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.

Pomeroy-Middlepo~~lllpolla,

Page DB Sunday nmee Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

December 5, 1113

American scientists :usi~g genetic .
·e ngineering to produce better ~atfish

/

MYSTERY FARM- This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil aud Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere Ia
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate Ia the weekly ton test may do so by guessing
the farm's owuer. Just mail, or drop off your
guess to the Dally Seutinel,lll . Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may wil! a ~S prize from the

Ohio Valley PubHshlng t:o. Leave your uame,
address aud telepboae uumber with your card
· or letter. No teleDhoae calbJ wiiJ be ~~t:Cepted. AD
coolest eutrles should be turued Ia to tile ue'llllpaper ofr~ee by 4 p.m. each Wednaday. In case
of a tie, the wiuuer will be ehoseu by lottery.
Next week, a GaiDa County farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Cooservatlou
·
District.

:U. S. share of commercial wheat
·market declining in Latin America
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department ·says the
U.S. share~ the commercial wheat
market in Latin America is declining, while the overall size of the
market has almost doubled in the
past five years.
• The United States enjoyed a 75
}lercent market share in 198283,
but this fell steadily to SO percent
In 198990.
· Now, the United States has only
23 percent of the commercial market for wheat in Latin America,
according to a report by the Foreign Agricultural Service on Export
)iarkets for U.S. Grain and Products.
"The eight lar~est importing
countries (cxcludmg embargoed
Cuba) now porchase more wheat
:than during the easy credit climate
of the c.ly 1980s," said the report.
. The Jargest markets, Brazil,
Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, Colom. bia, Chile, Ecuador, ~o.livia, co.l. 1eciively imported 9 million tons m
. , ·199293. compared to only five mil·
. :lion tons in 198889.
''Brazil accounts for one-half ot

this incr~. but wheat ilnports by
Mexico and Chile have grown dramatically as well," the report said.
The increase in commercial
wheat imports is accounted for
parlly by reduced producer supporters and the dismantling of gov-,
emment-controlled suwly and pur·
chasing organizations, 1t said. .
"Wheal imports grew in some
countries despite 'price band' rariff
structures, regarded by many as
trade ~trictive," the report said.
As to why the U.S. has lost market share, the report said,
''Argentina has benefited from
ttade arrangements with Brazil
(and) Canada has priced its wheat
aggressively into this rnarke~ at the
expense of U.S . market share.
Also, the Latin market has drawn
the attention of the European Community as well in recent years.''

Council requested new standards to
. reflect changes in harvesting and
marketing practices.
Presently, the standard applies
to seleeted and hybrid varieties of
the highbush blueberry produced
under cultivation. Tbe proposal
recomm~nds that the staJidilrd
inchide the rabbiteye species, since
it is grown in sufficient quaniiiies.
·It is also proposed that siZe no
longer be part of the grade requirements.
·
''Fresh blueberries are generally
not sized by packen anct the sizes
of blueberries vary from viuiety to
variety,'' said the announcement.
"For these reasons blueberries
would be able to meet a U.S. grade
without having to meet a specific
size.''
Another proposed revision to
the standard would base tolerances
on a percentage of defects and not
a set number, the procedure' which
is used in the current standard .
There would also be a scplll'llte tolerance for blueberries that stm

WASHINGTON (AP} ...:. &lt;JOv-:ernment scientists are using aenetic
engineering to produce a superior
breed of catfish.
·
.
The proceu. known u gyno·
genesis, produce$ catfish with
greater tolerance to poor water
qualil)', IIIOle resistance to disease,
more efficient f~ cooveraion and
improved grilwrJI rates and body
compositiOI\. ,
Scientists at the Agriculture
Research Service's CatfiSh Genetic
Research Unit in Stoneville, Miss.,
have even solved what had been a
maj&lt;X" problem with the process that the superior.race included. only
female offspring, :axpc:pments with
sex-conttol mechanisms have
developed females who can ptoduce male and female fish..
The offspring have a lower survival nue but are used to clone certain desired uaits. Generations of
these fiSh are brild with other catfish strains to add varietion. reduc·
ing their vulnerability to disease
and other probletlls.
The gynoge_netically-produced
males, when mated with· norm111
females, produce only male off-

dro~ in

!

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Department is seeking
comments on a proposal to revise
the U.S. standards for fresh bluebenies.
.~ve~stems.
The Nonb American Blueberry
Brottn skins and scars are considered defects when readily
noticeable. "The proposal would
add definitions for broken skins
and scars to give graders and interOTTAWA (AP)- Canada's ested parties a better distinction for
prime minister dropped his opposi- judging their criteria," the
·
tion to the North· American Free announcenlent said.
Trade Agreement, a~reeing to a
Jan. 1 signing that will eliminate
the final obstacle to the pact's
implementation.
The announcement Thursday by
Prime Minister Jean Chretien,
DAYTON - Jeremiah Johnson,
hailed by a "delighted" President
Vinton,
has enrolled in the ElecClinton, came after the Canadian
leader failed to wiD concessions he ttonics En,~nrring Technology
Technical Institute,
promiSed to gel during his election program at
Dayton.
campaign.

·.:1JilE JEA$QIJ.~S .
BEST BUYS
.

AREAl

Johnson to

-

i

'93.' T,RANS. SPORT SE.

They're rounding 1he far 111m and beading into the back stretclL••
•

'92' GUND AMS
a.to.,l/~ tit, en..., OS.

7 Pa~ie...et, lillolltely lollllll.

FROM

$13900

9

FROM ·

-the leaders In the Peoples Bank Discount Brokerage S~ Picking Contest are:

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As of November 26, lbe!e ~the top 5 perfonnlng portfoUos out of the hundreds In our contest. Om1ll, 346 ponililos

baYe Increased In value! ED COilteslalt chose 5publicly tr.lded stocks from a list of I 00 selected COIIIpanles.l'erf!mnance
1s based upon clwJaeinportrolioYIIIuc from the dose of business friday, October 8, 19,93 dlrougb Friday, NcMmber 26.
111e percentage pW!Ossof.Uftllrteswlll be ttaclred through 1993. Peoples BankwllliWIId $500 to die toppedormer~
$250 ~r second pla:e ul $100 lor tblrd place.

111e Peoples ll&lt;lnk lllialuM Bloi!e~~BC Service Is ida1 for meslors wbo do J1« ~.lhe benefit of research or
reoommeodatlons, but wl!o sdlllnllll on service llld per50IIII beneftts. ~Bank dlscouot brokerage seaytc:es are
o&amp;red thlOugh Olde D1Koon1 Corponllon, MemberSIPC, NYSI!, NASD. Discoulllbroiriritgellnds are DOIPDlC iDI,uml:

As/1for" t:l1lfiJilemmlt tlbeotml ,..,.,f.e st'Wflh
Mar1e1t1

Athens

Belpre

m-3155

593-7761

423-7516

LoM'll
896-2369

Middleport

m-6661

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opb offWI/IIa lltiM.

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75H9S5

7811-8820

mJc:

tbe Plllns
791-4517

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376-7123

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~9·3! , BUI~K ~REGALS
mt, Cl'lll~,, OliN..., rHr,lllfDIItr;. '
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Fli. $l"2,

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Pkk3:
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Pick 4:
8635

Super Lotto :
2-7-37-38-39-44
Kicker:
9'32331

PageS

'

.

'93~.

.

~

SUNBIRDS -

Alto., .1/C, Wflf,;,I.

FROM$

·Vol. 44, NO. 156
Multimodlalnc.

..

,..fCIIttr,

Strickland still
reform-minded
after year on hill

:serious crime
is declining

' WASHINGTON (AP) .....; FBI
statistics show violent crime is
declining a little this year, but law
enforcement officials say neither
ihey nor the public take much comfort in the numbers.
. Violent crime during the first
$ix months of 1993 decreased 3
percent from .the same period in
1992, while the number of property
crimes dropped by 5 percent,
according to preliminary finding or
t!Je FBI's Uniform Crime Report-

Jly JAMES LONG (OVP Staff)
and wire reports
Ohio's freshman Congressman
Ted Strickland, D-Lucasville, said
a frustrating year on capitol hill
will neither stop his fight to reduce
government waste nor end his
efforts to identify with the people
of the districL
The Associated Press reported
today that some members of the
freshman class - the biggest in
half a century - were disappointed
with the progress of legjslative
reform.
Sttickland said he shares that
sentiment "Yes I'm frustrated." he
admitted. "It would not be accurate
to say that a while lot of progress
was made in the area of congressional reform. •
However, be plans next session
to continue pushing a bill he has
introduced thai would prohibit
house legislators from sending

ing~.

STOCKING • MagKie Biggs, coordiuator or
tbe food pantry of the Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport, bas been busy stoeklug the pantry

By LEIGH ANjiiE REDOVIAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of about 30 churches

, ar

(AP) -Grady Lee Nelson Jr. was

for the holiday season. Biggs says she is looking
forward to the benefits that tbe new Regional
Food Center wlll bring to tbe conuty's pantries.

Meigs church members raise
$3,000 for regional food center

pf~; ~ewf·~;:kAII_1:~~~~~~a~~~.t:;
ntrl UU I sponsored br 1/Je Tri-Counr:y~Coml rsar
·y with
~::r~~:o~J~':;;::ir~~~~:
ann • v·e
.
.
the consttuction of a new

· day
.·
1iues

1 Section, 10 Page• 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. N-opaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 6, 1993

~----s-h~o-w--~====~~r=

' The small. reported declines
inay be positive, but I ·doubt most
Americans will draw much comfort
from them because the levels of
violent crime and drug trafficking
.remain so staggering,',' t:BI Direc·
.(l&gt;r Louis J. Frech S81d m a state·ment Sunday.
· The number of murders
(emained stable while all other
icported violent crimes went down:
Robberies by 5 percent, forcible
r&lt;~pes, 4 percent, and aggravated
·~saults, I percenL
.
~ Reported property cnmes,
meanwhile, were down across the
lloard, with burglary declining 8
percent, motor vehicle theft, 5 per~nt, and larceny-tlleft, 4 percent.
Arsons. which decreased by 15 percent, are not included in the FBI's
·determination of the overall crime
index.
· · In Cincinnati, ~keswoman Lt.
·.Cindy Johns sa1d police have
·noticed crimes are more severe

Low tonJcht In upper lOs,
cloudy. Tuesday cloudy, hlp In
lowtr 40s.

•

•

PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii

Smith a·uick-Pontiac!

attend ITT

ow

'.

exports sparked a rmancili! and poultry product exports, with
ciis1s for U.S. agriculture.
export value forecast at $8.5 biiBulk exports hit a record in lion," Eu11ene Moos, undersecre·
1981, when the combined vlliue of tary of agnculture f(l' international
shipments to China, Eastern affairs and commodity programs,
Europe and the Soviet Union told an o~qoolt forum T~y. l
tolaled tpOre than $5.5 billion, · Those· sales renect greater
compared with $2.5 billion in demand for beef, pork and variety
1993.
.
·
meats in such countr:Jes as Ja~.
If ,it weren't for increased So.utbKoreaandMexico,hewd. ·
exports of rice to Japan and coaon
·Another high-value category,
to MeXico, along with otber cooo- horticultural products, is ~oolting
tries, the piCture far bulk commodi- up: That term re~ers ~ fruits, vegties could be even worse.
etables and detlvauves such as
Because of the drop in buUc . jui~. Sales of those products ~
commodities the ovemll volume of also m for a record, up $300 mil'exportS- is pWjected at 130 million !ion from 1993 to reach $7.5 billion
tons, compared with 147 million in m 1994 ·beca.use of exports to
1993.
.
Canada. Europe and Japan.
But increased"exports of so·
"Market p~omotion actiyities
called high-value products will hav~ ~ pu:Uc~y ~ffeclive_ m ·
lceep the value of exports froin slip- capua~ on the~ fOlCign
ping. ''Another record year IS demand for more fruits. ~ v"~;
expected for U.S. lives)OCk, ~ . ~~asr._~f a healthier diet,

Business briefs
· STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP)
· -Volvo canceled plans to merge
· with French' carmaker Renault and
fon:cd out the man who made the
deal, Chairman Pehr G. Gyllenhammar.
. The moves Thursday carne in
· response to opposition from the
' auto and truck maker's Swedish
. shareholders, who feared French
- dominance. Tbe merger would
· have created the world's sixth·
: largest automaker.

''

sen-

Volume of u. s. farm exports
expected to drop in 1994
WASHINGTON (AP) ExporterS of com and other coarse
' grains, soybeans and wheat face
grim prospects in 1994, while the
year holds out hope for exp!ll'len of
mea~ milk products, fruits and veg- ·
etables. the Agriculture Dejlartment
says.
A repQrt issued Tuesday project·
ed fann exportS at $42.~ billion in
the fiscal year that started OcL I,
no change from the previous year.
But exports of coarse grains,
soybeans and wheat will d~line
$800 million in value because of
sma,ller demand, higher U.S. prices
and increased competition, the
report said. '
.
What's worse, it said, the volwne of so-&lt;:al1ed bulk exports will
drop to 94 million tons. That's 15
percent below fiSCII11993's level of
110.5 million tons and the lowest
volume since 1986, when a sharp

.

spring. USiug lheic "s~" · the spflni weevil infeswion by,
for breedina would aivc catfish ==n~~o~~:;~
firms
an economic advanllle over ..... ~..- R--..... Service's'
other f!lrmcrs, the Agriculture u"'
-v .,.......
,...__.__
_ t said.
,
Boll eevil' Research Unit ip;
~;;~·
· ved calfisb lines will Suutsville, MiJs:
i•
"The tubel don 'tlllniCt t.....ft.
be availab to com~~~C~tial,produc....._
ers sooner t]la 0 anY. produced cia! inseciS and are al!lfe lltem!ltbrousll convenliooal bretding. .
live to spraying, especially ncar•
"But we're still talking years townships or en~S,.
down the ~" said rqroductive :?.dfi~r:;:..~~-;:!~
r pbysiologjst Cheryl Goudie.
· For besuesults, one tube sboulil.
WASHINGTON (AP) -'- Bait· be ~laced every 100 feet around the
il\g the )loll w~vil just got a bit · penmeter of the field, two to four
easier f!ll' c:ouon fanners.
. times every growing seMOD.
·.
New, effective flail tubes to con.Thomas Plato, of Plato In!lus- ·
trol the pest are· now available triCs, said tile tubes are elfe;Ciive 1Q ·
tbroush a HoUSton company, Plato to 14 times lpnger than a single'
Industries, Inc. '
insecticide spray.
'
Much lik.e roach traps, the
Te5ts were conducted in ~992 m,
biodegmdablo paper tubes use only Tel!BS. Oklal)oma, l..ouisi,ana, Mis·
5 percent to 10 percent of the sissippi, Altansas, Alsbama, Geor; ·
amount of malath1on, the insecti. gia and :renne:s5ee•
. •.
cide usually sprayed on colton.
The tubes, which are available·
They anract the pests with in boxes of 60, including ,
pheromone, a synthetic version of pheromone dispensers, dowels to;
boll weevils' scent, and have an hold the tubes and two pairs of ·
insec~cide coatilig.
gloves, will also be sold in Mexico,:
When plaCed atound test fields Central America and South 1\meri~
in eight states, the tu!Jes reduced. ca.
· ''

