·TVC; Jason -Hart, lint
team All-TV£; and Joe Hill, the Coacbea
Award.

AVAILABLE

Jtealaool ,.. .

A~••••~Clurenelt

GOLF AWARDS - The foUowlng received
golf awards from Head Coach John Krawsczyn
at Tuesday's nights banquet. From left are
Adam Krawsczyn, the TVC's Most Valuable
Golfer and the Parker Long-Rodd Harrison

NOW

:
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
: Cincinnati Reds, who move from
- the National League West to the
~ new NI.. Central, won't play any of
: their division opponents at home
· after Aug. 21 next year.
·: The Reds ' home schedule for
~ 1994, released Monday, has them
,. playing St. Louis on the weekend
: of Aug. 19 to 21. Those ~re the
: Reds· last home games agamst an
" NI.. Central opponent
:: The Reds. Cardinals. Houston
· Astros , Chicago Cubs and Pitts:. burgh Pirates move to tht NI.. Cen~ tral next season when tl)e league
~ goes to three divisions. The R~ds
.. will play thetr last home senes
~ against Houston. Chicago and
: Pittsburgh in July.

Bellevue

AlG . . . . LIIICoiiSbidlum

Taylor was selected first team all
conference and to the District 13
All-District team.
Members of the freshman football team were presented their letters by head football coach Mike
Chancey. Receiving awards were
Matt Ault. Chad Bartrum, Casey
Booth, Scott George, Aaron Hockman, Rick Hoover, Jason Mullen,
B.J . Nicholson, Jeremy Pierce,
Caleb Shuler, Adam Smith and
Morgan Vanaman. .

· Cincinnati Reds to face
~ division foes on the road
;,. after August 21

Al Troy Memortal Stadhlla

AIO.,....Nca..

(football), Mike Jarvis (football) and Jason Taylor (golf). Not pictured are James White (football) and Mandy Jones (volleybaU).

Meigs High athletes receive accolades at sports banquet

(11-0), 7:30p.m.

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

•

ALL TVC ALL AC~EMIC - Five Meigs
athletes were selected to the TVC AU-Academic
team. Tbey included, from left, Matt Clark

Rqlonal Flndl
All P""" FrldoJ
AI 0.)1on W~lcome SlaCUum
Piqu1 (10.1) vt . franklin (10-1), 7:30
VI-

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FAMILY HOMES INC.

1) for re&amp;ional dwnpionlhip NoY. 'Z1
DIVISION 0

At Beru nnnlt Slldlum
Uni ontown Lake (9 -2)

•
•

~

t :·lonal Setnlftnal
AI Dublin Blah Sdl.r
MCN11t Vmaon. (1-2) vs. Uma Senior
(9-2)1 7 p.m; winner to meet Hilliud (10-

~(llo01.7:3CI,...

•

•
•

LA QUINT A, Calif. (AP) Bnish Open champion Greg Norman, scrambling out of D'Ouble better than the other three majbr
champions, shot an even-par 108
for over 27 holes to take a threestroke lead in the Grand Slam of
Golf.
PGA champion Paul Azinger
shot a Ill , Masters winner Bernard
Langer was at 112 and U.S. Open
champion Janzen at 113 with nine
holes to play in the $1 million
event at PGA West's Jack Nicklaus
course.

nad. Prince\011 (lQ.I), 8 p.m.
At Parma Brtn Fteld
Euclid (ll -0) v1. Clevellnd St. IanatiUI (11 -0), 7 p.m.
At Akron Rubber Bowl
Cuyahoa;a F.U. Walsh Je•uit (10.0)
n . Mu1illon Wuhinaton ( 10-1) , 7:30

. A&amp;-W...il-11

J

5•

GOU'

p.m.

wLPct.CB
7 0 t.OOO
5 2 -~i;
~
3 :
:333 • 112
2 l .167 s 1/l
1
61 s 1/l
1 5 .1

Paa•

Sports briefs

Scoreboat·d

.,

The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 17, 1993
Page-4

CROSS COUNTRY-Members of the ~elgs Marauder c_ross
country that recleved aU conference honors were from left to rtght:
Crockett Roush-second team aod Phil Edmonds-first team. They
were honored durblg Tuesday night's Meigs FaD Sports banquet.
(See detaill and IICiclltional photos on page S)
·I

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

••'

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UGHT~
LIF E INSU RAN CE CO M P A NY

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$8.00

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$12.00

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992·2156
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aaad. Any Information may
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with phone

JAMES C. BIRCHFIELD
Ou;ne1'-0perator
Funded throush policies with Fmelhouaht Ufolnluronce Co.

Call By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edltlo•

�,..
Page

6 The Dally Sentinel

• •

Wednesday, November 17, 1993·

.Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

· Wednesday, November 17, 1993

College basketball season gets underway tonight
By JIM O'CONNELL
AP BasketbaD Writer
Two teams will take the floor at
the Charloue Coliseum in 138 days
to decide the national champion of
college baskelball.
Day One of the countdown is
tonight with four opening-round
games in the Preseason NIT.
There jsn 't a team out there considered any beuer to get the season
going than No. I Nonb Carolina.

which opens defense of its nationai
championship at home against
Western Kentucky.
But doo' t think for a second that
this early-season tournament is a
cakewalk for the Tar Heels. There
are three other teams in the field
from the preseason Top Ten - No.
6 California. No. 9 Kansas and No.
I 0 Minnesota - and two others in
the poll - No. 19 Cincinnati and
No. 22 MassachusettS.

"I think that's what they're
looking for and I just h&lt;&gt;Jllt I'm the
guy that can deliver it for them."
McLane frred Howe and general
manager Bill Wood on Oct. 5, following the Astros' third-place fmish in the National League West.
Also interviewed to replace
Howe were Astros coach Matt
Galante, fanner Mets manager Jeff
Torborg, former Texas Rangers
manager Bobby Valentine, Baltimore coach Davey Lopes and
Philadelphia coach Larry Bowa.
Collins, 44, has managed 11
$easons in the minor leagues,
including nine in Class AAA clubs
in the Pirates and Los Angeles
Dodgers organizations. He's been
Pittsburgh's bullpen coach the last
two seasons.
Collins was promoted to the
Pirates staff after posting a 246-186
record in three SO-victory seasons
at Class AAA Buffalo. His overall
minor league record is 834-736.
He managed in the Dodgers system from 1981-89, including S 1!2
seasons at Class AAA Albuquerque.
Collins was a minor league
infielder from 1971-81 in the
Dodgers and Pirates farm systems.

Bowl-expefienced Nebraska
3-9 in last 12 appearances
ByJIMUTKE
AP Sports Wr.iter
Ask most people what Comhuskers look like after spending
New Year's Day in a bowl' and
they 'II be · bless. They imagii\~
a grimy ~urrounded by, hungover guests and decide they ~y
don't want to·knOw;,, , ""' ·.w.,
Ask the same of a college rooiball fan, though, 111!!1 the li!ISW~~
spill out: pulverized, pressed,
mashed, .f lattened, squashed,

crushed onchmusbed. .
•
Eith(:c way, it's not a pre~h pic-

ture. But then neither, typi y, is
the Comhuskers' performance in a
New Year-'s Day bowl game.
Almost any bow I game. Almost
any year. Nebraska's football team
has madt'it.to 12 sttaight and won
just tluee, each time against LSU.
It has lost its last six by a combined

189-83. . ' .

campaign to ensure the Cornhuskers stay there: "Toothless
BuOy of the Plains" was the clever
way one called attention to Nebraska's less-than-fearsome opponents.
Naturally, the writers' sworn
adversaries saw it somewhat differendy. Notre Dame was also No. I
in the USA Today-CNN poll. But
two feUo\V coaches gave Osborne's
~ first-place votes and the rest
gave him enough to fmish ahead of
Aorida State.
~w part
also of
rushed
IP .
his&gt;More
side, ,than,a
suggesting
the fascination for a Notre Dame-Aorida
State rematch was the media •s fascination with FSU coach Bobby
Bowden.
Osborne, a judicious man who
has averaged almost 10 victories
each season in a 21-ycar tenure,. is
careful not to take sides.

The suspense this year is not

gia.
.
The second round is Friday and

Saturday at campus sites, while the
semifinals are next Wednesday
night at New ' vori('s Madison
Square Garden with the championship game two days later.

·Terry Collins may be
next Astros manager
HOUSTON (AP) - Pittsburgh
Pirates bullpen coach Terry
Collins, who managed in the minor
leagues for over a decade, will
reportedly be the next manager of
the Houston Astros.
Local televisions stations KRIV
and KTRK, citing anonymous
sources, reported Tuesday ni!!hl
that the Astros would give Collins
the job today.
Collins, one of seven known
candidates to replace ftrcd manager
Art Howe, had been reported' as
one of two front-runners. Bob
Boone, a 19-year major league
catcher and a successfuL minor
league manager the past two seasons, interviewed three times for
.
. .
.
thejob.
Collins had his second inierview
with owner Drayton McLane and
general manager Bob Watson on
Tuesday and remained·in· H&lt;iiiSton
overnight.
"They are looking for an
aggressive guy that knows how to
deal with people and get the most
out of his players," .Collins said.
"That's one thing that's in my
background with all my years spent
in the minor leagues, dealing with
those situations.

In addition to Western Ken tucky-North Carolina tonight, Butler is at Cincinnati, Western Michigan is at .Kansas and Santa Clam is ·
at California.
The first round concludes
Thursday, pight with Cleveland ·
State at Massachusetts, Towson
State at St. John's, Rice at Minnesota and Alilbama State at Geor-

Modell says,
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
owner of the Cleveland Browns
says there's no looking back now
that eight-year starter Bernie Kosar
has been released and went to Dallas.
."We .know we did the right
thmg, given what we know the
facts to be, llJ!d it's never going to
be made publtc,'' said Art Modell,
who frequendy compared his relationship with Kosar to that of a
father and son.
. "What w~ know was ~oing on,
1t's best w:e did what we did. That's
all I'm gomg to say abou.t lha~"
. Modell wouldn't discuss the
ISsue of whether Kosar was
rel~sed
for "diminishing skills"
as coach Bill Belichick said or
whether some players had begun

.

VOTING .FOR• ME FOR
UCINE .VILLAGE COUNCIL.
ALFRED
HENRY 11.1"01$
.
.
. 1 JR.

:x:28:5:·:3rd::'s:t,:Rtlc=l=ne,=O=h~lo~

:fs!::ress play any part in the :=====:Pd:·:'o:r:b':·=CIIII=d:ldlll::•:·eo:
·
"i guess I'd find this debate a
lot more amusing," Nebraska ,
coaCh Tom Osborne said Wcdnel·
cjay, "if I wasn't stuck in the nud;, ..
. "',,...
dle of ....
Naturally, the idea of lhe COil)huaters being served tip in the bigest game of the year offends
people in some quanen. And none
morcso than the one filled with
aportswriters, some •of whom
would actually be force4 to, w~~~Cii .
2 tables of Merchandise at flea Mkt. prices.
iL
All ribbon ...................: ....................... 60o/o off
In the latest Associated .Press
poll, the writm made NOIIC J;&gt;amo
5 yd. min. same roil
the unanimous No. 1 choice, btit
ranked unbeaten NebratkaatNo. 3,
D.M.C. Floss............................... ~ ............ S-'1 00
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Folk Art Acrylic paint ............... Buy 2 reg. price ·
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Immediately afterward, they
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heeding Kosar instead of Belichick.
"I'm not getting into that
again." he said. "We· don't even
have a twinge of regret 'about 'what
we did. We'.re not at all !!~king
hack and saymg we shouldn t have
done it"
.
. .
Modell, who htred Behchici~
three years ago and said he hoped
that Belichick would be his last
head coach, praised the Nov. 8
decision to release Kosar.
"It was a big mo:Ve, a drainatic
move, a gutsy move to release
Bernie," Modell said. "We"have
confidence in Todd Pbilcox, and
we'll have confidence in Vinny
Testaverde when he comes back.
Life will go on for Bernie for the
Browns and (or Dallas." '
Belichick said the· Browns mav

"That's just basketball"
"I don't need to take that
(expletive)~" Thomas shouted
hack.
"Just leave the floor,'.' Laimbeer replied. "Leave the tJoor,"
Chaney spoke briefly to the
team and then called off the rest of
practice.
• 'It was an emotional situation
and we regret it happened,'' the
first-year coacb said afterward .
''We had a long flight and ·a really
tough practice. Everyone's tired.
Isiah took a hard hit and he just
reacted. It was emotion."
Thomas is averaging 15.5 points
and 10.3 assists this season, which
began with two victories but was
followed by four straight road.losses going into tonight's home game
al!ainst the Orlando Magic.