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
defeats
Lancers

•

Regional Food C~ter in Logan.
The $1.6 million Regional Food
Center will handle food distribution ·
in Athens, Hocking, Perry, Jackson, Vinton, Galli&amp;, Meil!S, Washington and Morgan Counues.
According to Paul Reed, chairman of the campaign in Meigs
County, the ftrst offerin~ made by
the congregations raue&lt;l over
$3,000.
Additional offerings for the new
center will be taken throughout the
next four years.
Construction on the center is 10

setting up chairs for a Sunday religious service on the USS Arizona
when the Japanese dropped their
liombs. He escaped death a few
minutes later by diving overboard
as the ship sank.
Fifty-1wo years after his escape,
Nelson will be returned to the ship
Tuesday - to be buried beside his
Arizona shipma1es who died in the
attack on Pearl Harbor.
'Nelson's wife; Loralee, of
Houston will hand over his ashes to
a National Park Service diver, who
will place tliem inside the rusted
hulk 1hat remains on lhe harbor
floor beneath the USS Arizona
Memorial.
Nelson, who was 18 at the time
SPACE CENTER, Houston
of the attack, went on to spend the (AP)- Astronaut Kathryn Thornnext 30 years in the Navy. He died ton, lifted high by a shuttle crane,
June 14 at the age of 69.
held a 400-pound twisted solar
Nelson will be the ninth Arizona panel from the Hubble Space Telesurvivor to be buried with his ship- scope over her head, let go and
mates, who remain entombed in the watched it slowly drift away as
battleship.
·
space debris .
. · One of the 1,177 shipmates was
Thornton and her spacewalking
Gtady's uncle, Jack Nelson, who partner, Tom Akers, then installed
died when the Arizona was hit with new solar wings on Hubble today.
a -1,760-pound bomb on the morn- . The discarded wing - a thin
ing of Dec. 7,1941.
blanket of plastic - began flipping
The public ceremony, "Remem- as space shuttle Endeavour backed
ber World War II," will include away. Sunlight glinted off die goldHawaii National GUard planes fly· en surface of the panel as it floated
i~g over in the "missing man" for·
like a lost kite, dramatic with the
mation. The guest speaker will be blue ball of Earth in the backR:ichard Best, a Navy captain who ground.
was a pilot alioatd the aircraft carri"It looks like a bird," Thornton
er Enterprise the day of the attack.
said as the shuttle moved farther
· The Navy will conduct a private and farther away.
&amp;ervice aboaid the memorial. It will
Installing new electricity~gener­
include prayers, wreath presenta- ating solar panels was the purpose
tions, a 21-gun salute and the play- of today's spacewalk, the second of
ing of taps.
five to correct Hubble's bad vision,
jilters.and other problems. The $1.6
billion telescope got two new pairs
of gyroScopes and new fuses dur·
ing Sunday's spacewalk by two
other Ell(leavour astronauts.
Both excursions required extra,
unexpected work: tossing the solar
panel today and fussing over a misaligned telescope door on Sunday.
Tht discarded panel joined
6, 700 other pieces of space junk
being tracked by the U.S. Space
Comr~Jand and was expected to
star in orbit for a year before
fallmg through the aanosphere and
burning up.
·
.
Hubble's old solar wings shook
every time the telescope moved In
and out of daylight The one that
was scrapped was badly twisted
and could not b!l rolled up for
trali5port horne. It retraCted about a
· third of its 40-foot length and then
stopped. ·

begin in mid-1994 and is expected
to be in operation at the start of
1995.
The Southeastern Ohio Food.bank:.Jo~at.ed in Nelsonville cure
rently serYJces ·83· food disttibuiion
outlets in the nine-county area.
These include food, pantries, soup
kitchens and lunch sites.
The new 14,000 square-foot
foodbank will meet the storage
needs of both the current foodbank
and kitchen operations and will
allow for growth in both programs.
According to Bob Garbo,
deputy direciOr of Tri-County
Community Action, the building of
the new center will allow the six
food pantries located in the county
to purchase larger quantities and a
wider variety of foods.
"The improvements of the new
facility will have a large impact on
the working families whose depen-

·

"There are lots or people up
there who think this is a bad idea
and don't wanl to see i1 passed
because it works for them," he said.
Members of congress are able to
send three mailings to constituents
each year at taxpayer expense.
Strickland said ibis often
amounts to free political propaganda for legislator'S. He said he spent
less on his entire campaign last
year 1han former congressman
Robert McEwen spent on these
mailings.
"Some senior members of my
pany are frightened for me,"
Suickland said. "I've had some
members ask me 'Can~t you justify
just one?'"

Meigs Commissioners
accept water project bid

dence on our services is growing,"
Garbo said. "The program will
also provide benefiiS to the Senior
Citizel\ .programs by allowing the
~s to ·stretch their 4oll!its="·
Last lear, over. 2,300,000
pounds o food were distributed to
more than 80,000 needy people,
with 101,681 pounds being distributed to 5,581 needy in Meigs
County.
Had adequate freezer and storage space been available, some
700,000 additional pounds of food
could have been delivered to
26,000 more people in the nine·
county area, many of those children, il was reponed.
A salvage area with a modem
conveyor system will allow the
new foodbank to recover thousands
of pounds of food and personal
items that in the past would be
thrown away, the food bank official
said.

Meigs County Commission
unanimously approved a $33.352
bid to complete the Rutland water
projecl duting last Wednesday's
meeting. ~:··!Oxca¥1tin« Inc., of
Racine, will install 1,285 feet of
six-inch pipe.
Durin~ the meeting, commissioners wd they did not expect the
project to be completed by the end
of this year.
The bid increased $3,892 from
the original offer because the company had to re-calculate the prevailing wage, Commissioner Janet
Howard said . Commission had
tabled the bid during the Nov. 30
meeting.
In other business. commission:
• Meigs Litter Control will
receive two state grants totaling,
$62,000.
.
• reappointed Nora Rice and
Jean Weaver to four-year terms to
the Meigs Counly Board of Menial
Retardation/Developmental Disabilities.
• approved an unidentified size
bond for a new county coun
employee - Kelly Milam. Milam
will work in . Judge Patrick
O'Brien's office.
Commission approved with one
And early this morning, it also
had the new solar wings. They will vote the following appropriations:
not be unfurled until Friday.
The astronauts "bave definitely
earned their Dr. Goodwrench certificate, and service station Endeavour has qualified for a triple A rating," said David Leckrone, Hubble's senior project scientist ,
A candlelight vigil will be held
Musgrave and Hoffman were to on the upper parking lot in
replace Hubble's wide field-plane- Pomeroy Friday evening at 7 p.m.
tary camera and magnetometers by the Meigs Chapter of Mothers
duiing spacewalk No. 3, beginning Against Drunk Driving (MADD).
late tonight. The new camera conThe local group is joining other
tains corrective minors to compen- chapters around the state in vigils
sate for the error in Hubbl~'s pri- being held in remembrance of
loved ones los1 in alcohol-related
mary mirror.
accidents.
Ellen Jane Rought, alternate
state representative from the chapter, and Jerry Rought, victim advocate, are chairmen of 1he vigil.
They will be assisted by Pat
Thoma, state representative.
Reggie Robinson, known locally
as "Rockin' Reggie" will be Ruest

Spacewalking astronauts
install new solar wings
While Thornton and Akers were
detaching the deformed panel late
Sunday, the panel flexed with the
slightest mouon and flapped like a
sheet on a clothesline on a windy
day.
The European Space Agency
made both the old and new panels.
Story Musgrave and Jeff Hoffman spent nearIy eighl hours in the
open cargo bay Sunday, held up by
the misaligned door to the gyro·
scope compartmenl. When they
were through, the Hubble had six
working gyroscopes again to guide
i~ three electronics units to run the
gyros and a new set or eight fuses.

unsoliciled mailings. Sttickland
said the reform measure could save
millions - and he is not overly
confident il will be approved.

• $13,544.54 to Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Districl's
equipmem fund.
• $5,000 to the Common Pleas
Court.
.
• $1,500 to the Common Pleas
Court.
• $500 10 the Common Pleas
Court.
• $2,542.25 to the Communily
Corrections Program.
• $1,000 to the Community Corrections Program.
• $1,500 to the Community Corrections Program.
• S2S,OOO to the Mental Retardation/Developmental Disabilities'
capital improvemeniS fund.
Commission also approved with
one vote the following transfers:
• $240 from probate supplies to
juvenile supplies.
• $180 from other supplies to
juvenile supplies.
• $4 30 from additional help to
juvenile supplies.
• $200 from juvenile per diem to
juvenile supplies.
• $1,000 from juvenile mileage
to juvenile supplies.
• $200 from juvenile witness
fees 10 juvenile supplies.
• $500 from juvenile guardian
ad item to juvenile supplies.

Meigs MADD Chapter
to hold candlelight vigil
speaker. He is ·a counselor for
Health Recovery in AlhensJRobinson performs regularly at dances
for teenagers. and at drug and alcohol free gathers where he gives lectures on abuse. After the vigil
Robinson will present a program of
music on the parlcing loL
The program will consist of the
Rev. James Acree, Hillside Baptist
Church pastor, giving th e invocation and benediction, special music
by Mr. and Mrs. Ron Clonch and
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Hood, Beth
Mayer singing "America, the Beau·
tiful", and James Soulsby closing
with "God Bless America".

Mason voters approve levy
.

naut
work

vised

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Mason County vo1ers passed a programs are also ineluded in the
$3.8 million excess levy for schools levy.
Additional items are supplemenby a 482-vot.e margin in a special
election Slllw'day. The unofficial tal salaries to ali regularly
tally was 2,419 for the levy, 1,937 employed professional and service
pelSOnnel employees and supagainst.
Thiny·two percent of the regis- plements to the regular budget for
tered voters cast their ballots, and building improvements, utilities,
officials felt the weather conditions operation of plant, and funds for
may have kept many from going to · new facilities.
The levy will also provide for
the polls. A steady down~ur of
rain hit the county the enure day, community suppon of the Mason
County Public Library. Health
up into the evening.
The five-year excess levy will Deparanent and Wes1 Virginia
provide for flee textbooks, instruc- Cooperative Extension Services.
Excess collectioos annually are
tional materials, library books,
for capital imreference materials and general desipaled
ot1ice opc:qiing expenses. Co-cor- provements.
The levy will take effect July I,
ricular and extra-curricular trips,
vocational and early childhOod 1994.

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COmmentary

Page 2-The Dally $e!1tlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport,,Qhlo
Monday, DeCember 6, 1993

111 Court Street
Pome101. ObJo
DEVOTED TO 1'ID Jllf'I'ElU!:8T8 OJ' THB IIEIG8-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET I.EHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They 1bould be les1 llwt 300
words. All len&lt;:rs are subject to editing and mu.st be signed willt name,
address and ~lepbooe number. No unsigned lettat will be publisbed. leltal
should be in good taste, addJeuing issues, not penonlliliel.

Crime big problem
By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO - Crime is the biggest problem facing Mayor-elect Carty
·Finkbeiner who narrowly won by painting his ~t as soft on crime.
A recent rash of murders and drive-by shootmgs has scared residents.

Some said they have become ~ners in their homes.
" I've never seen it so bad, 'said Scott Thompson, 37, a mechanic who
lives on lite north side. "I'm always loolcing over my shoulder when I
leave the house."
"It's not safe anywhere," said Fred Robinso.n, 33, a cons~~on
worker who lives in lite south end. •'People are gerung shot while drivmg,
·walking on lite strecL And it's teen-agers who are committing most of tbe
crimes. They just don't give a damn."
There have been 47 murders in Toledo this year, two more than in
1992. Nine people have been killed in the last month. Dozens have been
injured in separate drive-by shootings. Police said most of the violence is
gang-related.
.
-The latest homicide victim was Victor Clayton, 32, of Atlanta. He died
· Monday, two days after being shot on a inner-city street. Cia~ 'Yas in
the city visiting his mother. Police have no suspects or mouve m the
shooting.
·
Police spokesman Sgt. An Marx said most of lhe homicides and
assaults are between people who lcnow each other. And he blamed drugs
for conttibuting to the problem.
.
"Drug addicts need money to get more drugs. Dru~s cloud th~1t ~;
· soning their senses and then they go out and commit brullll cnmes,
· Marx ;aid "But I don't thinlc Toledo's crime problem is much different
· lhat other cities.''
He said people are afraid because of the viciousness of some of the
crimes.
On Wednesday, the body of Bre~~ Na~arre, 33, ofTol~o. w~ found
lying on a west side street. Authonbes saJd she was walking outside her
house when someone grabbed her, beat her and smashed her skull with a
· HJO-pound rock.
.
.
Ms. Navarre was in critical condition Thursday at St Vmcent Medical
Center.
Police have nQ suspects or motive in the case.
The city created a special police department gang unit two months ago
that has arrested hundreds of people. But crime continues to plague the
community.
·
Finkberner, who defeated opponent Mike Ferner by 672 votes out of
:92,276 votes cast, focused on Toledo' s crime problems during his carn-

patfF~ noted that Ferner, a fellow councilmen, voted against spe~ding

$250,000 in October to put more o~cers on inner-city streets:
.
Finkbeiner proposed impleme~ung offic~r foot patrol.s m nelgh'?&lt;&gt;r• hoods throughout the city and seamg up police precmcts 10 some nel~h­
: borhoods. Currently, officers gather in the downtown Safety Building
:· before going on patrols.
·
:· "We're looking at a lot. of options 10 make the city ~e. P~!~ all
. over the city have been saymg we have to address cnme, he saJd. We
: have to make our streets safe."
·That would be good news for Brenda Johnson, 27,. a mother of two,
: wbo lives in lhe near downtown area
·
·· "I can'tlet my kids go outside to play. I lceep them inside as much as
:; possible to keep them away from tbe gangs. The gangs have taken over,''
:-she said. ·

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Berryls World ·

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member or spouse" of an employee. An IHS I)Cficial told us there
weren'fmany violations of.the law
unlit lhe government starled hiring

WASHINGTON - . This faU,
Albert IWe nearly decided 10 mate
what he ntgardcd as tbe ultimate
sacrifice for his beloved wife of
five years: divorce her.
"I don't want my wife to go to
jail," says Hale. "lfl can save her
from gomg to jail by divorcing her
then that's a real option."
The possibility made the Hales
heartsick, and left their young
daughter - who overheard one of
their hushed discussions - distraughL But a HiO-year-old federal
law offered little latitude. The
Trading with Indians Act of 1834
carries a six-month jail sentence
and/or up to $5,000 fme, and the
"case" against Regina Hale
appeared to be open and shut. If
there's a lesson, it may be that old
and obsolete laws die hard.
The law prohibits all "commercial" ttading with American Indians by Indian Health Service or
Bureau of Indian Affairs employees or "in the name of a family

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
greater numbers of Native Americans whose spouses often work on
the reservstions and own bilsinesses. The two main employers on
most reservations are tbe tribal
government and the fedezal. govemmenL
Albert and Regina are American
Indians who were born and reared
on the Navaho reservation in Window Rock, Ariz . She is now
employed as a personnel slllffing
ass1slllnt for the IHS. He has practiced law on the reservation since
1972. They are raising Regina's 9-

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You want the best in life for offices located ihroughout the state.
yourself and your family - a decent BVR provides assislllnce to people
income, a comfortable home, a who have physical, mental or emofeeling of security, and full com- tiona! disabilities, while BSVI
munity participation through
employment and living opponunities. These goals don't change just ____J_' _ _ _ _ _...;:;;_
because you have a disability.
In Ohio, the Rehabilitation Serr serves Ohioans who are blind or
vices Commission (RSC) provides have visual disabilities.
·
vocational rehabilitation and other
In vocational rehabilitation, a
services to people with disabilities \b-trained counsetor .works with the
so that they can get jobs, live inde~ individual who has a disability on a
pendently, and achieve thefr goals, one-on-one. basis, planning a perjust like everyone else. This is sonalized rehabilitation program
accomplished through RSC's leading 10 employment. Counseling
Bureau of Vocational Rehabililll- is provided throughout rehabilitation (B VR) and Bureau of Services lion. Other services might include
for lhe Visually Impaired (BSVI) various evaluations, physicaVmen-

•
IToledo la7" I

year-old daughter in their own Hale, as well as Ol)ler Indian coubouse on an acre-and-a-half sized ples who work for the IHS or the
lot on tb~, reservation, because BIA and who own businesses on
that's "whtte we' re from." ..
reservations.
.
There they lived as a normal
In another case, Karen Arvl80,
happy family until one morning who worked last summer in
when Regina opened the mail and CroWnpoint, N.M., as a community
discovered that tbe marriage ren- outreach worker tp help 1~ the
dered her in "violation" of the causes of a mystei'ious fatal VU'IIS m
Trading with Indians Act and the Southwest. almost lost her job
would be "cause for severe disci- because of the law. When her busplinary action, as well as criminal . band applied for a loan at the BIA
penalties."
to open a gas station on the Navaho
"We were appalled by the let- reservation IHS informed her that
ter... but what do you do? How do she would have to resign if he startyou as a married couple resolve ed the business.
this? Maybe the best thing to do is
"This is one of those llnaChroget divorced," Albert Hale told our nisms," Rep. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., IOld
associate Andrew Conte.
us. "The law was needed ~ !50
When the law was enacted, years ago, but now you don t ~ced
Congress feared that non-Indian 11. This is just one of those thmgs
officials of the War Department we ought to get off the books
would set up shops on the reserva- because unfortunately real people
tions to fleece Indians of the funds
are in violation of real law and we
they received from -the government. don't intend for that situation to
exist." Kyl and Sen. John McCain,
Nearly 160 years later, this dusty
R-Ariz., are leading the crusade to
relic is haunting Regina and Albert
repeal the law in Congress.
Though the law has seldom
been enforced Ulis century. the few
instances where it has been
invoked caused inconvenience
rather than imprisonment.
In the early 1980s, a then-assislllnt secrewy of BIA who wanted
to rent his house to an Indian was
prevented from doing so. An official at IHS IOid us other employees
. of that agency had been prevented
from selling Avon products in predominantly Indian neighborhoods.
Health and Human Ser\\ices
Secretary Donna Shalala has
promised not to fire or prosecute
IHS employees because of violations, but word has apparently not
reached Arizona. An IHS official
there says "they haven't heard
anything" about not prosecuting
the cases and therefore the Hales
and the handful of other people
affected by the law are "stilll)llder
the ~un . " Regina promises to fight:
• My daughter heard us the
other rught lalking about getting a
divorce and she ... started to cry
because she didn 'I underslllnd,"
Regina said. "We're going to live
through Ibis and we're going to
fight (tbe law)."
Jack Anderson 1nd Michael
Binstein are writers ror United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Sen. ,an .M. Long

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"That 's a coincidence, the higher marginal tax
rate was a disincentive for ME to save and
produce, too!"

.~Today in history .

handguns. Its-seven:-_year road to
passage was as rocky as it was
lengthy. On more than one occasion, it appeared doomed by the

.

Hodding Carter Ill
tenacious opposition of the National Rifle Association.
But its .backers simply would
not give ub. Jim· Brady, President
Reagan •s lormer press secrewy
who was crippled by a wl)uld-be
presidential assassin in 1981, and
his wif«:, Sarah, carried their campaign from one end of the nation 10
the next. With ~h setback, they
redoubled their effor.ts, playing
point in an effort that wouldo 't lalce
no for an answer. Eventually the
politicians caught up with an elec·
torate ICITOI'ized lly ~ crime and.
fed up wilh gun violence. ·
"How sweet it Is, how long it ·
took," Jim Brady said after Clinton
made it official. The law will bring
"the end of unchecked madness
and lhe commencement of a heartfelt crusade for a safer and a saner
counll)'."
Over-optimistic? Defmitely, but

.·

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, Dec. 6, the 340th day of 1993. There are 25 days
In 1957, America's first attempt at putting a satellite into orbit'blew up
.left in the year.
.
on the liuni:h pad ar Cape Canaveral, Fla.
•
'
·. Today's Highlight in Hislay:
In 1969, a concert by, ~ Rolling S10ncs at the Allllmont Spce4way in .
: On Dec. 6, 1889, Jefferson Davis, the only president of the ConCeder- Livermore, Calif., was marred by ·the deaths'of four people, including one
· di · N 0r1
· who was SIA~ by a Hell's Angel.
· ·' · •
~te Stath~ 0!.Amenea, ed m ew cans. . . ·
'
1!11973, House Minority ~der Gerald R. FQI\t was sworn in as vi¢e
·,
IS uate: •
.
'den
eedin" S . T A
•
;. In 1790, Co'ngrciss !DOVed from New Yorlt to Philadelbhia.
prest 1, succ
&amp; PJtO . 8,0C"!'"
·'
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.
·: In ·1884 Army engineers completed construction ol the Washington
In 1989, the worst mass shoolillg 10 C~ hiStory toli:.ptace as 14 ,
, Monument: · ,
•
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,
WOJI!Cn were gunned down at the ~nivers~ty of¥ontreal's SC,hool of engi' In 1917 more than 1P1J people died when two munitions ship~ COl lidnccrmg by a man who then ~k hiS OWl! life. '
. ,
.
,
~· in the ~ at Halifax, Nova Scotia. setting off an explosion that devIn l9B9, Egon KrenZ res1gned as ~r of East Germany. .
. . .
4stated the city.
.
'
.
• · ,. Ten y~ ago: A bo!'lb planted on a bus m 1~ exploded, ~ling
· In 1921, an Anglo-;Jrish treaty' was signed in London, providing for
Silt Isr~l~. and wOundinl! 44. Tile ~ Fatah facnon of~ P!JO claimed
: lion of the Irish Free Sllte
•
·
·responsability, but later said the boiDbmg was unauthorized. .
.
~re:n 1923 txesidentialillllhss ·..,ai broadCast on nadio for the ftrst time . Five years .~o: Soviet Presidcn~ M~l Gorbachev an:ived f~ his
· Presi~ Oaotldae lpOb 10 a · · t aesslon of Congress
second U.S. VISit to address the Uruted .Nallons and meet w1th PresidMt
1957, AFi.-CIO
to expel the tntel'll8tional Brother.and
Bush. The
Atlantis. landed in
hood -of Teamsters. Tbe Teamsters were readmitted to the federation in Cal1fornta. Rock n roll p1oncer Roy OrbJSOD died near Nashville, Tenn.,
J987- , &lt;'
at age 52.

011

~ In

a

members~

R~gan

Pres!~nt~l

~ace ~huttle

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• IColumbus Iss• I
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W..VA.

·- ----Weather----..
South-Central Ohio '
· Mostly cloudy tonight. Low in
··the upper 20s. West winds arol)lld
.. 10 mph. Tuesday, variable cloudiness. High in the lower 40s.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday, mostly cloudy with
·a chance of rain or snow. Morning

lows in the low.er and mid-20s.
Hi~hs in the mid-30s to lower 40s.
Fatr Thursday. Lows in the 20s.
Highs mid-30s to lo"!'er 40s. Friday, a chance of ram or snow.
Lows upper 20s to lower 30s.
Highs in the lower and mid-40s.

--Area deaths--

Meetln1 canceled
The December meeting of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association
hilS been canceled. The next meeting will be held on 1an. 12 with
new officers to be elected.

· Audrey M. Gaffney, 72, Massil-lon, died Friday, Nov. 3, 1993, at
"Masaillon Community Hospital. ,
· Born hi Ches~er, she was a
·homemalcer, a member of the New.man Baptist Church and enjoyed
·dealing in antiques.
:, Survivors mcltide a daughter
'and son-in-law, Tammy and Don-ald Wolgamott and Herman E.
"Gaffney, all of Massillon; a grand.son Michael Howard Wolgamott;
·sisrers, Anceil VanMetre of Middleport and Corrine Ambrose of
Pomeroy. · ·
· She was preceded in death by
"her husband, Herman H. Qaffney,
in April, 1986, and by two brothers
and ortc sister. . ·
'
Services will be held today at
:Newman Baptist·Church with the
Rev. Dennis K. McDonald officiating. Burial will follow in Newman
Cemeter}'. .

Villa Lee

.

·~he body will lie in SUite one

.prior to the service Tuesday.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lJ.3.HI)

fUbUihed nery aftenlooa, Molldl)' tbrouab
fridriy. 111 COWt St., 1'0-y. Oltlo by die
Oilio VIlle)' Pul&gt;lllhla&amp; Co_,/WultJmodll

'""· Pomeroy, Oblo 45169. Pli. 992·1156.
Second .... pot11p pold 1&lt; Po.,...y, Oltlo.

Me-. ~ Alloclllecl Prell, lltd.lhl, Oltlo

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NCWI,_ Allocllllol, 'llatlo,P I AdYWilllll

R-..uti,., Jrllllwil IIIWIP"'" Salol,
7J!.. Tl!lfd A•ntie, - · Yart.. Now •Y..t
i00t7.
.
.
I'OSTMAS'l1lll: Scad - . . . ....., . lo 11te
Dally SollliiOI, Ill c .... s •• PoDIIIOy, Oltlo
&lt;U169.
SIJUCUP'I'IOM RA1U

lr c.m.. or Mo&amp;or .....
Doe Woet. .•.- ............................................$1.110
Doe Moolb. ............... - ..... ......,.... ,...........$6.95
Doe Yw..........................................__..$13.:10\ ·
SINGLICOPY
NICI
llolty......c.....-...........................- 3 5 Ctltti

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... diold.... paytbo- .., :
........... dlncl to'llte llaDy Soatlad
00 I - . ...

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baoll. Cntdlt Willi!&lt;

No lubacri~ou by m~n 'Perml~ In-biqO&lt;iit:l!!"llin\&lt;0
lianllal&gt;le.
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Committee to meet
The Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department commiuec
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Bedford town hall. All Bedford residents are welcome.

Members to take donations
The FOE Auxiliary #2171 will
Trina Ann Moore, 40, of Daymeet
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. People
ton, dieil Saturday, Dec. 4, 1993, at .
should
bring donations for the
Fairborn..
'
needy
and
baskets. The group will
Born on 1an. 27, 1953, at
inlllll
a
vice
president and initiate
Mason, W: Va. she was the daughnew
members.
ter of Charles Wesley Moore and
Mary Kaylor Moore of Reedsville.
She worked as a waitress and DIDDer to be held
The Ageless Classmates will
was a member of the Nazarene
hold
their Christmas dinner party at
Church of Fairborn.
6
p.m.
Monday (tonight) at Dale's
In addition to her parents, she is
in
Gallipolis.
Secret sisters will be
survived by tbrcc sisters and brothrevealed.
ers-in-law, P61111Y Sue and Eugene
Cooper, Kissimmee, Fla.; Pamela VFWtomeet
Tuppers Plains Post 9053 of the
Joyce· and Charles Nurkkala,
Veterans
of Foreign Wars will
Gwinn, Mich.; and Teresa Lynn
meet
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at post
and William Burnette, Fairborn,
home.
All
members
urged to
along with several aunts and
uncles.
.
Graveside services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Gilmore
Cemetery, Pomeroy. The Rev. Her- VETERANS MEMORIAL
bert Grate will officiate and burial
Saturday adniissions- None.
will be in Gilmore Cemetery,
Saturday
Pomeroy_ Friends may call at the Reese, Racine.discharges - Gary
funeral home today (Monday) 2 to
Sunday admissions- None.
4 and 6to s p.m.
Sunday discharges- None.

Hospital news

. Villa c. Lee, 86, a resident of
Mason, W. Va., died Saturday,
necember4. 1993,inPieasantV-atJey Hospillll, Point Pleasant. She
was member of the former E.U.B.
:Church.' .
· Born May 26, 1907 in West
Columbia, W.Va., she was the
·daughter of the late 1ohn Thomas
and Cluistine M. Edward-Stewart
. Survivors include one daugh~'in-law Patricia A. Lee of Pomt
Pleasant, W.Va.; three sisters
Wilma McDaniels of Phoemx,
'Ariz. Thelma Powell of Toronto,
·ohio' and. Lola Dudding of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.; two granddaugh·ter"s Kyla R. "·arpenter of Vinton
""
s
al'ld Mala A. Bumgardner of 1•
Albans, W.Va.; two great grandchildren Nicholas R . Bumgardner
Of St. Albans, W.Va. and several
: nieces and nephews.
She was prece\led in death by
her parents; husband Charles
Roben Lee in 1976; son .RobertER.
Lee
in 1971 and
three
SISters and
va
Wellington,
Eula
Graham
Freda Saunders.
· Friends 111ljy call today from 6 to
g p.m. at Foglesong Funeral Home.
Services will be held Tuesday,
'nee. 7 at 1 p.m. at the Christian
Brethren Church in Mason, W.Va .
with Rev. James Lewis officiating.
'Burial will be at Suncrest Ceme-

.

Chapter to meet
The Racine Chapter of #134,
Order of the Eastern Star, will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Monday (tonight) at
the hall. New officers will be
installed.

Trina Moore

Audrey M. Gaffney

.$2)18
AO

EMS ·a·nswers
f"IVe' ·call&amp;

this date at the Columbus weather
station was 70 ~ in 1956. The
record low :was 3 m 1977.
s~ !llis mornirlg was • 7:39
a.m. Sunset will be at 5:06p.m.
Aroulld tbe aation
Clouds and {og hung over the
eastern part of the country this
maning from Albany, N.Y.• as far
west as Dei!Oit, while snow fell in
Des Moines. San Francisco saw
clear skies.
Cold northwestern winds are
expected to usher snow squalls
onto the eastern shores of the Great

Meigs announcements-

PTOtomeet
The Parent Teachers Organization will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Rutland Elemenlllry. The public is
welcome.

of their goals in life, as· well ·a:s,
offer a tremendous boost to our
state and community economy.
Also during this time, .nearly
67,000 Ohioans received some I)W
of services from Rehabilitation Setvice Commission, over 2,000 of
which were local residents.
If you or someone you know ha5
a disabili,ty and would lilce to lean)
more about vocational rehabilillltion, call RSC toll-free at 1-800
282-4536 (voiceffTY), and as
always, if you have questions or
comments on this or any other
issue feel free to conlllct me. My
address is the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio, 43215, and my phone
number is (614) 466-8156.

the Bradys are C!ltitled. They have no longer in the court majority, he
already proved,that perseverance refused to give up, passionately ·
pays. It's a lesson that has to be reasserting the primacy of his conrelearned over .and over again, but victions in one dissent after anothhappily for us all, history is stuffed er. Some politicians' names ~Y. be
to the rafters with evidence on its better remembered, but JustJcc
behalf.
Brennan's works will endure far
So was the East Room of the longer.
'
The final recipient was 1ohn
White House on that same late
November afternoon when the Minor Wisdom of New Orleans,
president awarded five Presidential former mililllry ·officer and former
Medals of Freedom, two of thetn Republic~ national committeeman
posthumously. One went 10 the late who in nearly 40 years on the fed·
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood eral bench put his rare integrity and
Marshall, legal architect of segre- intellect in the service of far-reachgalion's downfall and first black ing change in his native region~ He
American on the high Court. Anoth- knew and loved the South, loved it
er went to Washington-based auor- enough to insist that it cleanse itself
ney 1oseph Raub, who until his of official racism and inequity,
recent -death was one of the best- knew it well enough to lcoow how
known and most passionate fighters hard the transformation would be. '
for equal rights and economic jusMen 11nd women cried during
lice in America
the Brady bill signing and men and
Both were great men whose women cried as JUIJ Clin!Qn mad!;
greatness was hard-earned. They his graceful, thoug~tful way
pushed tbe rock of change up the tli~ough, the presentations of th4
hill repeatedly, only to see it roll Presidential Medals of Freedom!
baok almost as often. Even when the tears were of joy and happi;
each eventually reached the top of 'ness, but also of reme.mbranc~
a particular rise, no one had to about the years of failure that preexplain to either man that the ceded success.
;
heights they newly commanded
Looking at _Sarah and Iint
were plateaus rather than final des- Brady, listening to the presidenl
tinations. Each kept pushing on talk abou.t the medal winnersl
unlit the da~ he died. ·
reflecting on the colleciiye;'181ionat
Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, consciousness they had taJsed and
"Gi:andnKlther of the GladeS," and the institutir;ms they .had helpe~
·retired Supreme Court· Justice ,:edcem, I wished th'atevery Ameri•
Willi~ Rrennan rose froro their can would have been prescnL W~
wheel~ to receive th~ ,JIIeda!S jleriodically need to be remin4e&lt;l '
.from 1M president. Ms. ~la!ii4' that mel!ningful ch1111ge d~s ,nof
1q3. She hal ~nt mas~ of'thOse come ~ily, an!! will not ~!DC ~
&gt;'*' haullbg 10 proteCt· "die frig- all Without silstained coiDDiltme!IL'
lie ecosyarcm of the Florida Ever- It is alwaY. templi_ng to wallc' away
gl~" 8nd IQ adv1nce the cause . .froin a tobglt light, '?UI it's ho wa)'.
of equal rights , as her citation' tobuildajustll!ciety.
'
:
notecl. Sho bas spent two U(etimes .
· •. - • ··•
•
proving ihi11 wOIDiln's piKe m1y , Hoddln1 Cartt;r Ill, ,former;
be ill the holne, but that home Is lhe Stitt De(Hirtment ~J!OkdDIIDl
aad IWird·wlallln~reporter,
world itself.
•
,... b"....
.._...._tedl-l
cifi
1usliceBtennan·'Sin~tyopintori!""! pu ......,,, ... ~-u
·
'
1d d
1
MIIDStreet, 1 W.atnlfOD, Q.C.:.
1~ns ovet severa ~· es 9~ te·
televWon prOduction .com·
sunply redrew the nallon's polillcal panv,
and SQCiallandscapc. When he WI$
•

·PA.

IND.