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learn next week when Testaverde end. We just have to put the past
might be available to play. The behind us . I think we can beat
Browns think he may rerum to the Hous!On."
lineup in December.
The Browns host Houston on
Modell disputed the suggestion Sunday.
.
..
by defensive lineman Michael
Modell S81d he expected a cnuDean Perry that the Browns (5-4 cal reaction.to Kosar's ~~~but
overall and 2-4 in the last six "the thmg IS ~rt of buildmg and
games) were in disarray.
taking on a life all it's own. I don't
"There is no chaos on the think the fans or media arc being
team," Modell said. "It's another fair to BiD.
myth being· perpettat¢ by people
"My reasons for stepping up .
unfriendly to the Browns. We're in side by side with him are to deflect
a down cy~1e, but we'll bounce some of the heat from Bill and act
11ack. This is far from over.
as sort of a lightning rod myself.
"We've got seven more games, But the fans are entitled to be
and I expect us to be there at the heard."
. . - -·· ·-··•· IIIIi'iii
··· ··-•·- - - -...-.------•

.·Pre • ftanksiiVIag
.
lnvantaJY ·Radal:llan lala

'

Starting lhree freshmen is a matter of perception.
" There's been a lot said about
Cincinnati starting three freshmen,
but those ·three are unbelievably
good players," Butler coach Barry
Collier said. "As importantly,
they're the type of players that
Cincinnati has been successful with .
since.. Bob Huggins
has been
.
th ere.
The freshman starters are 6-8
center Dontonio Wingfield and
guards Damon Flint and Marko
Wright Six of the 12 Bearcats are
firSt-year freshmen.

Pir~[;~,~~-'[9t~~~~~~1\'!"-!l""'''"'"
ol
ment
Thomas and Laimbeer had to be
separated after the 6-foot-11, :zro.
pound center elbowed the 6-foot-1,
18S-pound guard. Laimbeer had
turned away when · Thomas
punched him in the ~ the Pres$
said.
'
Coach Don Chaney r~strained

FOR YOUR SUPPORT FOR

finai_poU, say a familiar Nebraska'tliruher like No. 4 Miami? And

"We looked at the situation and
Jerry Stackhouse has played very
well in preseason, not that Staek;house would have beaten Sullivan
out, but ~e were bunchC\1 there at
theforward SJiot,'! Smith said.
As familiar as Smith is with his
four returning starters, Cincinnati
coach Bob Huggins is looking to
start the season with all new faces.
"We've lost five starters, our
top six guys, ansi I'm really concerned that after about the first two
weeks of the season, we may lose
the rest of our alumni, too," Huggins said, "We're not very good."

The Dally Sentlnei -Pag$--7
•

•

.no Iooking _back now'

(AP)

- Isiah Thomas lost ·his cool
again, and this time it will keep
him ·out of the lineup for l!(least a
month.
·
·
Thomas, one of the NBA's most
tempermental players, broke his...
right hand when he J?Unched teammate Bill Laimbeer m the back of
the head during practice Tuesday.
He will be sidelined four to six
weeks, said Dr. Ed Burke, who
treated the injury.
The broken shooting hand was
placed in a cast but won't require
surgery. Neither player will be disciplined, The Oakland Press reported today.
.
Thomas broke a rib when he
was elbowed by Laimbeer during a
preseason practice Oct. 30. Witnesses said Thomas became
angered Tuesday after absorbing
another elbow from Laimbeer.
Neither Thomas nor Laimbeer
- who along .with Joe Dumars arc
the
remaining members of the

......
.

to~C:~~~utstanding
:g~SC:.:~~:ti~~
n•tion!ll champion, most lilcely
~00:, '::~o~a~e!'=:'\~00~

'the~e's

Thomas·
breaks
hand
in
light_
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
Laimbeer, who yelled at Thomas,

IS

in~h=-~e~~;tr;.;ffoo~

like afterward (pulp), but who gets

North Carolina coach Dean
Smith enters the season needing 26
victories to reach 800. He' ll go
after the fJrst of those with a starting lineup of Eric Montross, Kevin
Salvadon - a pair of 7-footers Derrick Phelps, Donald Williai1ts
and Brian Reese. Reese bas -~n
slowed the flfSI two weeks of practice by a sprained ankle. If Reese
can't play. it appears heralded
freshman· Jerry Stackhouse will
start.
.
It was announced· Tuesday that
senior forward Pat Sullivan will
redshin this season.

P9meroy-Mlddleport, Ohio

lb. Qtrs .

446·' 134

.
:

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.

'

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'·

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•

Page 8 The Dally Senllnel

Wednesday, Novem~er 17, 1993 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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POMEROY • Wildwood Gar·
den Club will meet at I p.m. at
Morning Star Church.

becomes yogurt because it takes
more than one cup of milk to make
one cup of yogurt In this sense you
HOBSON • Donna and Friends
could say that yogurt is "beuer" Puppet Ministry will be at the SobQuestion: I enjoy yogurt and than milk. But before you can say a son Church of Christ and Christian
eat it often. I have read that it is food is "good" or "bad." it is neces- Union at 7:30 p.m. Clyde Render·
·better for my health than milk, but sary to look at more than the calci· son will be bringing the message.
my friend disagrees. He says it is urn content
no different th;m drinking an equiv·
Yogurt is usually made from
THURSDAY
alent amount pf milk. Is yogur! a cow's milk, although it can be
good food to oln and is it any better make from any milk, and therefore
ROCK SPRINGS · The Middlethan milk?
~· it can be quite high in sarurated fat
port Child Conservation League
Answer : Yogurt, as I'm sure And as you know, the consumption will meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
you know, is made by adding spe· of saturated -fats increases the Springs United Methodist Church.
cific types &lt;if bacteria, u$ually Lac· cholesterol levels. Some yogurt Guest speaker will be "Flip"
tobacillus bulgaricus or Streptococ· brands may have up to 45 percent Wiebke Muehlhoff, an exchange
cus thennophilus to milk. The mix· of their total calories as fat. All student from Gennany.
ture is then incubated at a tempera· yogun, however, is not high in fat
lure that favors .the growth of these When low-fat milk is used as the
RACINE · Southern Local
bacteria. The bacteria grow in the Starlin¥ product, the resulting School Board will hold its regular
milk causing a change in both the yogun 1s lower in fat. And just as meeting at 7 p.m. at the high
milk sugar and the milk protein. you would expect, the lowest fat schooL
These changes coagulate the milk yogurt is made from no-fat milk.
and uansfonn it into the creamy· So, you would probably be wiser to
RACINE • The Racine Gun
consider low-fat or no-fat yogun as Club will hold its regular meeting
textured curd known as yogurL
Yogurt has been a regular pan ugood for you."
at 7:30p.m. at the club house.
Most yogurt is consumed with
of the diet in the Middle East for
centuries, but it is a relatively new other flavorings added. Fruit fla.
POMEROY • Meigs County
addition to the American cuisine. vors are the most popular. They are Democrat Executive Commiltee
In 1960 U.S. consumers bought 44 produced by adding fruit and a sig· will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Car·
million pounds of yogurt- or just nificant amount of sugar to regular, pcnter's Hall.
over one cup per person per year. low-fat or no-fat yogurt. The sugar
In 1970 the consumption was raises the calories of a serving of
RUTLAND • The Rolland
~ssentially unchanged from' 10 yogurt without adding any other Township Trustees will meet in
years earlier, but by 1990 the pro· healthful nutrienrs. In fact, it makes special session at 6 p.m. at the Rut·
duction had increased to over a bil· this type of flavored yogurt unac· land Fire Station.
lion pounds -· or more than eight ceptable for those with diabetes.
The yogurt you choose would be
cups per person.
.
REEDSVILLE • Riverview GarThe bacterial action that con- better for your nutrition if you den Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. at
verts milk to yogurt creates some select plain, vanilla or lemon fla. ).he Reedsville Church of Christ. A
important nutritional changes along vors since these contain tittle or no Chrisunas workshop will be held.
with the more av.parent physical added sugar. Many dairies arc now Bring finger food and gifts for
.changes: The mdk sugar, .called making yogurt sweetened with patients at the Pomeroy Nursing
·lactose, is broken down dunng the Nutrasweet instead of sugar. This is and Rehabilitation Center.
.process of making yogurt. This is · a sensible alternative to yogurt with
1mjx&gt;nant bec;luse many adulrs lack added sugar.
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
the enzymes necessary to make
The previous comments don ' t group of AA and At-Anon will
milk sugar digestible. Individuals apply .to frozen yogurrs since they meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart
with this disorder -called lactose are made with the addition of other Catholic Church. For more inferintolerance - must avoid milk, ingredients. As 1\ poup, they are
·even the milk used in baked goods, generally lower m fat than ice
or suffer ·digestive upset Since the cream, but they are not'D~ce••arjly
· bacteria-Ill yogurt have already lower in clllories. No deserts,
modified the milk sugar into a · including frozen yogurt, fall into
A ilumber of names were unin·
digestible form, lactose-intolerant my category of "nutritionally good tentionally omitted from recent
individuals can eat yogurt without for. you ." Though, in moderation, printings in The Daily Sentinel of
concern for stomach upset.
as an occasional treat, they are honor rolls from schools for the
Milk is high in calcium, an acceptable.
fust nine weeks grading period
essential com\'~10ent of our diets.
Omitted were: Patrick Martin,
One cup of milk provides 37 per· "Family Medicine" is a weekly col· Meigs Junior High, seventh grade;
cent of the adult Recommended umn. To submit questions, write to Ashley Hannahs, Pomeroy Elemen·
Dietary Allowance of this mineral, John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Universi,
tary. fifth grade; Carrie Lightfoot,
while a cup of plain nonfat yogurt ty College of Osteopathic Bradbury Elementary, fifth grade;
provides 57 percent. The concen· Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Jon Halar, third grade, Jerri Bent·
tration of calcium
~m;:ilk::,_..;O;;;h;;;io:;..4;.;5~70;;;1:.:,._
ley and Jecemy Blackston, both
first grade, all Salisbury Elcmen·

- - - I n the service
JEFFREY BIRCHFIELD
Marine Lance Cpl. Jeffrey C.
Birchfie ld, son of James C. Birchfield of Rutland recently completed
the Basic Helicoplet Course.
The 1992 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School of Cheshire
joined the Marine Corps in Novem·
ber 1992.

MONTE RIFFLE
LCpl. Monte J. Riffle, son or
mation call 992-5763.
lames 0. and Joyce Smith of South
Webster and the late Don Riffle, is
RACINE • Rac ine Grange
deploying to Somalia with 22nd
lt2606 will meet at 7 p:lii. at the
Marine Expeditiary Unit from
grange hall. State delegates Chris·
Camp Lejuene, N.C., as pan of the
tine Napier and Pauline Rise will
USS Guadalcanal Amphibiou s
give reports.
Ready Group.
The 1991 graduate of South
MIDDLEPORT • Bradbury
TERESA FRITH
Webster High School joined the
PTO will meet at 7 p.m. EmergenNavy Petty Officer 2nd class Marine Corps in May 1992.
cy Medical Services Director Bob Teresa J. Frith, a 1975 graduate of
His maternal grandmother is
B yer will have a program. A door Meigs High School of Pomeroy Carrie Roush of Letart Falls.
prize will be given away. The pub- recently participated in two weeks
lic is invited to attend.
of active duty trainin g for
Maine is the only state that touch·
reservists.
es just one other state, being cut off
She joined the Navy in Decem- from the rest of the Union by New
FRIDAY
ber, 1976. Frith is a 1982 graduate Hampshire. Alaska and Hawaii, of
LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full of the University of Alaska , course, touch no other states. In conGospel Church will have a Thanlcs· Anchorage , Alaska with a AA trast, Tennessee and Missouri each
touch eight other states.
giving dinner at 5 p.m. Preaching degree.
and singing will follow at 7 p.m.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT · Bradbury
Chruch of Christ will have a
revival and tOOth anniversary celebration at 7 p.m. Nov. 19-21 with
Evangelist Art Bush. There will be
special music 15 minutes prior to
services. The public is invited to
attend.
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
a round and square dance at the
Old Legion Hall from 8 to 11:30
p.m. Music will be by CJ, and the
Country Gentlemen and Melvin
Cross will be caller. Brings snacks
and soft drinks. Children are welcome with adult supervision.
Admission is free. Everyone is welc.ome.
LOTIRIDGE · Lottridge Com·
munity Center will have a Thanksgiving dinner at 6:30 p.m. Every·
one is welcome. Bring a covered
dish.
POMEROY • The Meigs County Juvenile Court and the Ohio
State Patrol will be at Meigs High
School parking lot from 9:30 to
11:30 a.m. to give all Meigs County studenrs an opportunity to have
their speedometers checked for
accuracy. There will be no charge.

Thursday, Nov. 25

11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.
+toney Baked Ho!m

•Whipped PotaloM.
Gravy

w/Raioin S•uce
•Roast Turkey

wiDreoaing and all tha
Trlinmingol
•Roaat Sirloin of Beef
oCod Almandine

-s- Pot8toea

oCom O'brien
oiluttared Bilby Canota
•Seaooned Green Beana

•S.tad Bar and Aooorted
Deatertl

ALL THIS FOR

$995

Children 10 and under Only $5.95
Under 3 Eat Freel
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 446:0090

·r

Errort. '

';

gi4ing supper at 6.:30 p.m. at the
Salem Center Fire Station. Meat
will be provided and those attend·
ing should bring a poUuck dish. All
members and interested persons are
invited to attend.
POMEROY • The Meigs County Retired Teachers will meet at
noon at Trinity Church. For reser·
vations call992-3887.