Nati·onal heroes' long struggles ________
· ·· · · ;;But patience, cousin, and shuffle the cards, til our hand is the
stronger one" -Sir Walter Scou,
''Quentin Durward.''
To hear the critics talk, we
Americans are an impatient bunch.
We take the ax to the wilderness
and bulldozers to slums and expect
Utopia to arise from the stumps and
rubble. When it doesn't, we are
more disappointed than we should
be and, too often, walk away from
the unfinished work and toward
more promising projects. According to the conventional wisdom,
ours is a short-term society in
which six months is the far horizon
and one year is eternity.
There is ·more than a lillie truth
in the indictment, but more than a
little exaggeration as well. On one
recent White House afternoon two
presidentiill ceremonies reminded
me that if some Americans expect
inslllnt gratification, others are
capable of long campaigns against
heavy odds.
The first reminder came when
the president signed tbe so-called
Brady bill, mandating a five-day
waiting period for the purchase of

•

IMansfield l·ss• I•

'

llll restoration, vocational training,
necessary books or supplies, and
job placement. ·
The rehabililllr,ion program is
extremely personaliZed and focuses
on each individuals abilities and
interest. With this strong effort to
personalize the program, it may
take several months to several
years for an individual to complete
vocational training and achieve
employment
During 1992 and 199?. over
7,600 Ohioans were rehabililllted
and given the opportunity to
become employed with assislllnce
from RSC. Of those, 265 were residents of the counties in Ohio's 17th
Senate District. These people are
now able to realize and enjoy many

By The ANoditecl I'J'as ·
A col4 (loot closing la on Obio
from the west wiU start precipilllion in the fonn of rain. In northern
Ohio, the rain wilf'mix with or
change to snow this afternoon or
evening and end tonight.
As this system exits the slllte
TueSday. Another period of unsettled weather will move into the
Great Lakes and Ohio Valley for
the middle of the weet along with
near normal temperatures.
The record high tempCrature for

MICH.

State offers asslstance ~to._..disabled
'

.·Cold front will bring rain, snow into Ohio ·

•

Accn-Weatb~ forecast for

Native Americans hurt by·century-old law

&gt;

·.•..-.•
..

Theailly, ~. 7

.

.

The Daily Sentinel

'

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

.

OHIO Weather

•

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 6, 1H3
••

.

attend.

Chester trustees meeting
Chester Township TrusteeS will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Chester
Town Hall.
Chester D of A to meet
Chester Council 323 Daughters
of America will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m, Charter will be draped in
memory of Leda Mae Kraueter and
Betty Roush. Quarterly birthdays
will be observed. Potluck refreshments. Members encouraged to
wear white. ·
No square dance Friday
There will not be a square dance
at the Tuppers Plains Veterans of
Foreign Wars Post 9053 Friday
night.
Party slated
Tuppers Plains Post 9053 of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars and
ladies auxiliary will hold its
potluck ChristmaS dinner Saturday
at 6:30 p.m. Ladies auxiliary will
provide meat, rolls and drinks. All
members and families invited to
attend. Families to bring covered
dish. Santa will be there with treats
for the youngsters.

Woman charged
after mishap ·
Three charges were filed against
a Middlepon women following an
accident on the parlcing lot at Veterans Memorial Hospillll Friday
evening.
.
Trina Hudson, 38, Mtddlepon,
has been charged with failure to
control, driving without insurance,
and without a valid operator's
license.
Police said that she Ibid them
she was parking, wben she accidenllllly put her foot on the gas ins~
of the brake and the ear went 1010
the building near the entrance to
the emergency room. She was not
injured. The car had light damage
to the front end.

N(l'lhwesllater today witli tempt¥-

Lakes later today, while patcby
precipillltion is forecut f~ the
Uppa Midwest, w~ 1 few w:~­
es of snow could accumullte 10

.atures forecast to rise only inlo the

30s,

.

Mostly dry, cloudy weather 15
expected in the' Southeast and
Southwest, where temperiiW'CS are
expected to reach the 70s.
The high temperature for the
nation Sunday was 85 de!!rees ~~
the North Dade County Airport m
Rorida.

some areas.

Flurries and sprinkles are
expected 10 push into the NMheast
by tonight, with afternoon temperalUlU forecast 10 reacb into the 30s.
Skies were clear in Seattle, but
rain or snow is possible in the

Meigs County Court news
Pattick V. 1ohnson. Racine, seat
belt, $25 plus costs;
Alan L. Crisp, Plain City, speed,
$30 plus costs and seat belt, S25
plus costs;
.
Dennis J. Ault, Mtddleport,
driving under the infl!J~nce, $800
plus costs, six months jail suspended to 10 days;
David Homer, Racine, criminal
trespass, $50 plus costs, restraining
order;
Pam Shields, Coolville, speed,
$20 plus costs;
Matthew W. Falls, Reedsville,
equipment misuse, $10 plus costs;
Melissa Husk, Reedsville ,
speed, $22 plus costs, no scat belt,
$25 plus costs;
Johnny Little, Middleport,
speed, $22 plus costs;
David Barner, Racine, no operators license, $150 plus costs, speed,
$23 plus costs;
MichaelS . Henry , Portland,
driving under suspension, $150
plus costs, left of center, $20 plus
cosis;
Pauick S. Qeland, Pomeroy, no
operators license, $!50 plus costs;
Troy Brooks, Pomeroy, laking
deer out of season, $150 plus costs,
hunting priveleges suspended one
year, taking deer across a public
road, $50 plus costs; ·
Gregory Lees, Middlepon. talcing deer out of season, S150 plus
costs, hunting priveleges suspended
one year; ·
Edward M. Cranfield, Ripley ,
driving under the influence, $500
plus costs, three days in jail, driving under suspension, $150 plus
costs, failure to maintain control,
$20 plus costs;
Brian Halfill, Bidwell, possession of marijuana, $135 plus costs;
Louise Wiesman, Coolville,
passing bad checks, $65.13;
Richard C. Hollis, Cincinnati,
speed, $30 plus costs;
Linda L. Davis, Wellston,
speed, $30 plus costs;
John Lester Rumley, Fieldale.
Va., speed, $30 plus costs;
Anthony R . Collins, Eureka
Springs, Ark. , speed , $30 plus
costs·
G~ D. Bowers, Nelsonville,
seat belt, $25 plus costs.

The following cases were
resolved recently in the Meigs
County Court of Judge Pattick H.
O'Brien.
Fined were:
Terri M. Roush, Middleport ,
speed, $30 plus costs;
Walter R. Couch, Pomeroy.
speed, $30 plus costs;
Dennis L. Ripley, Hillsdale,
W.Va. speed, $30 plus costs;
Evaline F. Wolfe, Middlepon.
speed, $30 plus costs;
Madelyn R. Monaco, Smyrna.
Ga., speed, $30 plus costs;
Bradford M. Graves, Nelsonville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Wanda M. Cash. Roswell, Ga.,
speed, $30 plus costs;
David E. Young, Long Bouom,
Seat Belt, $15 plus costs;
Sharon K. Farley, Pomeroy ,
driving under suspension , $200
plus costs;
Thomas McClung, Reedsville,
driving under lhe influence, $750
plus costs, 10 days_ in jail, o!le
years license suspensiOn; and drivtng under suspension $200 plus
costs, 10 days in jail;
Albert
C.
Miner
111,
Williamstown, W.Va., speed, $30
plus costs;
Paula K. Dillon, Racine, failure
to control, $20 plus COSIS;
Anthony V. Froisi, ML Laurel,
N.J., speed $30 plus costs;
David R. Priest, Seward, Pa.,
speed, $30 plus costs;
. ..
Michael S. Jackson, Galbpobs,
expired registration, $30 plus costs;
Albert T. Falbo. Montgomery.
W.Va, speed, $30 plus COSIS;
Charles C. Calaway, Reedsville,
speed, $30 plus co~;
.
Daniel S. Pulhn, Nelsonvtlle,
speed, $30 plus costs;
Juanita L. Allen, Pomeroy,
speed, $30 plus COSIS;
.
David W. Harter, Coolv1lle,
speed, $30 plus cosiS;
Janet L. Dailey, Gallipolis,
speed, $30 plus cosiS;
Nathan B. Brown, Marietta,
speed, $30 plus costs;
1ack Mowery, Pomeroy. seat
belt, $25 plus costs;
John Everett ·c rews IIT, Ann
Arbor, Mich., speed, $30 plus
COS IS;

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dec. 3 discharges;- Nancy
Graham, Hobatt Baiter, Joyce Bar-.\
timus, Sophia Huggins, Virginia
Burgh, Larry Caldwell. Mrs.
Geroge Alderigi and daughter and
Betty Snyder.
Dec. 3 birth - Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Fetty, son; of Henderson ,
W.Va .
.
Dec ; 4 dischar~es - Carl
Tripeu, Curtis Gnmm. lean
Woods, Mrs. John Amos and son,
Mrs. Ernest Fetty and son and
Cheryl Johnson.
Dec. 5 discharges - Winney
Sanders, Terese Cordell, Mildred
Williams, Walter Perry and Patty
Chapman.

Units of tlie Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered"five calls for assislllnce
overnight Unitsrespondingincluded:
Saturday - 10:17 a.m. Racine
to Trouble Creek Road lames
Hincldey who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospillll; 2:20
p.m. Syracuse to College Road for
Michael Hubbard who was transported to VMH; 3:01 p.m.
R L s · R H
Pomeroy to oc.. prmgs 08 or
Faye Watson who was transported
to Holzer J'4edical Center; 4:20
M'ddl
0 b k
~m,. 1 eport to ver roo
ur.;ing Center for Margaret Ellis
who was.transported to VMH.
Sunday- 11:11 a.m. Pomeroy
to Butternut Avenue for Freda
Nickels who was transported to
VMH.

Deadline Tuesday
~pplications, for food baskets or
gifts will be taken between I 0 a.m.
~noon on Tuesday and Wednesday at the Salvation Army, Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.

li"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"ii

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .36 1/4
Ashland Oil ........................33 5/8
AT&amp;T ................................54 7/8
Bank One .......................... .37 3/4
Bob Evans ............ .............. 20 3/4
Charming Shop ......... .........12 1/4
Champion Ind .......................... 16
Oty Holding ........., ........... .32 1/2
Federal Mogul ...................27 7/8
Ooodyeat T&amp;R ................. .45 3/4
Lands End ......................... .41 1/4
Limite'd Inc. ........... ............17 3/4
Multimedia Inc . .................37 3/4
Point BliOCOill .......................... 15
Reliance Electric ................ 17 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ..................... .16
Shoney's Inc ...................... 21 7/8
Star Bank ........................... 33 1/4
Wendy Int'l ........................ 16 1/4
Worthington Ind..................... .I 8·
Stock reports are . the 1,0:30
'a.m. quotes provided by Ailvest
of Gallipolis.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

' .' ' .

7

SJ.H ......... IUTIMII SATJU..
Q .SIIMiUJN NHIHI'TIJIIDAY

HEY KIDS!

SANTA CLAUS Will BE AT THE
FARMERS BANK ON
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11th
BRING YOUR LIST!

We Are Changing For You. STOP!
Che1k Out Our landwlfh Bar.
With
•Home
. mad~

HOT DOGS

Sauce ,, ·

r.- '
~-:r---"1

.

. .. '

2/$1 00
·

:

BEACON S.TATION
'

211 West Secona

~B

::»tree•

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
6141992~2136

Route 7
Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783

6141667-3161

�'Sports

The D.aily Sentinel
·

FootbJ II

Ne

12

-OIIood

Odoodo r7, aJ!VI!UND 13

Utoh 122, Cloodooe l 01
S.W.99,''
·12
I.A. t..t..IOJ,I.A. Cioo&lt;n 102

W L T Pd.
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Pr PA

Phoc:IWt 117, Milwaube 91

New YOli. al lhah, 9 p.m.
Wubin.sum at Seatili; 10 p.m.

.667 289 197
.5132AUIO
.500 119 231
.013 136 272

a., ......

Don... _... ,........
I..A. llaiden .....
Sao Diot• .. .......
Saaalo ..............

293210
219225
:zjlC 205
190117

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

E...... DI.tdoo
T..,.
W L T Pc:l.
N.Y. Oiamo ....... 9 3 0 .750
D&amp;llaa................ 7 4 0 .1136
PIU!odolpb&gt;a ...... 5 6 0 .4S5
l'lu&gt;aU1 ............. 4 I 0 .333
WubinJt&lt;n ...-. 3 9 0 .250
C•lniDMIIH
.........-. 7 5 0 .583
Oo&lt;miL.. ........-. 1 5 0 .583
Oreen BIJ..... ... . 7 !J 0 .SI3
~ ......... 6 6 0 .500
Tampa Bay....... 3 9 0 .250
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210 189
2S!S %11
192217
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.750 353204
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7. Kanlu ................ - ..... S...l 1,.231

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8. ..... .... _,,.. S-1 1,070
9. u~ (1) ..................2-0 947

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IO.Louilvilla ...... ........... l -1
Il.Purduc ........... ...........s..o
12. lndima ...................... l -1
13. Syn.cl.llc ...................4-0
14. Arizona .................... 3-0

896
826
768

11
14
21

743
731
728

IS. Oklahoma St ............4-l
16. Illinoil ................. .....l-0

12()

18
19
8
16

17. MinnCKU .................4-2

641

15

18. Cloorpa Tech ............ 3·1
19. Wilconm ......... ,....... 2-0

583
3SS

24

20. Cincinnati ................. 4 ·1

354

23

21. C&lt;mnocti= .............. 3-0
22. ViJJjnia ....................2·1

342
l77

12

169

'20

163

22

Kanau Ci1y31. S•lWI16

1S. Califomia ......... ~ ...... 2·2

130

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Mexico

S=nda
,

Dac.ll
Jutralo l l
. , I p.m.
Ollcuo II T- y, 1 p.m.
CNdNNA.n at Now Bnjland, 1 p.m.
a..BV'BI.AND at llouakln, I p.m.
lndianapoUutH.Y. Oianla, 1 p.m.
LA. l.lau n New Orieanl, 1 p.m.
DaUu u Mizllrn·, 4 p.m.
ICanlu Cin' uDmwr.4 p.m.
Detmi1 at Jlhocmis. 4 p.m.
Soaalo ll LA IWdon. 4
Omen B1yat San Die&amp;o. p.m.

Florida

ne Top 25 •ma in The~ Auoc:iued
Proia 1993 ooUoso fooobaU fin~ ,...war
1611011 poll, wilh fim-place vo\u in
lhn&gt;ol)l Doe. •• lOla!
poinll baed on 2S poin111or a fini..Pace
vOlt roup ono point for a 2!i1h_-place
VOCO. and rinJdn&amp;ln lho pmiCIII poU:

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Clemaon IS, Futman 70
CoU. of Ch1rloaton 1 JEi,
Socllhom 71

IS
17

Soutb
Floridl 21. Alabarnl 13
Wisomtin 41, Michipn St. 20

'

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St. , . ,•., Col. I l l , -

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V.U.Pam'IS.-63

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12 Months $66.56_
STARrDELIVBRYDA'IB _ _.__
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Pomeroy, Ohio

CordiaUy Invites You To Share
in the Success of Our
"One Year New" Anniversary!!
al our

First Annual Open House!!
Tuesday, December 7th
;8:30a.m. thru 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, December 8th
thru Friday, Dec. lOth
8:30 a.m. thru 4:30 p.m.
REFRESHMENTS • DOOR PRIZES
"Stop by and say hello!"

Christmas
Greeting

992-2156

.

· Z..,uviUoltotecr..o 90, Nt;.lrll

....,

1 08 Mechanic Street

5t, Waloon
·

. 45 'Y...;. ~!5. Y-., Ooaney

·~

Williams &amp;
soc. Insurance .

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR ~ Dave or Bob

Ava.W. at Loder 219, Mllllepirt

46
=-~~" 26

......_~------------~-----1
r

I

for.Christmas Gift Glrilgl

a.,

56

:Jl~~~

CITY __._STAlE--ZIP--

•

14,tWt.a!.Jss

M:'73,'T.i."'llliiso-'

ADDRESS

GifT·CERTIFICATES

·M"':''!'-8.£..a.!L
-·'~C: ;- 52

n ' ~oiO
~---~-!..~, ~-s

-

Available This Year,
'

(1Z.16-14-8:50)
Jeremy Tolson 1-1-2=7, Mark
Whiting 6-0-2-14, Jeremy Dotson
3-0-3=9, Chad Nelson 4-1-0:11.
Nathan Gilders 2-0-0z4, Keith
McFee 1-0-1~3. Mike Mollohan 10-0=2. Totals: 18-Z.8fl0=50

Wuh all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Ch~tmas Greetings Edition
on December 23rd

PHONE

44.J • .
-llalao'73,~53

5

Gift to:

NAME

*Fqr laformatlon On All Aerobic Classes
Available, Call992·6193
·

~t:r:.ar:.=~·-42 ·

!Aeaai4,Nowl..aolna!&lt;&gt;ft75
LaiUlc.da.eG,Loni54.
. _ _ v.u. 52, "" '"'11

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'--57,11itWIIIu41

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'n 1. d X SJ. l.a.aMr E. Ball 5I

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~·I.!J.A-61

1lCUtot.UM.Yn
W-ILII,tw.l5

Noooto••

ZIP _ _

PHONE

•

.STEP f(ERGBIES
.