UPPER RIVER RD.

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

tary.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich

'
••'

640Z.
CAN

Let tiN Deli Do thl.:Coolline!

Wednesday, November 17, 1993
Page 9

.Names t&gt;mittec:t··11778
' Satc.m · Cent~r ,,: ,Star Grange '
wdl hold 1ts ·annual Thanlcs·

26 0!.
101

.

RUTLAND · Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold irs
month!)' board meeting at 6 p.m. at
their office. The public is invited to
attend .

NOQFAT, LOWQSUGAR
YOGURT - NUTRITIOUS,
WITHOUT MANY CALORIES

.

.

WEDNESDAY

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

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

•...............
DOUBLE

.

Talented Meigs High School you to acknowledge all
per·
student, Sam .Cowan, had a bad mit holders throughout its eight
county area including Meigs for
experience last week.
Sam became ill and was in a their participation in irs Halloween
uemendous amount of pain. He program. A total of $8,723.25 was
ended up in Children's Hospital, raised with all proceeds going to
Columbus, where he underwent benefit St. Jude ' s Children's
major surgery. He was returned to Research Hospital.
his Middleport home Sunday where
And the Women's Auxiliary of
he is recuperating. It'll be about a
month before Sam is back to full Veterans Memorial Hospital will
be staging a public jewelry sale
swirig.
I'm sun: you join me in wishing from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday in the
him a speedy recovery. Sam is the hospital conference room. Auxilson of Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cowan, iary President Libby Fisher extends
Vine St, Middleport.
an invitation to the public.

Pomeroy Village Auditorium .
I don't know if you plan to
attend the showcase or not. I hope
so. If you do, it would be wise for
you to get your tickets in advance
since seating in the Middleport
auditorium is limited to 500 and
only that number of tickets will be
sold. With a cast of some about 80
people the show could be sold out
before the night of the perfonnance
which is 8:10p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 27. The entire cast will hold
a final rehearsal at 7 p.m. at the
junior high building the night
before the show. I'll let you know
later in the week where advance
tickers Can be purchased.
, And Pomeroy will hold its
annual Chrisunas parade with mer·
chants staging their traditional open
houses on Sunday, Nov. 28. The
parade will fonn at 1 p.m. behind
the former Pomeroy Junior High
School moving out at 2.
. Middleport will welcome in the
season on Thursday, Dec. 2, with a
parade to be held at 6 p.m. Middle·
port business houses will also
observe their ,open houses on Sun·
day afternoon, Nov. 28, and will be
maintaining Sunday hours, I to 5
p.m. thereafter.

Advance tickets for the Big
If bluegrass music is one of your
"things" you'll be interested in a Bend Minstrel Association's Meigs
benefit bluegrass concert to be held Talent Showcase will go on sale
Saturday evening, Nov. 20, at the this week with proceeds from the
:ruppers Plains Elementary S~hool. event to go to the Meigs Division
Nine bands will be playing of the American Heart Association
beginning at S p.m. and all for the and the Middleport Arts Couricll.
benefit of Roben S. White of near
The musical, the fust to be pre·
Coolville, who has been having sented by the group si~ce 1989,
health problems. Robert recently will be staged at the Me1gs Jumor
underwent surgery at the Cleveland High School Auditorium in Mid·
Clinic and has now been returned dleport. Everyone has been
tJome·to recuperate for about 30 · extremely cooperative as progress ..
days after whii:li he will undergo a on the show moves ahead. The
Are we having a heat wave "er"
serond operation.
first full cast rehearsal has been set what? Far be it from me to com·
Bands taking part Saturday for next Tuesday night at 8 in the .: plain. Do keep smiting.
night will be Allen and Jim Stack
./
and friends; Dusty Valley, The Bissell Brothers, Hart Brothers, CrossREVIVAL'!
roads Bluegrass Band, Tri-County
Ramblers, Specks of Grass, Salem
lootJa AnniliniGJ7 Cel........n!!
Ridge and Plum MOUJ!tain , J.im
Winchester of Beaver w1ll be domg
Presenting Christ through the Word and Song •
the sound.
· Art Bush
· Tickets at the door will be $2
and during the evening to enrich
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
tile benefit, there will be an auc·
PLACE :
38618 Bradbury Road
tion, a bake sale, a S0/50 drawing,
Middleport,
Ohio
·and the cafeteria will be open.
For more information contact
Tom Runyon, Minister
.Larry·Jones at 992-5722 or Cliff
L()ngenet!e at 667-6576. If you
DATE:
can't attend but want to help with
· NOVO\BER 19·21, 1993
ihe benefit )'Ou can &amp;elld donations
to the Roben S. White Fund, P.O .
Box 303, Tuppers Plains, Oh.
SPECIAL MUSIC 6:45 EACH MNING
45783.
7:00 P.M. Each Evening
'

The Kerr Distributing Co .•
Athens, i.s extending a big thank

,c,,

10:30A.M.

Join the
Peqples Bank
Cliristmas
Club!

Get your free gift for Christmas '93
and extra cash for Christmas '94.
•

Open a Christmas Oub now and receive a FREE Glass Candy Dish. The Christmas
Club is so convenient! Your Christmas check arrives when you wanl il mosl- jusl
in lime for Christmas shopping. Christmas Club is so easy to join- and so easy to
keep up because you choose the amounl of your regular deposits.
Join the Chrislmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest on the daily balance
in your accounl. Come in loday- it's never too early to save for Chrislmas'
Marietta

Athens

373·3155

593-7761

Belpre
423·7516

Lowell

896-2369

Middleport

Nelsonville

The Plains

992·6661

753-1955

797-4547

�.

WedneSday, ~ovember 17,1993

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, November 17, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Harvest in the heartland: too much rain
destroyed thousands of acres and
By SHARON COHEN
billions of dollars of crops, creating
Associated Press Writer
In !his season of bounty, Mike a btuer harvest in America's heartPieper is a farmer on barren soil. land.
"There's an old farm saying
Instead of taking out his combine
to harvest. he's cleaning up mud, that a drought will scare you, but a
repairing machines - and digging flood will kill .YOU," ~d Gregory
Hanson. assoctate agnculture proout from financial disaster.
"The Oood would go away if ~~ssor at Penn State University.
For many farmers, that could be
someone gave me $1.5 million,"
the Iowa farmer says with a hint of the case this year."
In Pieper's case, the 3,200 aeres
a smile. "Then we wouldn't miss a
beat. But where's the money going he farms with his brother and others along the Mississippi in southto come from?"
It's a question farmers across eastern Iowa were swamped by up
the Midwest are asking. The flood to 18 feet of water. He didn't see
soil for three months.

Eastern
star seats
officers

Like many others, the Piepers
and their four children were flood·
ed out of their home. They hope to
return soon, but it will take far
longer to get their land back in
shape.
''You've got river scum on

everything," he said. "The grass is
dead. The trees are dead. Nothing
is living."
Pieper calculates his losses including relocating his livestock,
no crop and planting expenses- at
$1.5 million. He expects disaster
aid will cover about a quarter of
that. He did not have crop insurance.

Still, the 38-year-old farmer will
forge ahead.
"You can't lie down and play
dead," he said. "Somewhere you
have to come up with $700,000 to
plant next spring."
Pieper's losses are more dramatic than most, but aU along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, farmers are taking stock.
Ralph Wiesehan lost 1,200 of
his 1,600 acres near Orchard Farm,
Mo. "I'll write this year off as if
there were no year at all," he said.
But he's not complaininl!.
"When you see your netghbor's
house with six inches of mud and

AOVIMISIDITSII'OUCY..f:ach olt!MH 1av8t1ise&lt;111ems iS requ~red \O oe reaclil~ lva•laDialor sale In eactl Kr¢9er Store .

••oept U

tp«lfgQy IIOII'd in lhlll'd. II we 00 run oul ol an a0Vert1Hd ilem, we will oiler you your chOiCe ol a com-

~rablll ~em . wheft ~lleble . ,.flectlrtg t11e same nv1ng1 or 1 flincheck wh•ch w1U entitle you to purch•se th&amp;lcNertis11&lt;11 lttm 81 lht .ov.t11Md prical w+thln 30 d.l)'a_ Only one wendof coupon w1ll be- &amp;cceplltd per 1lem purchlled

.. '

~

-.ADey. '
LD: Cbe11ea Wallac4 .
Da: ·~Hays. .
'

..

... ,

~'
s;,

.,., .••

SARAJEVO, Bosnia: Herzegovia (AP) - Snow silenced guns
across much of Bosnia, but heavy
fighting broke the calm in the
, divided city of Mostar, a U.N. official said today.
Lt. Col. Bill Aikman reported
intense small-anns and sniper fire
in the southwestern city, as well as
artillery exchanges between the
Croat west side of the Neretva
River and the besieged Muslim east
side.
Spanish peacekeepers said not
enough food was reaching the east
side to sustain an estim:lted 35.000

IMansfield 149" l•
IND.

• lcolumbusl52"

l

Negotiators agree on
new army, abolition
of black homelands

•

Thllnksglrtlnt , ,
from 8:00am-4:00pm
stores wfll re-open
Friday at 7:ooam &amp;

resume normal hours

Frozen
Young Turkeys
Pound

•

JOHANNESBURG, South
Africa (AP) - Negotiators today
voted to transform the army and
abolish "independent" black
homelands, hours before F.W. de
Klerk and Nelson Mandela were to
sign a revolutionary pact to create a
color-blind South Africa.
Working through the night,
By The Associated Press
leaders of 21 political parties
Rain will continue throughout JOs. Highs 35-40. Fair on Sunday. agreed on almost all major points
the day with some heavy rainfall Lows in the 2os. Highs in the 40s.
of a new interim constitution that
possible statewide today, the Na- Around the nation
treats blacks and whites equaUy for
tiona! Weather Service said.
the first time since Dutch merClouds an&lt;! fog blanketed much
·
· 652
Rainfall amounts may exceed ofthe nation today, with rain dampen- ·chants
amved
tn I
.
Th e progress f o11ow
ed a ,our•
one to three inches ovemuch of the
ing
the
Midwest.
h
·
·
Pr
t
·
bet
our meeung m e ona
ween
state by evening.
Rainwasalsodevelopinginwest- de Kler'·... now lt'kelv, a lame -duck
Floodingcoulddevelopquiclcly
beca~ of heavy rains this past em pans of New England, and was president, and Afncan National
expected to move east across the re- Congress leader Mandela, the black
weekend.
gion during the afternoon.
former anti-apartheid political prisThe record-high temperature
Cold, damp weather continued in oner expected to take the country's
forthisdateattheColumbusweather the Pacific Northwest, with fog hover- helm afterthe ftrst multiracial elccstation was 76degreesin 1958 while ing over the coast from Northern Cali- lion April 27.
the record low was 13 in 1959. fomia to Washington.
The package sets out an interim
SunsetiOnight will be at5:14 p.m.
A patch of fair weather was 10 constitution and bill of rights. an
and sunrise Thursday wiU be at7:20 bring sunshine to the Plains states, and electoral law, and legislation estab' p.m.
.
the Southwest continued to dry out
lishing independent broadcasting
Southern Ohio
High temperatures in New Eng- authorities, a 400-mernber national
Tonigh~ rain likely before land were 10 be in the 40s and SOs. assembly, a 90-member senate,
midnight, then mostly cloudy. Low Along the Canadian border, highs only nine regions with their own legislain the low 40s. Chance of rain 60
tures and a multiparty Cabinet
in the 30s were expected. Highs in tile h ded b
·d 1 d at 1 t
percent. Thursday, partly cloudy. 40s and 50s were predicted for the · ea
y a Y.rest en an
eas
High in the mid-50s.
one vice preSident
nation's midsection. Tempertures in
After its approval by multiparty
the 60s and 70s we)'e expected across negotiators, it will be sent to the
Extended forecast
Chance of showers on Friday. the South. Florida was to enjoy highs last session of the all-white parliaLows in the mid-40s. Highs 55-60 inthe80sandfairslciesin the southern ment for its rubber stamp on Mooearly, turning colder in tile after- part of the state.
'
day.
•.
The·high temperature for the naIssues approved overnight
noon. Colder on Saturday with a tion Tuesday was 89 degrees at included a plan to refonn the army
chalice of snow flurries, mainly
by integrating it with elements of
m1'd Fl orence, s.c•
.....,-.;;;;.:;:::;.;;,;:.:;:~.::;;.:;::;;:.:::..::.:.:::..-------------..J black anti-apartheid forces. and set-

Rains continue; flooding
possible in some areas

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED (4-7-LB. AVG.J

Frozen Young Turkey Breast

BEIJING (AP) - The Communist Party on Tuesday issued its
long-awaited outline for new market reforms designed to push senior
leader Deng Xiaoping's economic
revolution into the next century.
The 25-page document was
short on key details, however,
including how the measures will be
implemented, and it left in doubt
the effectiveness of the proposed
changes.
Market reforms already have
dismantled rural communes and
allowed families to farm their own
plots. Price con~!~ were !if~. as
were many restrtcUons on pnvate
enterprise and foreign investment . .
With Chinese economic growth
- now 13 percent a year - far
outslriPJ1ing the world average, the
.'reforms have replaced Communist
Party ideology as the underpinning
of the party's legitimacy.
The new plan was adopted by

LIMIT 1 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
MOUNTAIN DEW,

Diet Pepsi or
. Pepsi Cola

12-Pak 12-oz. cans

the party's Cenlral Committee at a tion.''
But it is unclear whether Beijing
meeting that ended Sunday. It
focuses on correcting two glaring is willing to take the political risks
weaknesses in the economy: the of closing enterprises that employ
inefficient state-owned 'enterprises tens of thousands of people or forc that require huge subsidies, and ing its members to give up power.
The document also confirms
Beijing's weak monetary systems
that contribute to dangerous boom- plans to restructure the tax and
banking system to brio$ order to
and-bust cycles.
Even with the party's renewed China's chaotic economtc growth,
call to "redouble ... effons to speed which earlier this year sent urban
up the reform," the vague propos- inflation above 20 percent
While the new system will
als indicate no economic shock
include value-added taxes. a contreatment is planned.
Enterprise reform will set up a sumption tax and a reworked
new system under which compa- income tax, details are missing on .
nies wiU be able to ..OOrganize into how high the rates will be or where
share-issuing or other types of cor- the revenue will go.
That suggests there is not yet
pomtions.
agreement
between Beijing, which
The idea is to ensure they are
wants
more
revenue to finance
run by professionals instead of
national
construction
projects and
party and government officials, and
its
budget
deftcit,
and
local leaders
to ensure "the successful enterprises prosper and those which fail are who want the money for their own
eliminated in the market competi- projects.

Boy blames co-defendantfor toddler's death
"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE
'
(SERVES 8-10}

.

"IIV THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE

Fresh Baked
Pumpkin Pie
38-oz. 10-lnch

"Family Size" Turkey Dinner

PRESTON , England (AP) One of two boys accused of killing
a toddler told police his co-defendant "had a smirk on his face"
~fter bludgeoning James Bulger 10
death, according to an interview
played in court Tuesday.
-- The boy, who can only be iden~tified by the media as Child A, said
~)lis alleged accomplice smashed the
~JZ- year-old 's face with a brick,
)'1cnocked him out by throwing a 20•pound iron bar on his head and,
then tried to conceal the battered
body on the rail line.
. . "(Child B) tried to cover James'
&lt;face with big stones so you
could!! 't see his face. He was trying
to stop the blood pouring out of his
face,'•' Child A told police during 6
1(2 hours of.,police questioning in
February.
Child A maintained he had no
part in the killing and at one point
tried 10 slOp Child B from hurling a
brick at James.
"I was tryin4! to but then he just
threw it," he said.
Pressed to \lllplain why Child B
had admiued 'playing a part in the
killing,' Child A cri~d and said: ·
i-"You can go and ask ollr teacher
:wllo's the worst out,of me and
t(Chlld B) and she'll teD you (Child

I

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•1-Pint cranberry Relish

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ting out a two-tier police system ,
with police answerable to regional
governors in addition to the national police.
.
The council also approved a resolution to reincorporate into South
Africa four so-called "independent" black homelands, created in
apartheid's vain attempt to permanently separate blacks and whites. ·
The states. whose sovereignty
was recognized only by South
Africa, are Venda, Ciskei, Transkei
and Bophuthatswana
"End of the beginning," The
Star of Johannesburg trumpeted in
a banner headline today.
"Today - precisely one year,
10 months and 28 days after formal
talks began- South Africa's leaders are due to mtify a historic compromise pact, mapping out a path
to a nonracial future," the paper
said.
"A new country is being born,"
de Klerk said during a surprise visit
Tuesday to the World Trade Center
in Kempton Park, the scene of the
harried talks.
Despite the signing ceremony
today, government sources said the
final charter could still be adjusted
to satisfy the Freedom Alliance, a
bloc of potentially dangerous conservative whites and blacks fearful
of ANC dominance.

Automakers: Toyota likely to
buy GM cars for sale in Japan
TOKYO (AP) - Toyota Motor
Corp. expects to wrap up a deal 10
buy about 20,000 General MotOrs
Corp. cars a year and sell them
under the Toyota brand name in
Japan, sources at Toyota said
today.
The agreement, if concluded,
would give U.S .· made cars an
unprecedented entry to the
1apanese market. Cars and auto
parts account for about lhree-quar·
ters of the $50 billion annual U.S.
trade deficit with Japan.
Even so, the deal - said to be
worth about $200 million a year to
GM - would do little to offset the
deficit.'
The rwo companies have been
negotiating the plan for more than a
year, the Toyota officials said,
speaking on condition of anonymity. The cars would have Toyota

nameplates and steering wheels on
the right-hand side because traffic
in Japan moves on the left
OM sold only 9,089 U.S.-built
vehicles in Japan last year.
Both companies released statements today saying that an agreement has not yet been signed.
"We have had negotiations with
GM about this, but no conclusion
has been reached, · ' Toyota
spokesman Eiji Hirabayashi said.
Both Toyota and GM spokesmen refused to say which model
cars might be imported under such
an agreement
The two companies manufacture
330,000 Geo Prizms and Toyota
Corollas a year at a joint-venture
auto plant in Fremont, Calif., called
New United Motor Manufacturing
Inc.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
FISH 'N' CHIPS
$1.69

..

MON.-SUN. 10:00AM-10:00PM•

992·2556

China's Communist Party unveils
blueprint for next stage of reform

lb.

PEPSI

people through the winter, Aikman
Bosnian l'lllllo S81Cl Croat forces a seven-truck relief convoy to two
reported.
continued to shell government mental hospitals along the CroatSo many building s . were positions around Gomji Vakuf, site Muslim front line near the town of
desiJoyed that winter shelter was in of a major Croat offensive Mon- Fojnica, 25 miles west of Sarajevo.
The convo'y was turned back
question as well, Aikman said.
day. The radio also reported Serb
Aikman said 16 tons of relief shelling of government positions Tuesday at a Croat militia checksupplies were airdropped on around Brcko, Doboj and Olovo.
point, according to Wilkinson, who
Mostar during the night.
Olovo appealed that it be grant- called the action "appalling."
In central Bosnia, where relief ed the status of a U.N.·protected . Peacekeepers have been providconvoys have been suspended for "safe area," Bosnian radio repon- ing food and proteCtion at the two
three weeks because of fighting ed.
hospitals since the local staff ned
between Croats and Muslim -led
Ray Wilkinson, spokesman for last week during heavy fighting .
government forces, Tuesday's the U.N. High Commissioner for Most of the staff has returned to
snowfall sharply reduced military Refugees in Sarajevo, said his one of the facilities, a hospital pri·
activity, Aikman said,
agency would try ~ain today to get marily for children·.

The end of apartheid

ALL STORES WILL BE OPEN

Portland honor
roll announced·

•

dampens combat in Bosnia,
:1 -~!~~~ea~~,::·~rorecas~tfor~COI!di~·tionsan~dhigh~~~ but fighting in Mostar continues

W. VA.

out the

The charter was draped in memory of Clara Wil~iarns .at the recent
meeting of Harnsonvtlle Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star, held at
the Masonic Temple.
Pauline Atkins, worthy matron,
and Robert Reed, worthy patron
pro tern, presided. Mrs. Atkins read
a poem appropriate to the occasion.
The deputy matron of District
25, Betty Bishop, and the 50-year
member, Stella Al.kins were recognized and welcomed. All of the
past matrons and patron of Harrisonville. Chapter were presented
as was John Martin, master of Harrisonville Masonic LOdge.
Reed had grace before the
group entered the dining area
where they were served rcfresliments by Lois Thomson, Marjorie
Warner and Clara Mae Jeffers.

The Ponland ElementarY School
honor roll for the first nine week
grading period has been
announced. Making B!'Odes to be
listed on the honor roll were the
rollclwinJ stlldents:
&lt;fourth srade: Jan Wise, Amy
WIJ10ri, Travana Moore, Russell
Krider, Tyler Johnson, Amanda
Huddlescnn il!d Melissa Black.
Ftflh gradC: James Alley, Brlndi
'Codner; Holly Hannan, ·Garret
KiSer, Nick Bolin, Matt Marshall
· llld M1UiC Smith.
. Sllltli- arad~: Jennifer Sliain,
Brawn .ifennaa. Brin Bolin ilnd Jes-

-In Missouri, about a half-million acres of cropland arc at risk
because of heavy sand from
deposits .from the river or if levees
are not repaired. Crop losses are
expected to cost the state more than
$500 million and perhaps more
than 7,000 jobs.
- In Iowa, the com harvest will
be 918 million bushels, 52 percent
less than last year's record 1.9 billion bushels. Total crop losses are
estimated at more than $2 billion.
Robert Wisner, professor of agricultural economics at Iowa State
University estimates I 0 percent of
Iowa's farmers may not survive.

Sn.~w

WE RESERVE THE RIGHTTO UMIT QUANT1T1ES. NONE SOLD TO DEAlERS

Beta chapter
discusses
craft show

Eastern star
honors member

the dry wall and the insulation sagging, and you can come into your
home, high and dry, then you feel
really blessed,'' he said.
The numbers tell a different
siOry. The Agriculture Department
recently dropped its estimate of the
1993 com harvest to 6.5 bill'ion
bushels - the lowest since the
1988 drought, which was more
widespread. That yield was 4.9 billion bushels.
Consider:
- In Illinois , about 872 ,000
acres of farm fields were flooded.
State officials estimate crop loss at
$425 million.

-·•':,-----...;-

COPYRIGHT 1~ • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNOA'f', NOV. 14, THROUGH
SATURDAY, NOV. 20, 1W3 IN POMEROY.

Beuy Bishop and Doug Bishop
were installed as worthy matron
and patron in ceremonies held at
Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order
of Eastern Star, held recently at the
temple. About 100 people auended
theevenL
Other officers installed were
Gracie Wilson, associate matron;
Larry Well, associate patron;
Goldie Reed, secretary; Janet
Bolin, treasurer; Clara Mae Hysell,
conductress; Patricia Arnold, associate conductress; Pauline Atkins,
chaplain; Marjorie Rice, marshall;
Jane Wise, organist; Pearle Canaday, Adah; Lois Wyant, Ruth; Lois
Thompson, Esther; Connie Smith,
Martha; Darlene Casto, EJecta;
Avanelle George, warden, and Fred
George, sentinel.
Chapters represented at the
•· installation were Athens, Marieua,
Racine, Evangeline, Pomeroy, New
Marshfield, Thea, Aurelius, Minear, BarUeu, Mount Moriah, Webb
and VaUey.
Deputy grand matrons presented
,
were Beck Phillyss, District 23:
Deane Bauman, District 24 and
Belly Bishop, District25.
Grand representatives from District25 were Jean Thomas and Jean
Mowry.
Auending from District 24 was
Jean A. Johnson.

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Stgm. a' Phi Sorority met
recently the Parish House of Grace
EpiJcopal Church with Ruby Baer,
Jane Walton and Charloue Elberfeld as hostesses.
The group discussed the Christmas Craft Show to be held on Nov.
27 and 28 on the upper block of
Main Street. The next meeting. will
be tbe a Christmas party at the
home of Donna Jones.
Guests attending were Martha
McPhail, Carol Adams, Carolyn
Grueser, Jane Powell and Dorothy
Sayre.
Members attending were Charlotte Elberfeld, Joan Corder, Vern
Crow, Jane Walton, Velma Rue,
Donna Jones, Eleanor Thomas,
Ann Rupe, Norma Custer, Clarice
Krautter, Roberta O'Brien and
Reva Vaughan.

•••

and now too little grain

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

busln••• ordere.

...

,j

,·

,

at the time of the' crime, have
pleaded innocent. Prosecutors say
Child B has confessed to the crime
while Child A told police he only
watched. Since they are under 14
the prosecution must prove they
knew right from wrong.

.!JLCQQISI~OJ{S

FINE· JEWELRY

MIDDLEPORT.• GALLIPOLIS
OPEN UNTIL 8:00
Monday-Thesday-WednesdayThursday- Friday
Evenings'
151 Second Ave. G~ipolis
91 Mill St. Middleport ·
Hours 9-8 Daily
9-ti Sat.
1-4Sun.

.

The 11-year-old, boys are
with the ab.«Jucti&lt;?n and

~harg~d

murder of James, who was taken
from a Liverpool shopping mall
Feb. 12. The IOddler was led about
two miles to the railroad track
where his body was found two days
later.
Both defendants, who were 10

.

.
'

II .

Your Business Listed
In The Sentinel's
Holiday GUt Guide
Wednesday, Nov. 24th
REACH OVER 6,ooo
HOUSEHOLDS IN
MEIGS COUNTY!