62, M.ayavllle 61
Sol&lt;&gt;ll01,0...22 ·
SprioJ.
60, Waalio- 51
SprioJ.- 61 , _ 61

J..ollilad,...,llltyvu56
1.ktlaJIIIo.
62.:z.-tllo41

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92.1Wnn66
Paolllo5,0\1iwon.

OldO

Ri••
vRoe;tr River Maanificst 73 , Tot.

FEDERAL HOCKING

II•••

•

ADDRESS

-ll,-41 '
Ridpdalo 36, B...... Vall.. 34
5t a~oqan 38

-53.Loodonvillo50

c:.a.a.u.,

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Alr,_l2.n.-61'
Ba[IOr~ -19
Oiu•m '"-a.-SI.ri

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I .941

5
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Sou-Melh.6S,W"&gt;ChilaSI. 59
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Pidoftfa1'19, MaJivllle 34

l'llnklin - . . . 66, OWe 64
Pftlad. 90. Vmcmt-Wam~~. 18 (01)

66

Sublalpd.oocxdeled by:

.,' NAME

Calholic40

EASTERN

(9-12-19-11=51)
Bissell (14 points scored, but
distribution unknown), Pat Newland 0-2-2=8, RQbert Reed 1-01=3, Micah Otto 1-1-6-11 , Wes
Arbaugh 6-4-14?, Eric Hill 2-01=5. Totals: 14-3-14121=51

With wreallls el ... , ud mislletM, llecldap 11•1"
lbe ftri.ud scea• •1•alcllld willian, Cluilballs
•c_,. . . warndllud lllld ell• •• we ell•...... .
ble•ln.. we've ibandlllll pal,.... Far as
saying '111uh" to,., • •MJ lriMds, eld ad n-, ·
wll•tldnd npporl.we'l ....,. b-are. Doing
....... wllll yea II aar gaallll planrel

Subsc.rfptlon Coupon

Peml4,W.....,..j~Je41

...,[;:,';,rt• s,. Wend•lin 68, K.anau

Azkanoutii,NWI.ouiaiana 76
l'lodda76.T.... 61
S0111h Alabaola 69, AIL·Lilllo Roclc

Holiday Gift

Opon DOOI55, T - Cu. 44

~i~~:,.._ 48

SocoUnrtot

WESTERNCONFERENCE

--63.Bcanillall

NOIWllk St. hullt Lenin Calh. 51
Olonan1J·71, 1"'-19

Pailview 7 N
F
a• 4t.,i"S::::61
ayoae..,
·

Valpanbo 90, Bod« 73
Wftah' SL 14, Johft Cazran 19

7

•

H you feel you have been aub!JK:ted to any of theee JK:tlona call
the Vlllaga of Middleport Fair Houalng ·Board, Je•n Tru~aell
Secretary, at 802.-782. Equal QPIK1rtunlty Houa!ng lsthellw.
',

l{adilon 53
N ........J 36.~llla. 34 (01)

ond-half rebounds.
Federal had three steals, 12
tumoven and 16 fouls.
Eastern goes to Alexander Friday.
.

. A Sentinel subscription is the perfect gift It's u5eful and fits every siz~ and taste. Just flll
out the coupon .~low, and you '11 get 20% off the subscription cost.
Buthupy,drisofferexprres
'
December 31, 1993

.-

Howad&lt; 56,

Ea10nii,Day. Edpwood ,71

ToWtOn SL 72. Dtytcn?O

6.5

Ouvillo61 , Ma.;,nCalh. 60
Oay. Ouilliaa 90: Yellow Sptina161
Oay. Dunbu611,CoLSouth61
Oay. s - . . 59, Day. Belononl 57
Oofianoo14, ToLBowsllor66

'·--.r~•

NEDlilloU8l, WU...Milw•ukee66
Noclhw.._l6,111iooiaSL78
N-Dtmo6J.S.,Oleao53
Ohio St. 93, N.C.-Aaloovlllo 59
Solllinoia74,l!Y....W.69
SLI.•oula 14, Cocnell47

'•

Millon UniM.6t,Jrl'~c45
N. Unlm61, J,f,ounc ·
3S
Now~
. &lt;46,Pbilo4S (Dn
N.,.
52.Allianco38

"

Danbury Laketide 79, Norwali. St.

0....59 Now PhDad·l+ia41
Du.blln 7' D--"~..!"76

Mia.towi 10, Jaci:IOR St. 76

25
25
5
5

Millll1 Vall. 49, Xenia Wilaan 18
ldill« City l 4 . - 33

Pat Newland and Arbaugh
cashed in a couple steals !P bring
Easrem back to 27-21 at the half.
SecOild blllf '
EasiClR played !D~.Wirh .l:OIIfidence in the second hali.Setting
scoring from five men Reed, Newland, Arbaugh, HiD and OUo in an
early stretch duu saw .the Eagles cue
rhe score from 36-26 to 36-32.
Nter FH'Ied 42-34, rhe Lancers
lost the services of talented post
player Mark Whiting, who picked
up his third and fourth personals.
Goals by Hill and BisseU (two)
pulled Eastern to ·wilhin two 814240 wirh 27 second left in the frame.
Easrem had a chance, but a blocked
shot nullified rhe. atrempt for the
tie.
Starting the fourih frame, Bissen had the "give me the ball" look
in his eyes. Eastern went to its post ·
man twice, once for the tie and next
for its 6nt lead since the f'II'St quarter at42-42 and 44-42 respectively.
A pair of free throws by newland gave EHS its biggest lead 4642, then after a McFee free rhrow
went up 48-43 on anorher goal by
Bissen. Federal fought back to 4847 on goals by McFee and Dotson
at rhe 4:00 mark.
A Reed free lhrow gave EHS a
49-4 7 lead, rhen on irs next three
possessions Federal slowed rhe ball
down and went for the good shot
After returning to the lineup, Whiting tied rhe score at 49 on a power
play in rhe post, then on an attempt
to take the lead. drew a charge and
his fifth personal. Newland gave
great backside help on rhe play.
At rhe 1:18 mark, Otto hit the
sec:ood of two free throws for a S049 advantage. EHS got the ball
back, but had it stolen by Gilders.
Dotson grabbed the loose ball and
fired downcourt to Tolson, who
was fouled wirh 16.4 seconds left.
His second aerial hit its mark to tie
the score at SO-50.
Eastern caned time and set up
for the last play. Trying to find Bissell, Newland couldn't find the
doubled-up teammate and hit Hill
in the oamt. Hill · turned for the
jumper and was fouled. setting the

stage fer his heroics. •
Hill missed the 6nt, but got the
bounce on lhe second to preserve
lhe win wilh seven seconds left.
Eas!Un pressmed full court. Federal got the ball past half coun, then
called time with 2.7 seconds left.
Federal threw the ball out of
bounds on rhe inbounds play, and
EHS held on for the win.
Brian Bow en, Ry an Buckley
and Jeff Stelhem did not score, but
did wen when called upon.
ElF hit 14 of,61 , 3-5 threepoipt.ers and was 14-21 at the line.
EHS R18bbed 26 rebounds. led by
Bissell and Oao (10 and 5); had 11
steals, 13tumovers and 21 fouls.
Tbe Lancers hit 18-40, 2-4
three-pointers and was 8-20 at the
line. They had 3S rebounds, led by
Whiting's I LOne key to the game
was lhat Federal had only nine sec-

Edition
Thanday,

One·Size Fits All

Title VII of the CIVIl Alghta Act of 1968 1nd the Ohio ReviHd
Code 1T18ke the following kind of JK:tlon unlawful when done on.
the ba.tll of race, tee, color, religion, or national origin or
anceatry:
•Rafunl to Deal
•Diaerlmlnatlon In ter1111, condhlona,and prlvllegea
•Diaerlmlnatory or praferentlaladvartlalng
•Falaa repreaentatlon
.
•Blockbuster
•Diacrlmlnatlon In financing
•Diacrlmlnatlon In memberahll' In multlpla-llatlng servlc•
end real eatate brokers organization a

"~9· ··
~'JI,Norwayne47

~oaloffcna\ 7l , l.ima Temple
CllrDw 60, wayno-r- 56

Mic:lllpl9'1, Tn.-Qoau.noopl6

Gl

CoL w.. 66. Plino Vall. 64
Col. WheutoD06S,CoL. Waacaon60
Collin• W011em RUOl'\'e 67, Open

Pa11161

Kan?l, IWifonfSI

T-66

TW
................ 16
I .. Anlonlo ......... ta
lllah ...................... tl

~ ~-:!';~o,~,:n~lh 76
CcL Hart.ley 69. Col Becchc:rofl41
CoL Wain.. Ridp 72. Cci. SL O.an..

Nathan Gilden.

.,

PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT
RESIDENTS OF MIDDLE~ORT

HOUlton 77, F.Ulnm 43
lndiaa Lab 53, Onllll!l 51
K.t•a-.h-52. Rav-. SE 46
t •k wood 72. Shaw 33
Lebonao52, Wayncnille46
Lima Bod! 82, Boyllf26
Loudaa.;u.S4, Caoall'lllloa .NW 49
Madiaon Plalno 55, Wllllfali4S
Manltiold Sr. 55, Col Unden-McKm-.
ley2l
Maridta 60, Cambtidae 46
Muon l!, Ooahen 42
M.aaillon lacbcrl 59, Canlal TUnken
49
M.aaillan Pary ll, Akron CenL·How·

Door 62
CoeUnenlal ~9, A«:bbold41
· •-~~:'' Vall.. C!u
. . 70, Lou~ville

=~·~SL.!-4

...

711

CtiJ!icolhe60,U.....41
Cln. 0J.I!ale63, C:.phopPalla5l
Crc:larillo65, WOII!al!45
Oh Bcmodielino 82. Guficld H11. 53
Clo. Catholic 73, 1iiaily47
Clo. S~adlll79, Mcnoo 56

1

Balles- Sl-SO lriumph over Feder·

That score stood to the 3:51
mark. when Tolson gave FH a 5-4
lead.
Shots hit their marks more often
in rhe final three minutes as Federal
wenl back· door on rhe Eagles to
' take a 12:.0 lead.at rhe buzzer.
Eastern fell bdtind as .much as
11 poiRts in rhe second quarter and
trailed 2H3 'at thC4:14 mark.
Eastern did not hit a field ~oal
.,'
(
.
until lhe 3:18 mark when Micah
•
BAGS BIG BUCK - Dau7 BniWil·ofM~ IIOlds lhe rack
Otto finally got the right bounce on
J of bls 14-poblt 'buck be dowued in Bedford TOWDSblp during last
a three-point goal to I)1ake the score
· ~ week's guu &amp;easoD. It was the bluest deer Brown bas kiUed in his 21-16. Federal then unreeled six
many years or blmlill&amp;•
slraight to take a 27-16 lead on two .

.

Hcblon Lakewood 45, Licking Vall .

Celina 71, Findlay 5I

Dnlie90,Toleclo17(01)
D1inoia 101. DL-Qica 0 80
•-~-- ~ v~.
IO
- · ,., ~clcyll4
Iowa Sl.'l'I,N. Iowa 66

goals by Jrzemy·Douon and one by

seconds~~~ gav~ the Easlelll , High ScboOI.

.

• I

. Salle

40

Cauaville 60, Miamlabwa 33
Ow!e175, Muufidd SL J'iu.'o 51

c:..i&amp;h""'l!, Nolnaka.()naha 66

'

· ~~.~., ,......t,wv.
·
canMemlter
....,.,
••44 1ar 11111. •••••atiai•
of letaa PPO ~)iHra~ Motul PPO

O!eencvicw 47, Miami Trace 38
H.ainilton Badin 49, Day. Otaminadclulionoo 25
Hanlina NOIIhern 56, Cohlmbl&gt;a Grove

CanLon McKinley 66, Col Weatland

.....,

.

Fort.Lanmie49,AMa 37

Clallipolia 71, Rod&lt; ·Hill 38
Oaraway 73, Ridpwood 23
O.O.Seoown 56, WilliamlllurJ 33
&lt;h-. 54, Hud""' 51, 201'

~..
u~
"N
41 t.ADLCin nmata&amp;e ;, '• cwcomentown

Mldwt~t
Ak:ton 7S,Ion•66
Bow!lnao..a.as. t.oyola.DL60
Bn.dley 76, OUcaao St 60
C1evdand St. 74, Sqiniw Val. St. 61

Midwest

Findlay 57. Defiance 54
Foala Calh. 59, B. Keoz 30

c..w Wincb.t« 61, Jonathan Alder

61

•

John I~Ill,..,.....
Wade,

Fayetteville 14, Cincinuaci Hilla 26
Foiicia, 74, Batavia 23

CanficlAj 61, Louiovillc 44

Viqinia Tech 81, Coutal Can&gt;lina 54
Wake Fareat 71, Richmond 65

/

Faitba~D 65, W. Ubcwty Stlem 55
Fainicw 65, Clo. Lutheran W . .56

64 (OT)

.

•

."

Elidall7, Bellmano29

5

41

SyraCiu

Louiavillo-

Nor&amp;bvidw- 44
_..,..,..__ 60, Ada 59
-h..b 1' Ed
~:3 a aewood 63, Cle. John
Alh ..r.c ~-"--' "-'Y~ 'I
ona ~. "-~- - &gt;
- 1 1 6 , Ck.l!aao Tooh 59
Bdllli'Diilllll3, Dey. Jelfenon 5.5
Bocklna 101, Lima Pary 11
Jl-villo 6 6 , - - 62
"8~ 71, Valley fcno67

Charl e~1on

·Hubbar'ds Greenhouse

o..blin sa. o....p.n 43

Amhmll·SIIdD 16, N. Ricftevi.l.le 48
Anthon)' WayDe 62, Sylvani•

~~1:lJ:;~.r£'L'lir~ 49

East

OrAJratf Rivenidt3 62, Ridgemont 41
DWe 56, Tzi.County N. 23
Do.... 55,
36

Akolo
eo..n~ey
92. SmidovillA:
80
Ato&gt;o E.
67. Jludaoa
sa

Tulane 102. PD.irie View 48
Va. Comrnonwoahh 93,1.iberly 68
Virpola 59. Rice ll

{

46

Saturday's boys' action

It was Cleveland's defense,
however, rh8l won it The Browns
limited the Saints (7-5) to 127
yards - just 22 in the second half
- and sent rheni to their ftfth loss
in seven games since rhey won five
in a row at the stan of tile year.
Wade Wilson was sacked nine
times, matchin~ the most ever
aUowerl by rhe Samts.

Complete Medlcai/Surglc~l Care ··
Far E~r~ N,se &amp; Throat lliclu~IIf•g

Day. g.iatian 42, NoWUMI 39
Day. Faianont$,0.y. Wa)1'e57
Day. Meadowdalc 70, Day. Jcffcnon

Ohio H.S. scores

od_

''

16

Tcm-Tooh88,BCillol, Tonn. 70
Touaaloo 102, AI"'"' SL 91 (OJ')

: a.-..... . .........
•
t

(01)
Ccplcy 56, Tallmadp43
Cuyahoaa VaU . Chr. 64 , Streetsboro

80

loclcoonville 10, Louioiana Tech 60
LSU95,N"odlolloSL90(em
Louilville n' Michl&amp;an SL 68
Muylu\d IJ, MDI'JI'I St. 62
Mucer 76. Shortc!r 60
Miami 91, Florida A&amp;M 47
Miooia'""' 91,l.am• 70
~Mil,;.lool SL 62. SocMem Mi.. 58·
Mauani5L 89, MlnhaD 76
Mnlollead SL 110. Thomaa Mooo90
N.C. Ouuloue67,AppalachilftSL58

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~

Thlrclp-

Ooabon 1112, Oncelancl98
Mount SL. Vlnetnt Tournament
Clulmp...hlp
Moom Sl. ~193, Maino Maritime

Orarriblina St. 114, Baptiat Chrinian

NBA standings

•

KanoWr II, Slaollbcom ala

61

:14

3.5 '
3.5
5
5.5
6
I .S

w..ou;....,.