Advertising Deadline:
Monday, Nov. 22nd
5 P~·ID·
Call
Dave or Bob
at 99Z·21S5

�P~ICI=•~12~-;The::~o:a:ll~y:Se:n~t:ln:e~l--------------~P~o~m:e~ro:y~·~~:JI:d:d:le~po~-rt~,~O~h~lo~----••••11111!-...--..wedneaday, Nov•mber 17, 1993

PEP,SI COLA
PRODUCTS

oDOZERS

oBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

20 PK., 12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS
Moaday tin Sunday
8 AM·IO PM

D.A. IOSIOII

EICAVAniiG ·

To place an ad

~

Call 992-2156

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

(614)'
667·6621

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

'

1

"LIGHT tiAULING
&gt;FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

w. give caqMit
uphor.tery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they ds nrwll

GUN SHOOT

Adt oullide lhe CG WllY yo ur ad nuu mwt be prepaid
ReceiM diaeount for ad• paid ia aduDCe.

Free Ad.. : C ivu.way and Fouad ad. uDder 15 word. will be
run 3 daya at no cbarp.
• Price of ad ror aU capitalletten i1 douhle pr iee of ad eott
• 7 point line type oaly ued
• Sentinel il not re1po01ible for eft'On after fll'lt clay (c heek
for error• far~t day ad I'WII ill paper). Call before 2:00 p .111..
day dter publiclllioo tO make correr:lion
• Ad. tbt muat be paid in achmce Hfl:
Coni ol Thuu
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sal•
1 A claaified advertilement pJ.eed in the Tbe Daily Sentinel
(except Cla.. ified Diaplay. Bu.tia- Card or Lepl
Notice.) will abo appear iatbe Poillll Pleuaot Repter and
the Galli polia Daily Tribuae, reachiDf!l over 18,~0 homu

6:30P.M.

Steak or Roasts ....L:•••
FARM FRESH CHICKEN

Breast·Quarters ••• ~...

SPARRER BRAND

:~::~r:::.

139

$ 19

$

1

599
Fresh0ysters ••••••••••••

LONGHORN

, ... uck Roas·t ••••••••••••••

0

Low, wide 80 and 70 - Sell"
perl0tm1....,o PfOIIH.

YOUNG'S

.GENEUL

~n

~.-~SDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

LB.

·,. Chuck Steak ••••••••••••••
.....

I

Y eese •••••••••••••

992-7878

1-10.112~111

.

HAULING

. Howl111, L Wrltesel

.LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;.COAL

NEW -REPAIR

.

-'

••• ·
••
••
••
•••
••
••
•

P-17-11..Q70..1 00:212

1

Coupon Expire• 11/27/t3
Umlt1 F,.. Plr Cuatomar

:

PubliC Notice

~
'

•

915·4473
7122100

l &amp; LnRE lAIII
33151 PIM.IInvt IIIII
. . . . . . 45771
614.f92-5344
I-I00-714·nRE

~

Come by and register
for tree Battery to be
gven away· December
24, 1993. No purchase
required to register and
don~ have to be present

PubliC Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Eaatern Local School
Tho Board of Education of Dlotrlc1 Eloloe Booton,
Eaatern Loc•l School Treaourar 38900 SR 7
Dlotrlct deolrea to receive Reedovllle, Ohio 45n2
aealed bid• on the (10)27 (1113,10,17 ; 4TC
following :
Fleet Insurance
Speclftcllllono
ah..
are
available
11 the Tre
..ta
urer"a
office.
In order to be conaldered
111 bldo ohall be received In
the Treaaurer•a office by 12
o'clock noon on:
Decembar 10,1993
Said Boord ol Education
reoerveo lhe rlght1o accept
or relect any and all pena of
any and all bids.
Board of Education

POSlSUGAR ::
••
-GOLDEN CRISP ::
•
lloz.

•••
•

In Memory

2

•

HOlE SITES and
TRAILER SITES,

Gutter Clnnlng

LANDCLEARING.
DRIVEWAYSINSTAUED
UIIIESTONE-TRUCKING

Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

992-3838

3-16-113-tln

=:-...;"r

Smoolh rldng polyllllor cord

..-·-

w....... •100 .....

,.,1-800-714-nRE
,

;.====Rea=I:E:at:at:e:Ge=n=era==l==:::;

- JJ..'t•

91":. """'..,

body.

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

·-

(614) 192-7474
POMEROY, OHIO

III·SIAIE 1·9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
S..lc obedience,
llw enlon:-nt,

FURNACES
lnelllllclu•; I II will

peroonol protiiCtlon,

""-Ina..

kennel HI'Yice, pup• l
young clop for Nle.
By appt. only

BEUNDA (Pinky)
HICKS

who pa..ect awoy
11·17-81 ,

•••
•
1

Coupon Expl,.. 11/27/t3

: '

Umlt 1 Per CUIIOmar ·

I :

•••••••••••••••••••

••• ·
•

POST FRUITY
or COCOA
PEBBLES:
:.
.
.

.

'

13oz,'

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

. Ourlo.. wlll-clle,

llnoa .,..., JOUioft ua
. _.. _

::

.
.

•• •:•
••• •
•• ••'
••
,

Whllllllllllt .......
For lniiiiOI'f II 1M
onlylhlng
lull grief oan cal

II'•-·
...., ........b,
MOm, .......

'

1 ,
1 •

•

Clvleey

~

.,.. DK's
Farm Jays

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

AT THE
QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
. . 992-7878
7n1nm.

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE
36970 Boll Run Road
POII8[oy, Ohio

Middloport,Ohlo
GREAT SELECTION AND
VARIETY OF QUAUTY
METAL TOYS.
992-3384 8:30-4 Mon.-Fri.
- 742-3Q:IOA!Iar5:00
P-. Trecllln Avalt.bto
1111111

. GRAVEL, SAND,

992·7011 or
992•SSSJ
orTOU PIEE
1-100..141·0070
DIIWIII, 01110

992-3470
OWNER: JoH WW:w-.

7131191/tln

611Qlll

Gallpolle, Oh.

·.

-1&amp; or Tall F-1..-a72~

HOME SITES

PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORnNG GOODS
675-6755

CHRISTMAS
TREES

Located In Eastern Meigs County. 1 to 5
acre tracts avail1ble. TUppers Pllina
Chester water; electric available, on
septic tanks &amp; roads to each
approved. Partially wooded with rolling
hills.
From $5,000 up

Wholesale
&amp; Retail
up Rllllll at
lolln
Rutland, Oh.
Whot...,.o$10att.m.
$12 deffvared. Rllalllot
wtl be
a.m. to •
p.m. 1tartlng Nov. 241h.

Call Gene Riggs 985·3594
Memory Mates • Portraits
Special Occasions

o,.., •

TrMiareS'

·

Coli

J.A.R•
CONSTRUCTION

JAMES ILIIM l£ifiCI

•Dozer •Backhoe
o[)itcher •Dump Truck

Alann Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras

Land Cleoring, Pond1,
Water Linea, Sept lea
Llcen11 &amp; Bonded
Charlie Hatlleld,
Operator

New Haven W. V. 25265

I II I II \1 1
(, •\ 1 ' \ i l l ll

(304} 882-3336

THE
PHOTO PLACE

109 HlghStreel
Pomeroy
Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

Our Business is Security

Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

-

SquirreL ................... '55

PAll'S
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair

azs.oo-

C•ll IE liEn'S MOilLE HOME
HEiniG AID COOUII

Shruder Mooot... ... '1 55
Hom Mount ................'22

WHALO'S AUTO

IIW&amp;tnDMIUIII '
IUUIII&amp;IIOIIU

LIMESTONE, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIIT

GMFumacea

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMEilCIAL ond RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

MOR:TOACE COMPANY

(No

S.lllhrr C.tl1l

21121'82Jtfn

TRI-(OUNTY RECY«ING

Middleport, OH
Middlepon - Powell St -Acreage · Setting on llle edge of
town could be the spot you 're looking lor. City waler and
sewage available . 1.610 acres and a 0.186 acre righl ol
$9.000.00
way.

GO INTO BUSINES5-With a llnle know how and a lot of
Initiative you can become an Entrepreneur (Bualness
' Owner). Own a Septic Tank Se111ica that has bean In
busineu lor 29 years . Comes wilh a 1978 Ford F600 with
35,200 aelual mllea that has new radial s. new paint job, 2
yrs old pump , new hoses and 3 porta johns. Serveo several
counties.
.
$65,000
STIVERSVILLE - Bald Knob Rd. · Approx, 112 acre lot with
a 6 room , 4 bedroelm home. Has a largo ~ving room and
kitchun. Has a 46 loot long front porch, carpon and a full
basement.
ONLY$15,000 ·
SYRACUSE - Close in, but secluded - an older 2 llory
home with 1 newer heat pump, newer roof, and oomploloty
redone Inside. Home has 3 bedrooms. sun r~. dining
room, wraparound porch, patio, and a new decK 1Wo of the
bedrooms are huge.
Asking $45,000

JOHII TEAFORD
614-915·3961
UQJIOHIT

NOVEMBER SPECIAL

MillS
CO-UIICATIOIIS

(BEAT THE BAN)

SYRACUSE, OH.

NORINCO MAK 90 (AK4n ............1180
NORINCO UNI. SK$ ..___............ '95
1200 ROUNDS NON·CORROSIVE ..1130

111-112o61H
A11ldantWA

eo-c111

lnatll..._ofUnM

J .... • Phona • FAX
K.,lp ....
Off Premlo11 Ell. • Dall

CALLiniR 6:00
304-415·7256

FREE EllliiAlEI

okll llonla • 11 Yr. Exp.
Trl-c-ty

lilt :Milt 110.

SPECIALS

EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES
· CLUB

CERTIFIED MKHIHK
OUTBOARD MOTOR $32"

IN POMEROY

INIOARD/OUTIOIRD

8:46p.m.

DOTnE TURNER, Brokor .......................... ~2·588~ ,

51*111 Early Bird

BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................H2..S051
DARLINE STEWAB1...................................882o6345
SANDY BUTCHER ......................................H2·5371
JER~ SPRADUNG..........................(304) 882-3481

$100 Poyoll

OFFICE ......................................................... 112·2881.

accepting 111 ferrous metals
Including: tin, cat Iron , long ll1d short Iron•
Must be small enough to be mowcl by t.nd.
Short Iron (less th.., 3ft.) 1.75 per hundred
Motor Cast. ... .2.00 per hundred
11

w

WINTER STORAGE AVAiliiLE
..

Thlald good for 1

FREE card.
Uc. No. 0061-342

8

now

dry alum. c1na .23 pound
. Prices subject 11o chllnge without n~notiiKICI""'
Located at the comer of S.R. 143 end 7

::

Phone 992·5114

:'

Clean,

"

'·

•

. AIIEIICII GENEUL LIFE
ACCIDENT IISUUIICE COMPANY ::
Life • Medicare • C1ncer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ·

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Apnt

'

'

.

'•

••

'•
lox 119
·-·.
MWIIIeport, o•lo 45760
'·
,, 14) 143·52~64~~!:[·~

1.1.1 PI'RAIID
Now has beautHul Cocker Spaniel ~. Alto
featuring a 2 ft . Cl)mmort Black Tequ. Layaw.,. .,.
now avalllble for Chrietmu. Sale on our lnllrw atock
of large
new llama.

···~··············· ·

';

I

..

Mclendon

. . . 01)'

I oftlon Ill IIKI think
OfJOII

t

1ctt'21f1 mo.

742-2903

STATE ROUTE 124 . Approx . 8 miles from the
Ravenswood Bridge . A 3 bedroom rustic home !hat is
block with newer log siding. Has new lllennopane windows,
cuta gazebo, large gambrel root, storage builiing , nice fronl
po&lt;ch with a view of the river. Sitting on approx. 2 acres has
part baa«nant, and comes with a country chann east iron
electric..,....
$65,000

•

I

614-667-PETS

205 North Second Ave •
01

In Loving

.,•

P· t7·11·100.111CFII3

Umtt 1 ,_ Cultumw

.
Downspouts
Guttel'l

1• A&lt;w••lnln..tvg•

Special RIWIL D.yton

Trucldoad SALE Prical :-

1

··················~

Coup on !xjllrM 11/27/13

FREE ESTIMATES

to win.

Campbells Cream :
••
of Mushrooms : .
•
•
Soup 10.7 oz. ••

~

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

Going Out of Business Sale
and Inside Yard Sale
Berry Basket
2301 6th St. Syracuse, Ohio
Nov. 18. 19, 20
to 6

1111111111111111111

Buy 5 get
6.th.free

CONnRUCTION

Alzheimers &amp; Related
Disorders Support Group
Monlhly meeting
Thun;day
Nov. 18 1:00pm
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center
304-675·5236
Public Invited

•• •
•
••

P-17·l1-180- I C3AAG
Coupon Expirea11/27/t3
Umlt 1 Per Cua10mer

'
P·17·11·1GO-IIICOII3

ROBERT BISSELL

Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Sltls
Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink with each purchase

18_oz.

"

BULLDOZE_'! ,,!I~CKHOE
ond TRACNtUI: WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYilEIIIS,

IRIOLD'S
PLUMIIIG, ,
NEIDIG &amp;
COOJIIG

is·now offering

QUAKER
OATS

.

EXCAVATING

ROOFING

3141931 mo.

.

9(

992-6215

614-742·2138

La

LB.

Dirt
Gravel ·

·· SAYRE TRUCKING

lt.box

5499
-~ R1beye Steak•••••••••••••
: BEEF BUCKET
$ . 39
Steak. ••••••••••

Limestone

Pomoroy, Ohio

MUELLERS
MACARONI or

$ J99

HAULING

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Joe N. Sayre

'to / e

:~s~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

-Room Addlti-GuttwWork
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing
~ril.rlor 6 Exterlof
Painting
(FREE ESlliiAlEll)

Reasonable. Rates

SPAGHEnl

cleaning

Daytona Radial 60 and 70 811'111

Strictly Enforced
11111111 mo. pd.

Rate Over 15 Words
$4.00
$ .20
$ 6.00
$ .30
$ 9.00
$ .42
$13.00
$ .60
$1 .30/day
$.05/day.
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Bus in... Cud ......$17.001 inch per momth
BuUotin Board....$6.00/inch per day

21 oz. cans

REITOAA110frl.
INSURANCE Cl "'W
24Hour
E-.ncy SS.••""'Ice
..

POOR BOYS TIRES

FIICtory Choke
12C.u~Shot

Days
Words
I
15
3
15
6
15
10
IS
Monthly IS

FLAVORITE APPLE
OR CHERRY PIE
FILLING

(on ella)

EVERY
SATIJRDAY

RATES

$

FIRElWATER
DAII 4 QE

lrlltnwlt

CARPENTER SERVICE

PORK BUn

We111 •~Ida Ill:

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

1

2 Liter

llaGYIL

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
1

· TRiautl

4-11H13-tln

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

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD
4 THRU NOV. 20, 1993

&amp;

'

�Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

November 17 1993

Ohio

BEATTIE BLVD. T~ by Bruce Beattie

41

HOUHI

lot Rent

•Slovo,
- Call
.. ·-After
11'27.

51

Sl-l!lltlc
2P.M
. 114-148-

KIT 'I"' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household
GOOds

.. WedneSday, November 17,1993
71

Autos for Sale

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tht Dally

·-ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACAOU

42 Mobile Homes

1 .IFK'1

tor Rent ·

PHILLIP
ALDER
; REDUCE: bum ort tat while you

• liMp, t.... Ol&gt;ol labloiO I E·VIp
· [Muretlc. Avallable Fruth Phar·

macy.
~ Reduce: lum off fat while you
ateep, lake OPAL Available at

NORTH
D·"'ll
.KQ10112

4

...

.IOU t

A COJP D'ETAT fCJU.O.AJW
6'r' SAJJ&lt;Tia.JS .. RJU.CWED BY
IJEGOTI ATIC\4JS ..

.,

.7

EAST

.76j
+AJI0 761S

SOUTH
.A9t

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Easl

BARNEY
'81 Chevrolet 314 ton lruck, 2500

HriH, 4WD, IICIUinl ahape,
57,000 miles, 614·949-2012.
1951 Chevy 6 C.llndor, 4 Speed,
$2,000 080, 614-446-6001.
11172 GMC Rune Good, Good
Tlrn, Job Gon Wllh II, Coli
Leroy Coldwell, $4,000. 614-44114851.

HAVE A GOOD
VISIT WITH YORE
S!STER Z.ONEY,
·· MAW!!

WE'LL BE HOME BY

SUPPERTIME,
PAW!!

Obi.

Pus

••~·

Pass

Pus

511ooiM

·-...... "
txllll

34 Type Of been
35 Soul!! or

........

MFIIId57 lluliMr trM

58 Connl1-

lklllner
liiJ-'11011
IOBIIIIOf
llurdln

DOWIII
1~11

2

&amp;";;;r.., blue

31wo-

4 Prying
dlwlell

511Mr

lnaredlent

1Hocker •••I

Bobtty7 Plrt of fiCI
8 Alplllbtt unll
II Poychlc Goller
10 Fllh egge
11 Kind of curve
17 Money beck

3.Pus

Nor til

EUI

••s•6.

All pus

Pus

Openina lead: + z

By PbJIUp Alder

949-3005, 614-949·2373.

1m GMC 2 ton dump truck,

Trade,I14-4U.D684.

West

14 God of love
15 Mlllllllbr.

a

Marathon runners
at the bridge table

1m ChiYrolet hu.vy 112 1on,
runt QOOd, some rust, $795, 814-

$3500, &amp;14-192·3194.
1!178 Chevy LWB 6 Cylinder, 3
Spood, 1750, el4-441-t001.
1981 Dodge 1600, 614-441.0731. .
1964 Chevy Shonbod 305, Auld,
4" Uft Kit 15/31 Tlr• Rod Wit~
Block Int. $4,000, 114·-03.
19111 S.tO Tohoo For Sale 01

Soallo

44111br. . .....,
41iltlllout
150 Dulttt
54 .......

lllch.
31 Young hewk
37 Ofonoge
38 ActfUIGene

• A 10 8
t AK 6 2
.Qit

Mtllle..
41 Yo.gcod
42 Coin DPinilll

81!ntlce
12 11o1un
13 F!Miiiiflrll

18Tounll
20 Newt
21 Aft deco
llluttrotor
23 llerft (pref.)
27 ~~IOJIIInl
· 30 DllpiiJICI
32 Burden
33 Ftdure allyl.'

•Ku

;EEK AND MEEK

4AclrUIIutt

11 Unlm.llr

r

· Fruth Pharmacy.

• ICCMIDr

«&lt;lr_.,

PEANUTS
MV DAQ'S TAKING ME
TO ANOTHER f.IOCKE'r'
6AME TON16~T..

,.

In a team event, it is normal to have
sii players, four of whom are playing
at any given moment, so everyone can
have regular rest periods. However, in
this year's NEC Venice Cup, Sabine
Zenkel (who now lives in Chicago) and 1
Daniela von Arnim played 580 of the 1.4--1~4-600 boards for Germany.
On toclay's deal, Zenkel and von Ar· L...&amp;....L...IL...
nim outbid the other pairs in the two
world championship finals . What
CELEBRITY CIPHER
would you bid over the tltree-club
Cellbmy ~ ctYPIOifMII . . cnMIIIIr'Oirl.....
by'twnoul ~ ~ a'td ~ .
Ea::tlo...., In tht ..... Undl b *'Ottler,. To.My'• '*- 0 . . . W.
opening wilh that South hand1
In the NEC Bermuda Bowl, both
p
EIBT
YXIB
K
FHA Tmen overcalled three no-trump. Un•
derstandably, the Nortbs contented
D I 0 C . PC
E I H H K,X
I ZPI
themselves with four spades.
Both Sue Picus (for the United
OKG
XKPGTU
D I
0 I XL
States) and von Arnim doubled; an un·
appealing call with 4-~~3 dlstribu·
KCU
XTGITED
lion. (AgainSI Picus, Easl had opened ·,zKxu
I D Z T X
two no-trump lo show a weak preempt in either minor. West jumped 1o
YIHLG
XIFTXD
AXPEZ .
four clubs. North, Sharon Osberg, bid
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I tranquil beeauoe I'm doing what I'm ,_,,
to do, to enjoy what- 111111 I ha..." - (DIYa) Cecilia Bartoli.
four spades. East bid an undisciplined
five clubs. South competed with five
spades, which North did well to pass.)
WOlD
Zenkel, North, didn't commit the
lAM I
band aulomatically lo spades. She cuewith four clubs. When her partoer
bid diamonds, she drove lo that slam,
learing spades unmentioned.
Note that six spades is hopeless,
whereas aix diamonds coasted home
i~ 0 R M ) A
w-hen the trumps breke ~Z. Declarer
ruffed West's club lead in the dummy,
cashed the A·K of trumps and played
on spades, losing only one trump trick.
Wben you have two trump fits, one
D R A A I/
of equal length and one unevenly di·
vided, pick lite even fit (here the H)
when you need 1o discanllooen on the
other suit.
Gramps would be considered elderly by most people.
but is young at hean. He is
always amazed when some one
r - - - - - - - - - , r e f e r s to him as an.·- --Nov. 17, 1993
5

•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1978 Chovy Shon SWB 350 04
Speed, N•do Engine Wotk
1750, 614-44U001.
.
1810 414 Chevy luv $700 Qr

,

Trade For Guna Equal Valu.,

614-4411-7730.
~
Hunter Spoclall 11J76 FO&lt;d FISO,

Farm Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

evening shift RN
For n"tON lntormaOpoto...... ot

._:Ho.,

1 tour wheeler key, en Ohio
Unl-., otudont ID bolonglng
1o Mol Bloke, loti In lronl ol
Mlck.. Boot. Shop In Pomoroy,
114-ltl2-t4tl .... lot Amy.

7

co-

45

.... -'111od woldof,
mochanlc. Transpor-

roona.

tation.

Yard Sale

Iaham.

SurfiC41 mlneN: nMdld ror out·
ol..toto work. Oporot.,. noodod
for end - · ohovol, dngllno,

drill«, ond

board provldtd,

PlY 11,112.00 wookly. 1-800-Qtl..
9617.

c::'.tl:ny
In Ook Hill,
li
11g Elpoflonoo

Ohio
Semi Tractor /Tralltr Drlnra.
Elcoliont Poy, EIP«ioncod
Drtvon Only. CaH 81Htl2·7773.
18th,
llllhr .
COntonory Wonted- oomoono to bruoh hoo
TownhouN,. ttOft"'e lnllrior, 1 8mlll lal In Rechw, 11~04~
DiehM, Infante To Adun 2940 oftor 5:30pm.
Clottwee, Mlec, M .
WANTED: EMERGENCY REUEF
All Yonl Bolte lluot Bo Pold In COMIIUNm SKILLS INSTRUC.
· DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. TDR(S) noodod to INch c .....
tho doy boloro tho od·lo to run. muntty and peNOnil •kllla 10
,_Y odHion • 2:00 p.m. adun• wllh teaming llmHaUont
F..... - , . odHion • 2:00 In Molgo County. HOURS:
wookdlf ond wookond - .
p.rn.Soturdoy.
nlghla t\Hdod. High ochool d•
grH,
valid drl'l•r'a
8
Public Sale
lhroo yoors llconNd drivl"' Ol•
porionco, good driving rwcord,
&amp; AuctiOn

•c•na•,

and

lhquata

automobile

Rick PM.- A\lcllon Com-y. coventg~~ required. If lnterHted,
1un limo ouctl..,..r, _.,ptoto Hnd rHume to Cecilia Baker,
auction
MrVIet.
UCMMd P.O. loa: 104, Jackson, Oh
IM,Ohio a Wool Ylrglnio, 304- 4514D-0604 no ,..., lhan

m-me.

·9

111231113. EOE.

Wanted to Buy

-pitt·•*

AntlquH end ...., turnlluro, no
Item tOo 11tp or too ~~m~.ll, w;lll

bur ..... ,._ ...

18

River

B~ck,

Frontaoe

4

Bedroom

814-441-'1'1$7 Allor I P.M.

Small, 3br. houM wfaHached
gan~ge,
corwenlenl lD Pt.
Pluunt, 8yl"'. old, appniMd

$42,900, ooll 137,000. 304-8953008.

Very nice 3br. home, In tawn,
full buemern, fenced yard, 1
car gorogo, now windoWs, low
utllltr•, Immediate occupancy,

only' $55,000. Waraon Runy,
304-175-3433 or after Spm 3C)4.
675-7t0i.

32 Mobile Homes

for Sale

197'1 Than, 2br., ramod..ed, fur-

Bilby ond child ollllng dono ot

nlohod, $4950. 304.f'l!io30T.J.

reel

1988 Plno Rl~ , 3 bedrooms, 2
bath. utiUtr room, 113,000, 114992-3049 or 114-1192·5448.

reasonable

prfcea.

will

howlhald. atlo W8ntecf.. ok1 !,.,.port child up to 12 mlln
from and IO holM. All hoUri. Wt
blcYCIH, can Ollby lolortln,
hive roloronon, call 814-192·
IU·11141.
2091 ... , ..00.55tl-20il6.

Alao 11'111111' apacl. All hook·UPI.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·~

Prnon11304-Tf3.5838.

Bunk Bod Fromo Good ~~J:
tlon1 $40, 814-441-8111, 8
238o.
Chrlatmat

.
.,..., 115. Will
wholooole. Nol r•ponolblp lor

occldonla. 304_.711·1464.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
11 ~ Go lion, 1325; Now JET BOI

46 Space for Rent
Sp~cn

Crul-. 5 dapl4..nlghta:

Undorbookodl
Muot
Hill
$279/coupto. LlmHod tlckoto.
407-787-8100 ell!. 8588. lion-Sat,
9:00AM· !O:OOPM. ,
Donhy, 14k gold, blue Mphlro
ring, alu I, Or.at Chrlwtmaa

5151,11..011 WV.

tor rem •anlng at

$85/mo., al.c) 2 bedroom mobil•
homn tor rent, 114-in-21~7.

(Nio Sand Filter Aequlrwd)
$1,495; Ron Evana Enterprts..,

Trailer loti for rent, chy water 6
sewer. 304-675-084.

Jackton, Ohio 1..aoq.53.,..9528.

47 Wanted to Rent

814·2!56-11364.