' Clouiplooilllt

Duke Rl,"Xavicr, Ohio 60
E. llliro&gt;d 83, Auolin 1\cay II (0'1')
E. Kauuclcy 121. Da.U &amp; Ellcina 67
E. Teruwseo SL. 106, Wofford 77
r....... IOO, w. Camlina 64
-·.&lt;lootJia Tech 95, 0eoop SL tiS

Basketball

+
~

Aihoalua,.._
10!.1!-.66
JtlaaCOII.rT..,...•L .
TIIHp-

Dmdlc:n 78, Samford Si

Hawaii 56, Tulano 17 ·

'
'

31, Wicklitfe 2S
Cha:don NJ).Q. 40, Ncwbory 38
.
CJn. M.Nk:holu 57, Cin. Cllat Ea1c 44
Cin. Putce1l Mli\IA 33, Mount Notre
Dtmo26
.
a...t.nd Hta. 70 Sllakedlla. 41
Col. Academy 57,
bu.
46
CoL DoSaiea 57 Cd. llartley 48
Col Waucn.., ~Cot Ready 43
Coldw11er 54, Onawa-Glandorf S2

Elmin 91, Dic::kmlca 94

SW LoW11ana 61, Bcilo SL S1
Soulloom Ca171, TauL·M.atoin 71

Dl~-A-"·n•c
...
,._,..
TIIJII
W L teL
NowYodc ..... - ....... 10 3 .7611
Orlando .................. - • 6 .m
B...........................9 7 .563
WubinJt&lt;n ............. 6 9 .400
Miunl ......................5 8 · .315
New 1er1ey ....... -... ..5 11 .313
l'h!la.lalphla ............4 11 .7117
C~~ttral Dl"'kll
Alllnla ................... u 4 .733
Ooadollo .................l I .500
7 , .500
a.llYilUND .........6 9 .400
llelnit......................S 9 .357
ladlana ...................J 10 .333
Mil,.....................! 13 .111

Chapin Falla 45, T win1buqJ 41 (OJ')

~

EI..W. c...c:::,a:::t~ounwnenl

plenty of time to iilakc a nm at it.
"We won a lot of games early
with the same guys," Belichick
said. "Ul's just get out there and
get another streak goins."
The Browns used two quarterbacks, Todd Philcox starting and
finishing and Vinny Testaverde
filling in for rhe .middle two qiiarters. Each threw a touchdown. pass
to Michael Jackson, Pbilcox an
eight-yarder in the f'mt quarter and
Tesiaverde a four-yarder in the
third. Philcox also directed a I 0play drive rh8l set up Mau Stover's
43-yard field goal in rhe first peri-

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - It good defensive team. I saw what
was no blowout, juSt another blown they did to the Raiders,·· Jones OJliX)I'tURity for rhe Cincinnati Ben- said. "And we're just human. We
gais, whose critical mistake on a can't go out there and win everY.
fake punt foile'd their upset bid game by 30 or 40 points. You can t
against the San Francisco 49ers.
keep up a streak like that all seaThe blunder put the 49ers in son. You just can't."
position to regain command, with
San Francisco also was hun by a
help from Ricky Watters. He rash of injuries to its d.efensive
scored two of his' lhree touchdowns front seven. with linebacker. Antoafter rhe failed filke punt, arid San nio Goss and defensive linemen
Francisco beat Cincinnati 21-8 on Artie Smith and Mark ·Thomas all
Sunday night for its sixth straight starting in place or injmed regUlars.
win and a two-game lead over fading New Orleans in the NFC West.
NOW OPEN fOR
Cin,innati (1.11), a 24-point
underdog despite JeUing its fust
CH!:?I&amp;TMM) &amp;UOC&gt;N
win of the year last week against
the Los Angeles Raiders, had botPolnMttlu "1• &amp; Up
tied up the 49ers' top-ranked
Bwrled Holly TrN~ '17""
offense by intercepting Steve
Live Norway SprUce
Young twice and'sacking him in
&amp;-7ft. ·'21"
the end zone for a safety. •
Cut TNei-Uve Wrwath8
The Bengals also effectively
For the LovecfOnM
neutralized Jerry Rice, held without
Gr.v• Blllnkela
a touchdown reception after getting
10 in lhe previou_s five games, a
Artlflcl81 Spraya, vspan in wliich the 49ers averaged
Cllld Wruth1
38 poi!lts per outing.
Open Dally H, Sundaya 12-f
Tight end Brent',Jones said lhe
49ers didn't take the Bengals light.
,,
ly and rhcy don't have anything to
~pologjze fl!r i cqpsideriilg they.
.
,..
cam~away wtlh~~nr•'-• , ~·· · ·''" .. : '.~''"' 'i92•57J6.-.~
"I knew all ali)ilg they
had
·
·
. a

The Dally Sentll1fl Page 5

•

Dtelil'aftrA
aJ lfockina SaiQtday nlaht in lhe
The win wu l!utern' 1 f'uat of
consolation ganie of the Runnin ' the seasonand the first varsily win
Rocket Tipoff Classic at WeiiJton for head coach Tony Deem who
'
said,' '"Thil wu much needed win!
I rhink we grew up tonight. We got
'1 ,'
· down early, but rhe cliffrzence was
we ke{lt ourselves under control.
The ktds stayed poised, played
great defense when we needed to
come
back and.kept wOiting hard."
'·
"yre have two very tpugh wins
COJ!Img up, and wirh a win under
our belt we 'II be much better off
going into these games . Tonight
Charlie Bissell really came alive,
but the total team effort really
made the difference. We gained
confidence as we went along. I
lhink getting a lot of players in the
~t half, gave us fleSh legs for the
second half and that really helped
going down rhe suetch."
Balanced attack
·. Eastern had a balanced attack
led by Bissell, who was on the
bench much of rhe second quarter
.with three fouls. Bissell led the
scoring wilh 14 points and also had
10 rebounds. Sophomore Micah
Otto notched 10" points, including a
three-pointer, and grabbed a second-best five rebounds.
Senior Pat Newland's eight
points came in handy, but the outSlaJJ.ding ballhandlin~ in the clutch
gave
Eastern new life lhroughout
BLQCKED - ~ru tonr8nJ Robet't R~ (24) lluds blS Dewthe
second
half. Senior Wes
bora shot blocked by Fec!eral HockiDa'a Mark Wbitinl (center),
Arbaugh also added eight points,
while tbe LI!Oters' Cbad Nelao• (left) watc.-es the play, durlilg Satwhile Roben Reed and. Enc Hill
urday nlcht's Ru•DID'· Rockets Tipoff Classlc .eonsolatioD ~e In
each added three.
Wellston, Where,the Eagles WOD 51·50 to COllect their first WID of the
Federal was led by Marie Whitseason.
ing's 14 points.
Early aoin1.
Eastern was frigid from the floor
throu~hout the en~ f'crst half, bitting JUSt 6-35 in the. stretch. Had
the second. half gone the same way,
Robert Stack and the Unsolved
Mysterlu crew most likely would
have been called upon to investigate the phenomenon. Many of the
missed shots were wide open
layups under lhe bucket. however,
some of the misses were lhe result
or intimidation from the taller,
bulkier Lancers.
After over two scoreless minutes of play, Jeremy Tolson gave
Federal a 3-0 lead on a three-pointer at the 5:45 mark. Eastern went
up 4-2 on shots by Wes Arbaugh
and Bissell.
.

"'r

c......;n. 49, Sptin,. North 40

Toun~meacs

.. CcnL Florida 94, Winthrap 15
Ciladel.111, William 4 Mary 73

Canton GlenOa.k 62, Cuyahoga F.U.

CaDOUkln 45, I..oW.mlle 43
Celina 56, Troy 54 (0'1')

Slaft!cml 69, UC RivonMie 64

91, Marill U

B1uffloo 55, M&lt;Comb 40
Bn&gt;ok.m. 51, k&lt;anum 34
8NIIIwici 44, Clo. M•hall41
BudtO)O l.oool59, Ke)'IIOM 24
Canron Cath. 64, Manl1icld SL P&amp;n

c..w.~ 77, Law.! Sohool34

B-CoU..11,ADmnaSL 74

Soulll
C•-""""
72.
N.
Carolina SL 69 (OJ')
•• .,......

Far West

...

45

Vi.l.Janova 76, Gcoraetown 75 (OT)

nia I, Wa~hinaton 7, Arizona Su.t.e 4,

•

34

FarW.t

cs Bak~ 611, uc o..a 61

Rut&amp;en 7S, Waaner65
Sica• 91, Holy Crola13
SL lolln'a72,S«on H&amp;ll64
SL loaeph'a 90, t.oyola, Mol 70
Temple SS, Ala .•BirminaJum 52

Wyomina 4, BaD Sta,. 2.

'•

SGUlh
Florida St. 80, ~70

......,., 97, Olclah- SL 14

County76

o...., rtetl•hol - s...~~~an c~
31 . CincinaaU 11, )loftb Carolina State
12. Michlpn Sta.. 9, V...... 9, Calila.-

College scores

- • Sunday's scores • -

1, UT·Oa•ttanooga 3, At..-Binn·

BudovJ195, Marymoun1, Va. 55
Delawm: 73, Delawm: SL 72
Huvard 77. SL Fnacla, N'Y 52
lAna kland Univ. 7&amp;, M.d.·E. Sh&lt;;R 68
M.anh.anan 57, Fonlham 51
Mua•rbu.aeaa 116. St. BoaavCIRIU.te 66
NOOihoulomiOI,n..-Moaan!7
Pam62, F~~47
Pam SL 96, puq-· 64
Piuabcqb 94, Providence 82
Robert Morria 78, Md.-Baltimore

II
IZ
13
14

II
16
19
20
21
22
23

Belley 43, Onndview 42
Blac-k Ri..,cr SO, New London 46

Eul

Lui
W·LoT fb. Wtek
I.FiooidaSL(42) ..... 11-1·0 1,5177
1
:z.-.(15)....... 1140 1,461
2

•
•

Beme Uni111 69, Trimble 2S

Brown II, Lafaymlll 85 (01)

Tum

Aluon llobul 59,1'adua 46
Aluon Splina. 53, Mioc:va 52 (0'1')
Ambcnl-5tede60, Elyria W. 31
A:dlbold 53, w•.._ 43
Avon Lako$3, N. Roylhon 41
B - . . 54, a.. EaatTocb"
Bellcwc 59, Nonoalk S4 (em
Benjamin Loaan S3, Mcc:hanicaburg

Beilin Hiland 60,le....,-Scio S4

Y1 . Commonwealth 24,

- • Saturday's action • -

\
. h

3. WESTVJlCJINIA(3)11~,421l
. 4. -Damo(1).... 10.1-0 1,353
5. A..... (l) ........... ll40 1,343
6. T - . ............ -9-1-1 1,255
·1. TeuaA&amp;)L...... lO.l-0 1,126
•• l'leaWa .................. !O.l-0 1.1)99
9. .,........................9-1-1 1,1)33
10. Mlaftli.-..-.............9-Z.O 1,1)30
11 . OIUO ST............. -9-1·1 174
12. NOIIhCarolina .... lO.:Z..O 140
U . PinoSL ............... -9·2-0 101
14. u~ ...................a-:1-o 739
IS. Boalon Collo&amp;• ..... 1·3-0 695
t6. ........ ,_ ...,........9·2-0 583
17. Colondo ..............1·3-l 501
II. Alabama .............. - 1·3-1 474
'19. Clclaboma ..............l -3-0 438
20. JC.waa SL .............I·:Z..I 40.1
. 21. Jndlw ................ -1-J.O 334
12. Virpola Tecb ........ 8-3-0 :!63
23. Midllpn ...............7-4-0 :Ill
24. ClanaCft ................l-3-0 148
25. Pteano SL .............8-J.O
34
lio. Louilvillo .................l-0, ]4

30

Major college scores

AP Top 25 college poll

'

Saturday's alrls' action

mahun 2., Butler l,lowa 1, Michigan s~.
I,"Nebrub 1, Teua-ElPuo 1.

Plaabculh••• Miami. 9 p.m.

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Wcllll&lt;lo 66, CheohileRivc.V&amp;ll. 59
WMolonbura 88, lluolington Rou 50
WIIWI&gt;all7l, ow., 46
Xmi.a 70, Day. Carroll66
ZanooYillc 49. Pi&lt;:brington 48

17

By SCOTr WOLFE
Selitlael Ccnespolllieat
An .intense s~ond half and
clutch free throw shooting by
sophomore Eric Hi.ll wilh seven

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WopokCIIItla n, Bell&lt;{OIIIIino53 (OT)
w-ltanlina72. Clo.Jdm H.y &gt;9
w-Kamody M. M.aplowood 31
WubinJt&lt;n C.R 66, Wilmington 53
Walkins Mcmorill63, Wonhington
Kilbowuc 56
.

14, Peppcrdinc 14, Georaaown 13,.Tu·
lane 10, XAVIER, OHIO 8, Oklahom1 5,
Pitttbur&amp;h 4, Tna1 4, W•ke Fore.~t 4,

Mc•ulaJ, Doe.13

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VCIDiili&lt;D5S,W~30

Pomeroy-MidcUeport, Ohio

.

.:Eastern takes th"ird pla&lt;?e in season-opening tourn~ment

·of'post-Kosar era .
By CHUCK MELVIN
CLEVELAND (AP) - History
provided the Cleveland Browns
with the lift they so desperately
needed. . '
Owner Art Modell delivered a
pep talk, remindiQg rhem lhey were
one Qf. the NFL' s best teams during
the f'list half of rh.is season, and two
members of the Browns· 1964
championship team were on the
sidelines S~JDday as lhey beat the
New Orleans Saints 17-13. ending
a four-game losing streak.
"I'm real happy for the team,
and especially for Art for the support he has had for us rhe last couple weeks.,' ~ coach' Bill Belichick
said. "I thio1t his motivationr along
with a couple of alumni whQ were
here, Dick Schafralh ana Jim
Brown, reaDy helped us."
The Browns (6-6) were on the
verge of dropping, out of tile AFC
Ceritral race until Modell called the
players togelher for a talk on Friday. His message: T-here's still

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;With 51-50 .wln over Federal Hocking, .

Niners -cage Bengals

Upper Sciteo Vall 79, Kmton 43
Vail Wan 52.Bry&amp;ft 50

Old Dominion 23, Pam 18, Miaaou.ri 15,
Seton Hall 15, Ocor&amp;ia 14, New Orlean'

N.Y . .lela at Wub:inJtm., 12:30 p.m.
San Fnnciloo at Atlanta, 4 p.m.

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St. 25,

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Tutcanwu Cath. 13, Tuacanwu
Vall69

Olh.,rt receMna •otes: B01ton Col·
Lege 111, Florida St.. 109, OHIO ST. 96,
Marqueao 19, Maryland 75 , W. Kauucky
6l,l.SU 41, VU.l.ano\11 36, Wuhinctan St.
35, MtmptW St. 32, Smta CIUI29, New

Toqbt's eame
SIIUrdaJ

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Trotwood Mldi.lon 82, W. CarraUtoa

Voodolia Butl&lt;.69, Tn&gt;y 26

23. Vand«bilt ................ 3-1

Next week's comes

•

Tol. Calh. 47, ~y
45
TolSLlolw59,
43
Tol Wai,. 62. Oak llubor
Triway 67, Tutlaw 56

TW·L Plo. Woek
I. A!bnuo (51) ............ 3-0 1,603
2
2. NMh Carolina (1) .....6-1 1,481
4
3. Miobi&amp;an (1) ..............4-0 1,467
5
4. Dui.o (2) ................._.J.O 1,420
6
5. T~~~~plo(l) .......... _..... z.o 1.38.1
7
6. Kaolioclly ............ -..... :Z..l 1,261
I

:!4. G. Wullina1on ,_ ...... 2·1

San FnncioGo 21, ClNCINNATI 8

Sprinabaro 62. Middfaowt~ Mldison

Sllalboq 61, Rinman 62
s.....,.m, 74, N. Olmmcl63

I.A. ~ 25, Buffalo :14
13, llelnit 0
- - 17, How Enpnd 14
a.JM!l.AND 17, New Orlc:ana l3
Wultio.... 23, Tampa Bayl1
Pbaenia 38,1..A. llama 10
San Dl&lt;ao I 3, Donver 10
N.'Y.Ililnla 19, Miami 14

Jlbi.l&amp;dcJphla ~ O.UU, 9 p.m.

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Lui

-33.-17

.,,..

AP Top 25 coUege poll

231205
188273

OUcaao 30, Green Ba~ 11
lndianapallo 9, N.'Y.lota6

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Scxibrint 49, Lordsown 43 1
Sholby74, -.own44
Sbenaodoah 51, Meodowbroat 50
Soloa 83,EudabN. 14
s~ Calholic 52. a..a,.., 37
s~ ~.ooo~1s. Comoboll 66

225152
234 1611
175212

Sunday's ICOI'ea

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w-

PF PA

w..... Dtvlaloo

Slft)'ranciaco ...
New Odeua ..~,
Adanla -............
I.A. Rima ....... .

............ E. 76,l'odlmoulh w. 41
Roodaville Eaa- 51, Fodcnl llo&lt;kina50
&amp;v.no'16, B...UVW. 64 .
Ridpdalo 611,.Bocbye Vall 43
a..ifonl tiS, Eaatwood S4
S. OwiecoG SH 69, SprinJ. Shawnee
45
s.
6S, I.ooan Elm 58
Slft"'*y18, Willanl14 (em

Detroit at ~-~?:~_£.m.
Pvnland n Cl.BVEI.AND, 7:30p.m.
Sacremon\0 It Indiana, 7:30p.m.
BOIIGn 11 New Jc:mcy,l p.m.
~· c;tippcn •t ODcaao. &amp;:30 p.m.
Miami,, Dallu, uo p.m .
Ow1otto at Haultan, 1:30 P:DI:·
New Yotk u LA. Lat. ., I 0:30p.m.
Denver at. Golden Su.~e, 10:30 p.m.

9 3 0 .750 235 116

7 5 0 .583
7 5 0 .583
6 6 0 .500
5 7 0 .417

JlkluMI.tM_RiwrValL 63

Tuesday'• gliDes

WMiera Dtv .. iH.

ll[azuu

Pom~aoa.o;n... &lt;46, Blulllon 44
Pukway63, s-.w.s9. 30I
PltoW.,...,l,AWo52

TonJ&amp;bt's &amp;ames

Central DIYII:Ion

.-........ . . 0
~ ......... 7 50
CIJ!\II!LAND .. 6 6 0
CINCINNATI .. 1 11 0

Hlloo ~. \lfoodrow Willoa 61
H-5l, Alllmlta!mare41
Olmilooll'lllo 611, B-yn 46
Onvillci3,Ftmoool2
l'llnliiYillc Hu.., 70. Lob Cad!. 64

Dmvcr 115,Dollu 110
- . !Ol,I.A. Lalua 99

'Nt!,tnspdle ..... . 4 I 0 .333 163 Z10
New&amp;i:aJand .... I 11 0 .tiJ:J 1402AO

-

(em

SWlday'siCOres
Haultm 99, a..Bv'lnAND 91

Miami ............... 9 3 0 .750 241205
Buffalo.............. I 4 0 .667 2711177
N.'Y •.Jtu ........... 7 50 .SI32A6 11'1

61, NCIII!owood 6S

l.tlpp&lt;~49
NowaA C1tll. 60, Col Aelclemy Sl

Ooldon sw. 99, Iadillla M

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
T-

New~~ 49, OIU&amp;hict• 39

New .

.

Browns get first win

Mil' p55,N-l-'4at+l
74, H.UU... 52
- V - 6 2 . W - S.5S

~Ill, W'¢ " pJ• -\05.~

NFL stlUldings

Monday, Decembe 6,1993
, Pagl 4

With 17·13 victory over $slnts,

St·orehoa•·d
S. Aauaaio 90, Jlhi1 d '

, ·

; Monday, December 6, 1993
~
.

fiT TOGETHER AEROII($

l:~::::;::~~~t·~Jea=·~le~Ow2::·..~~=~-~

Sentinel

"

THE DAILY SENTINEL

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By The Bend

Sentin~f

The Daily

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Monday, December

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We ~pe~~t a week at the pU. and
Alma can't wail 'til next 'Jell, - BIG

Ann

"XJ...,' the W0111111 whole husband
ALINOmO
nagged her for years to go wilh him
DEAR AL: 'I'hanb for aharin&amp; the
to a nudist c:IIDP· But befllft'J I go
bile facll. You'll be ph ssc • to know
any fulther, plcae be aware tll8t
ANN LANDERS
I received I Jmli-Y leacn 6om
' nudist camp' iJ • outuiiUded term.
"1993, L.. Alii....
readers whp sang the pqiles of
(So is nudist colony.) Tbe conect
llm.. Syudlu~e
nudism, and rve been iJMted to
Crooton S)'Ddlcote" ,
terminology is nudist park.
peib IIi ~Florida. Mic:hipn llld
I have been a nudist since I was
Arizona. While I very _much
17. For the last 10 years, I've lricd 'Where's your wife?' I told her this IPJPCille 1M lnvl•arioM, 1 CID't
10 get my wife 10 join me. ' Alma' iJ was Alma's fii'St time 10 a nudist quilucn)i!elfin that llllling. Keep .
self-c:oosc:ious about her figlftJ (sbe park and tll8t she was a little lhy. readla1 ror.· w~d from another
is
With that, tbe WOIIIIIl left the line member of dte club:
overweight) and was afraid she and went 10 get Alma. In a (ew
par Au Ludera: I ~ been
would be ill at eaae around women
a nudiat for 36 ~and am ftnnly
minutes,
they
were
both
back.
who a slim and well-proponioned. Apparendy, the WOIJUUI.Iiad given coovinC!tid lhal if everyone would
I penl1llded htz. 10 come with me
Alma a good pep talk because she accepl the cciacqJt of nudism, there
just once, and if 8be didn't enjoy it, I
would be no more wan, no crime
would never bring up the subject ~ ~':dile on ~ face an1J and DQ ~ lllil we would 6ve
again. She &amp;greed.
After lunch, a magical togedicr in perfect bannony .. God
For the fint few hours, Alma was lranlf'onnation
place. Alma got iritended Us tO. .~,
lDCCIIIIfortabl She sat wilh her arms ber camera and100\;
Anyone wh~ 1relds the Bible
liked me 10 ~
and legs CJOIIed and a fin in her
picture with the other mwli•• knows m.t all the trouble started
lap. Wlien the lunch bell rang, Alma her
(which I did). I knew thea that abc when Eve ate that apple and pill 011
said she wasn't hungry and would
the fiJ leaf:
see me lalcr. I went 10 the dining was going 10 be 'one of us.•
room and stood in the chow line wilh

Landers

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Robin Manuel

!'

i Manuel

advances in talent
iseeking competition

! · Robin Manuel of Racine, a competition for the final taping at
:. counlr)' performer, will be partici-,paling in the Talent Seek Program
:~ m Nashville, Tenn., at the Opry"' land Hotel on Dec. 19.
:::· Robin is currently seeking and
~ in competition for a recording con': tract in counlry music. A contract
c• will be awarded on the basis of
·.;call-in votes to Nashville to one of
:~the performers.
:; This is Robin' s second trip to
:!NliSh•iille since July. She rece1ved
to continue on in the

the Opryland Hotel.
There are many recording companies represented at the taping,
she said , and not only does she
have a chance at being awarding a
contract, but also may being inter· the achen.
viewed by other recording compaTbe WOI1IIII bebincl me in line (she
nies.
was twice Alma's size) asked,
Anyone wishing to support
Robin may contact her at (614 )949-2991.
Her mother, Joyce, will accompany
10 Nashville.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

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Public Notice ·

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Public Notice ,

me,

MoN. thru FRr. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8- 12
POLICIES

Alv.Jt ·

the National Auoc;iation . o(

m.....
- •-'0

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Public Notice.

Honor rolls for the first nine
,'~ceks grading period for Meigs
:;,unior and Senior High Schools
::have been announced.
-' Students making a grade of B or
::above in all their subjects to be list:;ed on the honor roll are as follows:
.. Ninlh grade· Jonathan Barnhart,
:casey Booth, Jonathan Dickens,
'Taryn Doidge, Justin Fields, Bran·;ooo (Scott) Gcor~e. Tara Grueser,
;;Mandy Jeffers,~ Kloes, Lillie
·•Jlloise Lambert, R1ck Marshall ,
::Aniber Slaven. Making all A's
·•were Liberty King and Erin
l'rawsczyn.
~ lOth Grade • Amber Bennett,
~icole Bentley, Chris Chapmlijl,
;{.arry Michael Coon, Terri Fife,
'Israel Grimm, Dorothy Leifheit.
:Michelle Price, Marion Snider,
:cynthia Stewart. Making all A' s
:w~re Allison Gerlach and Kim
~mith
·
;I lith Grade - Sarah Anderson,
~icole Marie Bell, Bobbi Jo Butch~er Billie Jo Butcher, Jeff Dlpnell,
:Linn Darst, Amy Durst, David
•felly, Jarrod Folmer, Keith Friend,
~Travis Grate, Kelley Grueser,
~Adam Hendrix, Heidi Huffman,
:J(imberly Janey, John 1effers,
.~evin Lagan, Lisa Montgomery,
~hilo Dawn Moore, Matthew Morris, Susan Page, Jamie Pennington,

Reggie Prati, Shcrri Ramsburg,
Cynthia Roush, Sheriden Russell,
Josh Sigman, hisa Tatterson ,
Melissa Vance, Shannon Wheeler,
Tonya Will, ,Walter Williams, Tom
Wolfe, Michael P. Young, ·. Making all A's were Anthony Barrett,
James Counts, Christy Dill, Mandy
Jones, Shilo Moore, Shawn Petrie,
Jason Taylor. Crystal Vaughan,
Michelle Ward, Amanda Well ,
Julie Young, all A's.
12th Grade - Bradford Anderson, Matthew Oar!&lt;, Paul Anthony
Davis, Crystal Donohue, Arnie
Elliott, Lisa Fackler, Tracy Loraine
Fife, Jason George, Racquel
Gomez, Danielle Gray, Phillip
Green, Jason Thomas Hart, Joshua
Heck, David Herman, Ginger Holcomb, Heather Hudson, Jason
Miller, Gina Molter, Wiebke (Flip)
Muhlhoff, Misti Powell, Stephanie
See, Stephen Smith, Shannon
S!&gt;BWI, Tonya Thorton, J.eff Tracy.
T1m Vance, Jeffrey Whtte, Angte
White, Marlo White, Kevin Whobrey, Rebecca Williams. Making
all A's were Tom Cremeans, Traci
Danielle Crow, Crystal Donohue,
Trac;y Fife, Melissa Jeffers, Anthony King, Misty Lane, Andrea
McDonald, Cindy McGuire, Joy
O'Bri ~ n. Sarah Pullins , Jason
Witherell, all A's.

Social Security Benefits for
Divorced Spouses
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager iD
Athens

Social Seeurity bCnefi rs on his or
her record if you're 60 or older. If
~
you hav.e a disability, you can get
;.
benefits as early as 50. In either
case, your marriage must have last·
ild 10 years. You can receive
~ - Are you divorced? Did you divorced widow(er)s benefits at
: know that divorced women and any age if you are caring for your
: men may lie eligible to receive former spouse's child who is under
; Social Security benefits on the 17 yeara o'd or disabled. The 10
; record of their former spouse?
year marriage rule does not apply
1 To qualify for benefits as a m these cases.
,
•
1 divorced spouse you must· ..
If you remarry be.ore age 60 ,
;
• be at least 62; and · .
YC1U cannot get Social Security
1 • have been married to your from an ex-s1,10use unless that su~
,spouse for at least 10 years; and
sequent ,marnage also. ends. But if
• are not currently married.
, your ex-spouse remames, you may
your former spouse must be:
still be eligible for benefits on his
least 62 and
or her recbrd. Hoy.oever, you are not
ceiving Social Security eligib!e f?r divorced wid?w(er)s
nt or disability benefits.
l!enefus 1f :,;our own reurement
You a1ao c.~ get benefits if your bene(it is higlitz. .
fonner spouiCI is eligible for retire·
If you are a d1 vorced spouse
moDI. benefits b11t not act11ally who is 60 or oilier (or over SO but
~Civing them, if you have been
disabled), tbe benefits you receive
iJIYon:ed for two years on!K!"C. If will not a«~t lhe pay~nts fn1!1e
JOUr ex-spouse was recetving 10 other sumvon recemng Social
retitomont flenefits ~efore th,e Sec11r~ty benefits on your ex. illvon:e, the 2 year P,Cnod doesn 1 spouae s !eCOtd.
: . •
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· If you have any questions conL":u'yourown retiiement benefit is coming your eligibil~ty for
~ m. wllat·you could Jeeeive divorced spouse's beneftts, you
~a- yow: Cll-busblnd't n:cord, you ma)l call Social Securi»''s toll-free
•will bo J!lid only your retirement number, 1-800-772-1213, or visit
.
·
the AthCns Social Security office at
l be1Jefil1
• If your former : e is . 221 1/2 N Columbus,Rd (Photle
j dk 111 , ~. yoii may be . le for ,592-4448).
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$13.00

$ .60

Riggs
land;

CHRISTMAS
GIFTWRAP

'2

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99

""""
....... ""
s
""""""-

fMt; th- oouth 7 rode to

the plac~ of beginning,
oiotlmatad at lllr• acrM, be
ihe'oMie moi'e or leu.
Excepting a~d ruervlng
11nto former Grantoro all
coal underlying the above
ducrtbecl r•l-te.
Reference lo made to
peed recorded In Volume

wHITMAN·s

PEARSON'S

A880RTED

MINT PArnES
FOIL COVERED
120Z.

SAMPLER

CHOCOLATU
1 LB. BOX

CUB
DESIGNER
BAGS
CHRISTMAS
GFTBOXES
Wli'T!'OI'~

IQJAO"WIOf-lfOICHt . · ·

Tree .Farm

vs.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Walsh College
Sat. Dec. 11, 7:3p pm Fre,s .ticlkels
at all O'dell locations

912-5702
Carol l Devld Algge

Bob's Market &amp;
GrE~enlhou1ses, Mason, W.
Va. &amp; Gallipolis, Oh.
locations, will be closing
Tues. Dec. 7th at 4, p.m.
for an employee
Christmas dinner. Sorry
for any inconvenience
this may cause.

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED
'

Shoolder Mount... ... '155

IIEIICM

2. 3 01'14 PACK

CANDY
CANES
CHEAAYOR

99"'

PEPPERMINT
12 PACK

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COTY

1

GIFT SETS.
MEN'S'TRIOI918.
MUSK FOI'I MEN 1196
OR STErSON 1930

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OF FlUNG OF
COMPLAINT FoR
•"mHOAim'f""" lEU.
'"
· DECiEDENT'S REAL
ESTATE TO PAY DEBTS
THE .ITATE OF OHIOF
MEIOII COUNTY, COURT 0
COMMoN
PLEAS,
PROBATE DIVISION
To John W. Cuto whou
lui known eddreoo wae
1120 Eaot Main Str .. t,
Polneroy, Ohio 41718 onc1 to
Mark All• Cuto, whooa
lui uown arldruo waa
21UI 14th Av.,ue,
Parkenburg, Weot VIrginia
2810t, ypu ora hftlbJ'
nollllecllllat you have " naMed ,Dilendante In I
tegolactlon· entltlarl Marvin
L Kelty, PlolniiH w. Homer
H. eulo, Et AI., o.tendllnl8.
Tide action hao bean
aootgned C•e Numbar
27130 ancllo panclng In the
Court of Common Plaae,
Probate Olvlolon of Malga
County, Pomeroy, Ohio

m•.
Tire

object of the
Coftlllllllist It for authority to
all diDidtnfa .rul •t.te

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.36MM
VIVITAR
CAMERA

1399'

PS33

99
·~12
STEREO . ' . .

2SUCE
TOASTER
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~LANTA

ANTACID ,

359
,
, ...

LJQtJID
OfWl
OAOEMY

12'0Zc '

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In~~ pay dabl8 ol .the
•*
raal •lata I•
more partlcul•ly _..,rlbed
wllloli

In Volume 235, Pago 11~
Melge County o..
~rde. relwen011 to whloh
II ~~::-':equlrad to
anower the Compholnt
wllllln 21 deya after lila lao I
ubltoatlon of thla notice
P
whloh will be publlohecl

PubliC Notice
NOncE TO CONTRACTORS
'

STAlE OF OHIO
DEPAATIENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Colulllbua, Ohio

NovMiber 11, t8113
Contract 8alaa L4al Copy

No. es-1011
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
BAF-a-8(4)
Sealed propoaalo will be
raoalved at tha ollloe of the
dlraotor of the Ohio
Daparl•ent ,
of
Tranaportallon, Columbuo,
Ohio, until 10:00 '"""·
TI••IIIIJ,i;J•n~• 2t. 1113
tor lmpro¥emante In: Melgo
County, Ohlo lor Improving
-lion MEG-124-&amp;71, Slall
IAoilla 124 In tiala111
by grading,
paving with
. ·conorett on

~=

oln
co~pca 11e.
I~'Memory

wonderful son

oz..GE1.. TARTAR

.
CONTROl. OR TARTAR
coNmol GEL8.4 OZ.

His niernory will
never grow old.
He fashioned his ·
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199.

~leout o~sunshlne
He mol~ed his heart

I

of pure gold. .