Croa

Country

Siting

And

Rowing Extliee Mlchlnti $50,

TapPin MletOWIVI a Anawwlng

74

Motorcycles

Maaey FargUion 135 Tractor'
$4,950; ~40 Allie Chaimer
15,950; 180 MF $2,995, 114-2116-

e~·3921

350 grain Wlgon,
12tl. 1ran•port dltc, NIIW
ld• com Dlcklr AC no till com
plontor. All gOOd cond. 304·273Knuo~~e

chalra and hutch, •xcall•nt
condition, 114-9!12-7508,
4215.
.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch Super Grader, Tobaeco Stripper,
200 PSI tiU5; t lnc:ll 200 PSI Strl.. a Gradn, Ov.r 200
$32.50i Ron Evane Ente~.... Stick• An· Hour, 61e-388-9252
Jackeon, Ohio, 1..aoo.53'J.H28.
local Distributor For Supar
Grade~.
WATER STORAGE TANKS
Above And Below Ground FDA 63
L
Approved For POioblo W.tor. -=.:::--:-::;:.:.lv;..:e:.:st;,:.:.:OC.:.:k~,.,.,.,..
Ron Evtne .togterprtHa, Jack· i Good Broke Ponies, 614·245Hn, Ohio, 1

-137-1528.

S087.

Zenith COnoolo CoiOf T.V. 25 3 Yoar Old Gonllo Bull 112
Inch Noodo llinor Work, $100, Llmouoln 112 Anguo, 1,500 lbs.,
Calllt4-24 5-5819·
1900, 614-446-11113.

PiTNSSS CSNTSR
$SO A MONTH
GSTSYOUA

Commando.
miiH, •• conditio~.
$3,500.00114-379-2111
.'

1m Hondo s54, 1350,

klllbroe

engine,

~on-850

Hydraulic oil,50 gat.$125. Sldoro
Equipment, Henderson, WV.
304_.75-1142) or 1-eoo.277·31117.
Mochlno, 814-31111-8281.
8522.
Toon Boya Loolhor Bombor
Jacket, Uke New, Size 911'11111, New Holland 351 grindar/mlxer,
BNIIIHul Gift, $55, 814-256-t445. NIIW Holland 7ft. hayblnd,
UHd
furnltu,.
eouchee,
Ncllntrs, chairl, dining teb ..,

Windsor

2083.

614·9!12·

1989 H.D. Sponstor 883.
after 7pm.

..........-

30f
,.

TA~~

UAt&gt;t ·INS1

1990 Hondo CR 250 R, 614·1i9t,
3202 after 5pm.
,

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1893 Ploubuoy Ponti&gt;on bo~

BORN LOSER

18h., 40hp Yamaha outboa
motor, Eny-Load trelter, anac
able prlyacy cunaln wlpo11·•
=~· ulltd 4 tlmH. 304-89~

TI\€'1' I!£FER 10
~/16
'AA.nFtU~

Spoclol Now Till Thlnktalvlnjj:
1986 Boyllnor 1850 Cuday Ca~l
Inboard, Loaded Wnh Elllr..
$6,5001 Serious lnqulroo Onlr,
614-44o-1012.
'

76

0

P'Wil£N~

0

1:; "T roc
COOTR!X..~,

INTELLIGE.NC£.:..

w~ou.rr

'AATI FIC.I"-L
I~OI:AAC£"

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

t

;•
~~ · L----------L~

'rO.J ML.Je&gt;T 6E COMING
t:IOM-J WI'TH A COLD I

Household
Goods

3117-715TAftor 4p.m.
E1porloncod Tochor Avallobio
For Tutoring 814-441-432&amp;.

M~":l Good Condition, 12,500,

81

- - To Buy: J-* Autoo
Wllh Or Without Moten. Call
814-4411-1888.
Lorry Llnty. 8144ef;t303.
Wonted To I,Y: Slioi&gt;dlng Tl"'" Goorgoo POIIablo Sawmill, don't
bor ' PIM, Qood Prlc•, 814- haul your loat to thl mill jult
Clll 304-875·1l57.
Mll1 P1uta'1 Day Care Center
Top Pllld: AN Old U.S. lli.f
I A.M. .,,30 P.M. Ouollly
~-RinGo.- Colno, Loving Caro For ·An Chlidran
Co1no. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
OUr 11 Goit P1rt-Tfme, FuiJ.
111 ~-uo,Golllpotlo.
Tlmo.Fod. AHiotonco Avoiloblo.
Wo- to bur: mobllo Call I'OI'Inlormotlon Or Vloll. In·
font IT-or 814-4411-8227. Pro"""'"· 114-441-01711
School,
Schoolago,
BU
WAHTlD: onglno tor 11111 Ford School, 114-441.,22&lt;1'.
FootM, 40p.1• 1.3 I~
noodod
ASAI!l
I
·2455 T l T Lawn Servka, lawn,
e::!Oiio.a:oopm. or 114-9!12·24ii llndle8plftD, erump removal,
• ..., 1:00pm.
.
ond leal cr-.p. 304-773-5802
Of , .. 00.1131-1440.

8-8611.

1984 Cimaro For Salt Or Trada

For 4 WD Truck Or $3,800, 614388-8896.

,.._,

1914 Monte Corio S.S. WhHo

With Blue Int. 4,600 Original
Mlln,
CoiiKtor'•
Car,
Showroom New $13,000 614·3888803.

- RIFI'

Services

1982. Camaro Z-28, 305, 54,000

Gtnlf1ll Maintenance, Painting,
Yord Work Windows Woohod
Gunars Cleaned Light Hauling,
ComrMrical, Rnlde,.lal, Stave:

81

Home
lmprovemenls
BASEIIEI'IT .

•

WATERPROOFING
'
Uncondlllonol lltwtimo guoraljtM. Local referanc .. fumlahed.
Call 1-800.287.a578 Or 614-2370488 Rogoro WolorptOOiing. e ..
tobtlohod 1975.
:
Curti• Home lmprovemen11. t1o
Job Too Big Or Smell, YNro Ex·
perlance • "'On Older ,....,

Homoo. Addltlono, FoUndotlono,
Roollng, Khchono /Botho. lnIUI"'d, ""FrM Eatlmatas. 114--387·
0518, •

ASTRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Rentals
tubfKt,

41 . Houses tor Rent

3901.

2 Bldroome, Bnement G•

'

1

.,
"Look. If yoU'NIO illf.con8clouilabout h, .
, &gt;'" llfi yollrMifl gor11r. malk.'~
.

,.

i

Box 4465, New York. NY. 10163.
I IOday. In arrangemenls where partnern are
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) You're luncliooal, your progress might be imped·

j
ed.
live tOday wilh but one major flaw, and thai I GEMINI (M., 21-.June20) II il is your lOt lo
hkely to be extremely clever and imagina·

'Birthday
_

u.-,,

lm'll lot. A lnoclt - .
Ate. f\200 fMl PeL tao 111

1312. 1•

whallo dolo make lhe relationship work.! TAURUS (April 20-lley 20) Res uil s

is a lendency to treal mattern lhal are slill : disseminale importanl inlonTalion today, rt
in lhe early stages as il they're already . might be wise 10 have somelype ol print8d
accomplished.
or wlitten handout Instead of leaving things
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jen. 19) You 'll up lo ·memory or a verbal presentalion.
have good earning surges today, but also . CANCER (June 21-July 22) Someone
t'll.....strong inclinations to be extravagant . II ; who has no logrtimale claim lo ~n endeavor
--a\IUI'
you're imprudent, yQur llivoious lendencies you're developing with another might be
1looking for participation loday. Don't be
could neutralize your good ones. ·
AQUARIIIS {Jen. 20-Feb. 11) Your proba· afraid to say no.
Th -~- Nov 11 1113
bliities lor succeu today lOOk good and 1 LEO (July, 23-Aug. 22) This can be a proyou're likely to be ,an .achiever. 1 dUCiive day for yQu, provided yQu are com·.
More travel than usual is a poss1bH1ty •n the .1 Unfortunately, however, you mighl be an : patent ill scheduing ..Be sure prlor1ty mat·
months ahead. However, some lnps you • ungrai:IOus winner or a PIJOr loser.
tara are pUt at lhe top 01 your lilt.
'
.
tail&amp; lor P,leasurable. purposes could have PISCES (Feb. 20-Mirch ZO) Today il -. VIRGO (Aug. 23·1ep-. 22) Associates ,
commercial overtones. B,oth lypea sh~uld you're succeasl4i .il could b!l -due. In large cOuld lose, reep8ct 'ror you loday H you dO
llve up lo your eKpec:taltons and anticlp&amp;· pari lo your allies an~ supportera. Yel. !1Q1 ha""lhe .courage 01 yQur convic11ons. II
tiona. ·
, .
sllangely, you might leellhole who as&amp;ist· you take poaiUon in which you believe,
defend ~ agelnat ail eomera.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) II Circum· ed you didn't do quile enough.
atanc;&lt;~s are running .smoothly toda~, do not ARIEl (Morell 21·Aprll 18) Involvements .UIIIA,(llpt. 23-0cl. 23) Financial trends ·
.make any changes merely lor •c_hange wilh friends for purely social purpoees · continue to loOk strllng, PIOVidld you don,
lake. II you -m11a around Wllh lhlnga, H should liva up to your tKp&amp;CtalionB loday. take any foolish risks ar gambles. Be cau·
could prove se~·deleatmg. Tl)'lng to patell However, arrangements wilh pals ol a busi· tious In the managemenl 01 your matelial
up a broken romance? The Aslro·Graph ness nature may nol give you much to aHairn.

0

Fumece, Carpwt, Fronl ~arch,
.No Polo, 814-4411-0!151.

Buiii'IISS
Opportunity

21

Matchmaker can help you to understand , chee r about.

Mail $2 and a long , se ll -addressed, ; should be favorable in situations where you
stamped envelope to Matchm aker. P.O. : hawoe the latitude to ca ll your own shots

Employmen t Serv1ces

F1nanc1al

BOOK

TO&lt;Iay is the 32Jst . fi&lt;'.itBI'&lt;i;i*l""'&lt;#~ '!tXI
IZI W/ a~,;; All!"''~
day of 1993 and the $0-~
~"-"'(~
~""''"''"'
57th day of fall .
~~'®&lt;
·--TODArS HISTORY:
On lhis
day in
1558, Elizabeth I ascended lo the Eng·
lish lhrone.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Bernard
Law Montgomery (1887·1976) , Brilish
mililary leader; lsamu Noguchi (1904·
1988), sculptor-designer; Shelby Foole
(1916-J, writer- historian, is 77; Rock
Hudson (1925 · 1985), actor; Marlin
Sco rsese 0942·), director, is 51 ;
Lauren Hutlon U943 ·J, model. is 50:
•

!

· ' . '· .

a

''

.

.

"

1 I I I" I

.

O

5
Compl~te the chuckle Quoted
.
•
•
•
•
.
by ldfong •n the m•u•ng word5
1.........1.-.L.......L-.L.......I-.J you develop from !.h!!p No . 3 below.

',(ll&lt;

IWEDNESDAY

Trimming. Free Estimates! I14-

Will tutor In my ~ on 1ny
1f1!dn K·12, math
ocltnce, rNding, otc., 814-192·

DATE

ltr!!IJ &lt;7l lUI I-t

Ea A TREE !iERYICE. Tooolng,
Trlmmlng, lrM R1mova1, Hedge

' ...

I I

MY R A L W

~

Mercha ndise
St

PO YOu

BRAND-NEW
BODY I

~

Wanting to rent- 2 or 3 bedroom
house, ln clean and good condition, praflt private slUing, 814992·2428, It no tnawer piNH
lena mnaage on m•chlne.

121170 with 8110 Oll)lndo1
moblte
home
approv.a
woodburnor, 12800, 814·992·
2413.

Wanted to Do

Furnished
Rooms

Roomtforrent•wtM.ormonth.
St.rtlng ot 1120/mo. GoUla Hotel.
114-446'8580.
.
Slooplna room. wllh tooking.

Trucking

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

351

1974
61. Fann Equipment , • 4,000

hat full time

blue Ohio Unlvorslly
hy chllri, contalnt 3 gold k_ey1,

4WD,

alumn. lntHt, 4 blirret ca,..
borator, new tlrft, 4al)d, good
cond, $1200. 30H75-li4~.
•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Ignite - Trait - Valid · Fiance- DRIVING
After driving around the same block three t1mes the
wife asked her husband, "Why didn't you tell me I was
lost?" Smiling the husband replied, "Well. you always
know where you're QOillQ when I'm DRIVING.·

NOVEMBER17I

�.•

November 17 1993

A

Ohio Lottery

Tar Heels
open season
with victory

Pick 3:
017
Pick 4:
ll52
Super Lotto:
1-7·21-31-43-44
Kicker:

Page4

Low lonlgbtln upper lOs,
cloudy. Friday, cloudy, high ln
mid SO..

397925

TEMPO

•Air Conditionin g
•Power Mirrors •Overd rive
• Ciearcoat Paint
•AMfFM Stereo

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

Vol. c.t, NO. 145
MuiUmedlalnc.

Workers
spared
of health
increase

TO~

94

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Health care premiums for county employees will go up effective
Dec. I, but employees are being
spared from paymg mcreased costs.
During the weekly· meeting of
the Meigs County Board of Commissioners, commissioners agreed
to increase health insurance premiums by $24 for family coverage
and $17 for sinjlles coverage effective Dec. 1 wtth county depart·
ments picking up the difference.
Currently, monthly premiums
are $400 for family covera~e and
$150 for single coverage wtth the
county piclcing up $200 and $120
of each. respectively.
The cost of the increase is to be
covered by each department with
no extra money being paid by
employees, commissioners said.
In addition, the board opened
bids from contractors vying to
complete the Rutland waterline
replacement project
Rose Construction of Racine
submiued a bid of $29;460 while
Field's Construction of Kitts Hill
submitted a $56,680 bid. Commis·
sioners agreed 10 table the bids
~~~~~ .v:.si~~?-' of
9
·:'1'1\i~1ii~l67tiriWUiif;
tiQq 9f three fire hydrants and
1,000 feet of six-inch line. The project'is being funded by a community development block grant.
The commission donated a tele·
vision ·and a video-cassette
recOrder/player to the Meigs Coun·
ty Highway Department.
Engineer Roben Eason said the
department will use the equipment
to view training films.
Commissioner Fred Hoffman
and Eason, while discussing the
county's recent membership in the
Ohio Cooperative Purchasing Program, agreed that county agencies
should slill purchase from local
merchants as long as local prices
are competitive.
. Eason, who is considering the
purchase of a four -wheel-drive
pickup truck for the highway
Continued on Page J

TERCEL

-:::::--=il~llraamnger XLT 4x2

•XLT Trim •AMIFM Cassett e
•Sl iding Rear Window
•Chrome Step Bumper

•Power Steering

$9899
You Can Lease h For Only
jo Per Month

9

lndu~ng

w

''

94 Toyota T-100 Pickup

•Air Conditioning •Cloth Seat
•Full Carpet •Chrome Package

•AMIFM Cassette

•Rear Step Bumper

•Bed Liner

93 PONnAC SUMBIRO

93 FORD ESCORT LX

Auromatlc. air.
3 10 choose trom

AutomatiC air. AM IFM
slereo. loaded
.

$9999

$9999

•Automatic •Air Conditioning

$14,999

'$9999

Sales Tax

MONTHS - NO MONEY DOWN

·~

94 Toyota 4x2 Pickup

,•,

&amp;DUO LE

International Series. $12 999
leather . loaded
l

Air . V6 .
loaded

$7999 .

Air. lowmiles.
one owner

6 cylinder

overdrive$13 999
AMIFMcassene. a11
'

$8999

93 PONnAC GRAND PRIX

93 FORD MUSTANG CONVERnB~E

88 OLDS CUTLASS ClERA

92 OLDS 88

U CHEVY 4x2 PICKUP

88 DODGE CARAVAN

AMIFM cassene.
anti·lock brakes $12,999

AM /FM casselle.
$12,999
automatic. air

6 cylinder . automatic. ai$5999

One owner.

~utomatic .

tow
miles. sharp

V6. 7 passenger.
$7999
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Meigs County
.prepares for its
175th anniversary

'"

VICTORY - President Clinton answers a
question aner his statement Wednesday night
at the While House following the passage of

· the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Vice President AI Gore watches at left. (AP)

House's NAFTA approval
gives Clinton big trade win
WASH1NGTON (AP) The House vote to fuse North
Ame*a into. one huge market. place ·gives'President·qiJl\0 " .
sweet, cointi'fi'on\.lleilffi'a P,?T.u·
cal triumph that sllolll'cf ~fliri'gth·
en his hand for even grander
trade deals ahead.
With a last-lap frenzy of persuasion and deal-making, the
White House transformed itself
from underdog to an easy winner Wednesday night, muscling
the North American Free Trade
Agreement through the House
by a surprisingly comfortable
234,200 margin.
"At a time when many of
our people are hurting from the
strams of this tough global
economy, we chose to compete,
not to retreat, to lead a ¥W
world economy , to lead as
America has done so often in
the past," Clinton said after the

.

vote, saluting the House.
The measure is a major prize
for Clinton, who flies to Seatlle
today for trade talks with. A.Siiiri '"
leaders.-HC'bopes NAETA will
pave the way fot a trans-Pacific
agreement and give him clout
·and credibility as officials from
around the globe seek a world
trade arrangement by Dec. 15.
In the Senate, where debate
on NAFTA may begin as early
as Friday, leaders of both parties
believe the pact will get close to
60 votes, perhaps more, without
any ann-twisting at all.
In an AP survey, 52 senators
said they probably would vote
for NAFTA , 31 said they are
likely to oppose it and 17 were
undecided.
Once approved in all three
capitals, the agreement creates
the world's largest tradin~ bloc
- 370 million people m th e
United States, Canada and Mex-

ico.
Beginning Jan. 1, it will
gradually erase tariffs on manufactored and agricullural products,~.way for banks
and oth~r service industries 10
do business in the three counlries.
The House victory took
weeks of strategizing, political
gambling and lobbying in which
traditional political allegiances
were turned on their heads. Big
busine ss sided with Clinton
while labor and some of the
Hou se Democratic leadership
opposed him, at times biucrty.
Though Clinton had argued
that a defeat for NAFTA would
weaken his foreign policy hand,
most Democrats scorned the
agreement as a job killer and
voted 156·102 against their
president. The House's lone
independent also voted no.

the observance committee.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Ideas on how to observe the
Sentinel News StafT
Planning for the 1994 obser- occasion were discussed particularvance of Meig s County's I 75th ly ways to incorporate the obseranniversary got underway Wednes- vance into festivals and programs
day afternoon at a meeting at the which are already being carried out
in the county.
Meigs Museum.
Parker reported that plans have
According to a brief history presented at !he meeting, the General already been made to have a video
Assembly on Jan. 21, 1819 passed made of activities during the yeat
an act to "erect" the county of incorporated with pictW'Cs from the
Meigs from parts of Athens and past
Ways to involve the schools and
Gallia Counties. Parker reported
that there is some conflict in the churches were discussed, as well as
date that the county was aclually fund raising. Having students do
formed, one source making refer- essays and art work on Meigs
County's history was proposed.
ence to June, 1819.
Cindy Oliveri reporting for the
Funher research will be carried
Meigs
County Showcase commitout on the history by the Meigs
tee
said
that the observance will be
County Pioneer and Historical
incorporated
into that activity
Society as plans progress for the
which
has
already
been scheduled
I 75th anniversary next year.
for
Sept.
15
and
16
at the Roell:
Representatives or several orgaSprings
Fairgrounds.
She
said that
nizations met Wednesday with
Coatlaued
on
Page
J
Margaret Parker, who is chairing
~------------------~

CELEBRATION PLANS BEGIN ·The initial meeting or Meigs
County's l7$th anniversary committee was held Wednesday at the
Meigs Museum to begin planning for the 1994 celebration or the
organization or tbe county. Margarel Parker, seated center, is
chairman and wiD be assisted by Cindy Oliveri, secretar y, left, and
Mary Powell and Karen Werry, standing, publicity.

,.---Local briefs--seven injured in accident
Seven people were injured Wednesday afternoon in a three-vehicle accident, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Driver Rebekka D. Mcln1)'1'e, 17, Baum Addition, Pomeroy. and
driver Andrea D. Dillard, 14, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, and her
passengers, Kyle D. Ord, 22, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy and Eric E.
Dillard, 14, Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy, were transported by Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospit.11
where they were treated and released.
Driver Sue A. Kauff, 37, and her passengers, Earl S. Kauff, 9,
and Richard A. Kauff, 6, all of Racine, were transported by private
veh icle to VMH where they were also treated and released.
According to the accident report, Kauff was southbound on S~1tc
Route 7 in Chester Township when she stopped to tum left onto
Township Road 152. Dillard. who was fo llowing Kauff, slid to a
stop and was struck fro m behind by Mcintyre. The collision forced
Dillard' s ve hicle into Kaufr s.
Mcintyre was cited for failure to maintain an assured clear distance ahead. Mcintyre's and Dillard's vehicles sustained heavy, disabling damage and were towed from the scene. Kaufrs sustained
moderate damage and was driven away.

Wood
addresses
Rotarians
Keith Wood, wildlife officer of
the Oliio Department of Natural
Resoutce"s Division of Wildlife,
was the Monday night speaker for
the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club . He was introduced by
Howard Frank, program chainnan.
Wood indicated that he had
always wanted to be in law
enforcement and for the last sixteen
years has had that privilege. The
last 10 years he has served as the
Meigs County Wildlife Officer.
One of Wood's main effons has
been in the field of education, particularly with hunter safety and
classes for beginning hunters. The
c~s insure that new ,generations
of hunters wi)l have traming based
on their awn safety in the handling
of firearms and in the safety of
people around diem.
Hunter educalion has been
around since 1979, Wood said .
Thankfully only two falai acx:idents
have occurred in Meigs County
since 1983. The goal is none, he
said.
Wood pointed out lOIS of opportunities:exist in Ibis area for hunting and fishing . Being .the only
wildlife offteer for the entire county, Wood said he receives many
calls .aiJout htinting without pennis·
sion, controlling deer population

2 S.Cti.DM, 12 P8gll 35 _,Ia
A Multlm.... lne. ,........,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 18, 1993

Woman cited in accident
STORM DAMAGE -A firefighter from
Waterloo Township walks past the wreckage of
a mobile home which was destroyed by high
winds in Athens Wednesday. High winds

destroyed two mobile home and damaged sever·
al buildings in the area, but no injuries were
reported. (AP)

Storm causes flooding, wind damage

1 Storms throughout Ohio forced
some schools to cancel classes as
up to 2 inches of rain caused creeks
to overrun . Winds up to 50 mph
damaged some homes.
No llll\ior injuries were rePorted
in Wednesday's storms.
, In western OhiQ, water from the
Stillwater River and .Greenville
Creek spilled over their banks in
Darke County.
·
Schools in Ansonia were dismissed ,early because of a threat of
flooding in the basements of the
and
the worst school buildings. Mindy Walters,
problem and trespassing is the ~ ecretary at Ansonia Elementary
w,orst one to handle, he said. In School, said the closings .affected
Ohio, land does not have to be 750 pupils. '
posted to prevent hunting.
.
Gary Middleton, ])liS supervisot
Wood emph*lized that most for Ansonia Local Schools, said'
,_
· · ·
Contbni~ on I'll' J

~f~urse. ~n~

r

buses had to make 11 detours in
taking the pupils home because of
water on roads.
In nearby Greenville, flooding
disrupted telephone service at the
city's wastewaler treatment plant,
where high water on Monday
forced plant officials to use a row boat to get around the plant, Superintendent Steve Olwine said.
Winds up to 50 mph damaged
three mobile homes and a garage in
Atli'ens County in southeast Ohio,
the county sheriff's department
said. The Nalional Weather SerVice
described the s10rm as a possible
tornado or downburit.
·
The storm also downed trees
and power lines;
A tornado was reported ncar
Stockdale .along the Pike-J~Itson

county line in southern Ohio. The
weather service i~ Huntington,
W.Va., said Wednesday night that
it could not confum that a tornado
had toqched down.
Jackson County sheriff's
Deputy Suzy Matteson said a bam
was damaged, but no injuries were
reported.

1n Fairfield County, a volunteer
weather observer said 1.15 inches
of rain fell within 30 minutes. The
town of Bremen closed a street
because of flooding, the county
sheriffs office said.
The l'lin canted minor llooding
in some areu becaUJC the ground
was nearly satur1ICd from previous
rains over lhe ~. the weath·
er service said.

••

A Greensboro, S.C., woman was cited following a two, veh icle
accident at the junction of East Main Street and Nyc Avenue in
Pomeroy Wednesday around 5:25a.m.
According to a report from the Pomeroy Police Department,
Michelle Haywood, 32, was approaching the intersection when she
reportedly dropped an object onto the Ooor of her 1992 Ford sta,
tionwagon. While reaching to pick up the item, she struck the rear
of a 1988 GMC truck driv en by Kenneth Krigba um , 50, of
McConnelsville.
No injuries were reported. Moderate damage was listed to Haywood's car while Krigbaum"s truck received no damage.
Haywood was cited on a charge of failure to conlrol.

Deputies report accident
No injuries were reported following a one-vehicle accident on
State Route 248 Saturday around 9;45 p.m.
According to a repon from the Meigs County Sherifrs l&gt;epan.
ment, Michele Metzger, 18, Pomeroy, was eastbound on State
Route 248 in a 1983 Chevrolet when he: vehicle went orr lhe road
to the right, suuck a guardrail and went into a private yard causing
damage to shrubbery, flower beds and trees.
Damage to the vehicle was listed as moderate.

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported
Six deer-vehicle wrecks were recently reported by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department.
Beverly Fetty, Pomeroy, was eastbound on State Route 124 near
Bradbury Road Saturday evening and sii'IICk a deer in the roadway
Continued on l'lge 3

-•.

-•

'.
;•

.

•

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