.:

••••••••• S n ack Center

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; j ,,

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Coke It Diet Coke
12'plc. 12 ~ ....."...:;,... 2;~.
,CQke'&amp; Dl~ Co.ke · i p'k.. OZ.'•N/R.:~ .................r' f'l.59•' '
• ·....
ac»
Coke &amp;Diet Coke . · •aflttt................
9 .. • til( Bee Party Mix 12 oz.. .........~.............~........ t.1~.29.
'~

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f;tl . . . . . . . ...

onhis~rd

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Blrthclay 0.0. 6th ·

As the years roll.
bY: Memories will
n,vor die.

I

SadlY mined by

wlft, Margsret,
" chllcnn &amp;
jl

..

He needed·II 'new star
1il,(leavjn
, ••
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. "- ,. ;
beaadM light 10 shine .
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Porches,
·Patios,
Sidewalks
;· 992-7878
717 1

ll1lm.

DK's

..

at)VIngyou.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER' SERVICE
I-A1oom Addldono

t~tl''o!(,; .

world or sorrow · ,
He cJiOse that dear
son. ot oun.
. .•
In M•-rv ot
'
., ,...
'
Mkllatl
Pa11'k~ 811...
who p._..n eel IWIy •

· • Ole. 8,'1tlci'

992-6215
•

$10.00each
Open 9to6
3 different klnclo:
Scotch, White l
Auotrt., Plnao, 5' to 8'.
Harley Hanlf18 roaldance, 35875 AaiWoodo
Ad., Pomeroy, Ohio
11NW1 mo.

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIMESTONE, lOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

t-1H2-!tn

992·!470

OWNER: Joff Wlckw.._

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

GUN SHOOT

485·4473

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EVERY

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11111111 mo. pd.

- .. ...--

.

..

-- - -

.

'GENEUL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878

SHRUI &amp; TREE
TRIM lid
REMOVAL

7f711rm.

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
8:46p.m.
Spacial Earty Bird
$100 Payo"
This ad good lor 1
FREE card.

USED RAILROAD TIES
. 12..10-112-lln

accordance
8urlaca Tranoportallon
Uniform
Aelocailon
Aulol8nce Act ol11187, and
41 CFR, Port 23 and
.qUalified to bid with ODOT
under Chopler 5525 ,of the
Ohio Aavloecl Coda,
:rife' Ohio bepartm... t of .
Traneportatlo'n . haraby
notlll• all bldclero that It
wiU afflrlnldvely lnoure lllat
In any conlract entered tnlo
purauant ' to mlno~11y·
thla !~~~~~~~
advertlaement,
buol,...o
will be
anorded full oppcrtunlty·tb . l &amp; l nRE
aubmlt bide In roeponoe to
33151 PIH Grwo 1111111
thla Invitation .,d will not
be dlacrlmlnalad lllllllnilt on
R..., OW. 4577 I
8J:oj"n~ of r~. color,
614.t92-5344
or
.
national
origin
'
In
,
l-'"""-7l4.
·nRE
-lclerallon lor . . _.....
~ .......,..
Mlnlnluni wago ,.... for
thlo project have b•R
'
·
~-=·=: :O.r::;::.~- Come· by and r~glster
Ilia bid propooal. ",Tiie doll for Ifill Batte.y to be
1
aet ·lOt' completion of thle ~n away~:DJece~:;mba
=~r
work ehall be eel forth In 2'' t·" "" No
t~~e bidding propoaa~.·
... .......
Pla~~e 'ancl Speolllcallona required 10
are on file In tho dOn'
to win.
0 ;. P., 1 iln 1 ;; i
01
Trlli ~ aportadon .alid
· . tho.
Ofllce DUlle Dlolrlet Deputy

Lie. No.

TRI·STITE K·9
ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
Beale obedience,
law enforcement,
peraonal protection,
kennel aervlce, pup• &amp;
young dogo for Hie.

•terprt••

Roltweller. Shepherd
SludSaovlca

By appt. only
614-667-PETS

e

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEAnNG &amp;
COOJING
QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474

POMEROY, OHIO
.

· Ho"~~· W_.,. __ •

ROO
..,. fiNnG....·
'

NEWa·-·---..
REPAIR
•
.......
Do........... trt;
G m,..,....c
utter , - nIng
0&amp;&amp;

FREEPalntl..
R-au"'S,
IWI-IS

w.-•••_..

''949-2168
-..-.....,a-..ts-..es-_lfn_,,

L .- .....
1

_

McLendon
MOitTCAOE COMPANY

11128/lln

446·9515
CIRPD &amp; UPHOLSTERY CLONING
~---:--.:..1·.:.;10::.::0.:-.:;300·9 515
We give carpet and
upholotery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they delervell
'drapery (on tlte)
'flne fabrlca
•general ciMnlng
'odor treatment
20 years

satialied
customers

WV013372

We epeclalfmln:
ARE I WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATIONINSURANCE CLAIMS
24 Hour
Emergency Service

Gary Barry, Ownermm Faulk, Manager .
Certified technicians on every job.

WHALnrs AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
IIWlllltNinJOI '
III.UIIIlaotlll

FURNACES

tt2·701J or
·tt2·5S5J
or TOU FlEE
...00.141.0070
DIIWIII, OliO

lnllllled -plelo with
""
• .~ ftnonclng 11Vallollla.

r il. l~
·t.\
\'r

01

HAULING II•uE.._~::~Gao Fumac•
~::.::..
....
s:zs.oo mo.
S3&amp;.oo -.
LIMESTONE,
C•ll lElNEn'S MOBILE HOME
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
HIATIII AND COOLIII
Galllpolla, Oh.
-~~or T• F,. t~ll87
&amp;.COAL
RIIIOrllble.Ratea
J~N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742·2138
:W./111! 1 mo.

12/Vtln

1

(304) 882-3336

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CL~RING
WATE I
SEWERUNES
BFoENTS&amp;
SO'ES
HAUU G: J,Jmeatone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenoed and Bonded

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced

CONSTRUCTION

Cheryl A. James
William C. James
Co-Owners

BULLJ)OZING

SATURDAY
6:30P.M.

J.A.R.

New Haven W. V. 25265

EXCAVIliNG

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

7122193

• · ·Sidlymlnadby Director. ' ·
Mom, Did ·&amp; Sllltra. .I (111Director
. ..:.w.:.·:..cl.;;;
••;;::
· . ~· -&lt;f'
------~.
:zo 1121 of
a Trana,.Ortatlon J.--·f:..•;:;r•;.:;
-8C)0.784·nRE
·.1'

CHRISTMAS
TREES

36970 lall R1111 Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

(DBEa) cartlflad

4..,w'IIY

Alarm Systems

HAULING
SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

992·2269

~~~~~~r~::

Our Business is Security
Closed Circuit TV

V.C, YQUNG Ill ,

roodwoy 34'-0" min.) over

roelrlcted
to
Blclclng on
Bu•lnaao

liliES ILABM

614·992·7144

(FREE ESnMA1Ell)

praolrHoied oone;ete box
boom with oappad pile
abutmento (opan 45 ·0"
Malloona Creek.
Bl ...ngtt

31904 L11dl••
Creeklo..

Exterior

AIGHT HAULING
sfiREWOOD
BILL SLACK

oenter lo center brga,j

167 er It GHWre OU67-0117

-Eieclrlcal.and Plumbing

Land Clearing, Pondo,
Water Llneo, Septic•
Llcenoe &amp; Bonded
Charllo Hatfield,
Operator
742-2903

Public Notice

.

..

Middleport, o•1o

-Gutter Work

ATTHE
QUALITY PRINT SHOP

912· 33114 1:30-4 Mon.·Frt.
742'30ZG Alter 5:00
Hre 11-noon SaL till

Now has beautnul Cocker Spaniel Puppies. A110
featuring a 2 fl. common Black Tequ. Layaways are
now available lor Christmas. Sale on our entire stock
of large aquariums. Many riew ~erne.

..':
.........

ara al10 avallalllo.
Call 992-3466 • 992-3818
We lOOk lorward to

~Farm Toys

Middleport, Ohio
GREAT SELEcnON .AND
VARIETY OF OUAUTY

l.l.s PETUIID

PLU.nMB~IJ.4'
·. . um -.ng

l!oolc your

•Dozer •Backhoe
•Ditcher tDump Truck

METAL TOYS.

God ll!!Ve US a

7

CONCRETE
WORK

742-2979

DAVIDSON'S

SIVl•DI.I

675-6755

once uch wuk · lor elx
ouccMolva ....U. Tha lut
pubHOM!on wiN be mllda on
12fl7, 1883 and lila 211 daye
lor Ano~ will commence
on lhat _.._
In caoa of your lollure to
•n•w•r or otharwloa
-r:ncl u required by tha
Oh o Aulea of Civil
Procadura, Judgment by
default will ba rendered
ogelnot you fer the relief
demanded In the Complaint
Dated: November18, 1993
Robart E. Buck, Judge
Melgo County Probate
Court
1111122. 28, (12) 6,13, 20, 27

2

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTt

~Nu,OH .

Homegrown-carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
Wh~e Pine 4' &amp; Up w~h
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742·2143 or

992·3838

lies now. MMting

Squinel ...................... '55

2112192/tfn

WEIER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

FREE ESTIMATES

Something

Hom Mount.............. :.'22

, PIERSON
BROTHERS
SPORTING GOODS

IIIIo S.JMiay Calls!
11N2m 1110.

otr..~.,..t~a"
106 BullamUtAva. Pomeroy
Com• . and 811Pfrienc8

elegant Food and

614·992·7643

CALL AFTER 6:00
304-415·7256

I

~.:..:.;.:.!;.;;:..,;,:...:..;__-:.~

)

~

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and .RESIDENTIAL
~E ESTlMATES

OAI~
UMEITONE-,TRUCKING

311507 Aocuprtngo Ad.
(at comw of u.s At. 33)

It

-3

NO. 27130
11 PAGE 431

OOlORS a til fl . OR
TWNU.E 1 SHEETS

(BEAT THE BAN)

. TRAILER SITES '

(or ...Houlllor rou)

al,

~~59t

BISSELL ·.BUILDERS, INC.

Monthly
$1.30/day
$.05 /day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.
Business Card......$17.001 inch per momth
Bulletin Board .... .$6.00/inch per day

Chooaaand
cut your tree.

' '
""

$ .20'
$ .30
$ .42

' CHRISTMAS TREES

11.

I

.

$4.00
$ 6.00
$ 9.00

•New Homes '

I

,.

15
15
15
15
15

lox 119
Mld.leport, Ollio 45760
(614)143·5264 5114.93Mn

NOVEMBER SPEC:IA.L
NORINCO MAK 90 (AK47) ••,_.......5180
NORINCO UNI. SKS ........................ SCJ5
1200 ROUNDS NON-CORROSIVE •• 5130

Over 15 Word s

RIGGS

!

. ..
. .
'f'

1
3
6
10

Rale

IOIERT IISSELL
CONnRiiC'hOil

~

.

Words

.

OROER
In Cua
In tha
Court of
Ohio, atyted
Financial
Company of
Inc., et •1,
vo. Norman J.
et

RATES
Days

Rocky R. H•pp, D.C.U. • lpnt

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs

1:00 p.m. Salurday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I:OO p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThlllSday
I :00 p.m. Friday

HOlE SIIEI and ·

foivorced spouses
~ligible for S.S. benefits
:
:

SUNDAY

DAYBEFORE PUBLICATION

CLASSD'IEDS
EXCAVATING
GET RESULTS • FAST!
~.:J=Kitcr,:"~.f
L---..------:--------_J-;-------:::=:z:=:::::"====:::::::3~ . SEP11C
AVAILABLE. ·
SYS1EMS,

honor rolls announced
.~Meigs
.
,

. CLOSED

• Ad. ouWde the couuty rou.r ad nma lllu.tl be prepaMI
• Recti• diKount lor ub paid in advaDCe.
• Fne .Adl: Oi.,..way and Fouad ad. uDder 15 word• will be
nan 3 day• at DO chup.
• Price olad for aU capital leUen U double price of ad co.t
• T polatlloe 1ypo oaly oued
• S...tiael il not n~pouible for erTOn after fll'lt day (check .
lor orron rmtdoy od ....... illpapor). Call before 2•00 p.m.
day al&amp;er puhiM:aUoo to make c:orrec:tloa
• Acll lhat ftl\111 be paid m ~·•nee are:
Card ol ThaD!r.
Happy Ado
Ia Memoriam
Yord Soleo
• A clauified ad•erlilemt~ral placed iD the Tbe Daily SeaLiael
(e..epl Clutir..d Dioplay, Buoin,.. Cord or Let!ol
NoU...) orilloloo oppeor in the Poinl Pleuanl Ropier ODd
the CaUipoU. Daily Tribune, ruchina oYer 18,000 bome.

"-110t

Retailers would endorse the~
But lhlr*J ror •••
l

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
T"esday Paper
Wednesday Poper
Tlnusday Paper
Friday Paper
Stmday Paper

Call992-2156

for~ 1'bn would bo som=l
1p11e lime lbat some ~ · mtgb
eYell puo diurdL .
· · 1
'111i1111A • Jll!8l deal o(ienlcl
to
OWia *"•I ~It~ noe
a likely p M11y - at
iJi
oar life~. But Jsn't it ·"'OI'IIl
thi"~abaal? Wlllt do )'011 IJY!
il fly? rn lip myte~t -;
AN ADVANCED THINKERI
FROM ALABAMA
· ;
DBAR 1'H1NKER: I doil't tblnl(

FORECLOSURE ·BALE
UPON VAWABI:.E REAL

Mort1111ga
dated
28th day of
Fabn!My, 18112,. wh,ar.aby
NORMAN J. HAMILTON and·
VIVIAN . LEE HAMILTON,
huaband and wlla,
convoyed tho hereinafter
ducrlbed AMI &amp;lllle to the
afOfUIIId PlalntlH, to -ura
a promlooory. nota, which
oakl Mortg- Ia of record

'

!
-~=::=-::!~
be a\'011 ICWIO didn' bawe t0 .iXiil

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

Rainbows, Kirby, Electrolux,
Hoover, Eureka, Tri.Star,
Regina, &amp; most other braltds!
Parte Shipped UPS
Faet • Dependable Servlcel

To place an ad

-~-

Public Notice

" aftd purauant

EAGLE SCOUT •
Maxey, son
Vernon and Mary Lee
Maxey of Tuppers
was rec:ehtly presented his Eagle Scout
award in a ceremony at the Hickory Hills Church of Christ at
Tuppers Plains. He is a student at Eastern High School. Sean, ceoter, is pictured here with Pat Clifford, left, and Gale Osborne,
scout masters or Troop 235, Chester.

P11rt• • Service • Bags • Belts

Think ot what a great worl4"thill
would be if people judled C!fi«
anotbcr on the basis of how we lrell!
.out fellow humans. If we wore DOl
clothes, !heR would be no ~Y tq
1e11 who·was ricllllld who wai'JMIOII
Bavy. IIIObbery and IOCial ·~
blled 011 who- wbal would Dl

NOncE OF IHERIFPS

,

111 Sec'old St.. Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
· MEIGS coum ·
SINCE 1161

,.

•

l

Readers prai~e nudist colony lifestyle !

.

De.- Au I,.Mdera: I would lite
10 comment on tho letter from

'

JMon~y; December 6, 1993

6, 1993i
p e-6

.

.
;.·····

I

•DOZERS .
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
,. •TRUCKING

POOR BOYS TIRES
Daytona Radial 60 and 70 Sarl11
• Low, wide eo and 10 - SeriH
pelfonnance PIOfiiM•
Two otrong ftbe!gl=o belli'

I• A&lt;oare~aoiVe IMd fjeolgn

I• Slnocllh rkllng polyeoter cord
body.

• 101
' o· N

D,,..

T

EIC'lvlnNG
11r1
. ·
(614)·
667-66
. 21

, ~1Ho-lfnl

1.,.....,_ _ _ _ _.,...,

CALL
304-nS-5533
Open 6 Dey'a A Wetk ,,
SU·. NEAL FOJ\ THL: Dl.Al.

-·

�I

.r

Mooday, December 6, 1993

)age 8 The Dally Sentinel
Announcements

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

35 Lots &amp;

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

The Dally SenUnel -

Paa• '. e

NEA Cro••word Puzzle

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 6,.1993

BEATTIE BLVD."" by Bruce Beaule

----------------------~-----¥------------!
ACROSS
370_....
311 Anflla ......
11uty lnMct
PJ:nLLIP
ALDER

-·
=
......

4F-.JIIM

40 8ho4l 111111

8 Atttnllono

42 Sy 111041111
44 HumcJr
45Pt.,..'o

12 A leiter
13 lltllllnt proy·
erleodor
14

wlcllll'l
41 Lilllla'.

Let•• --

NORTH

16 lllkt lace
18 Cocottut tree
17 AU.Uc
roup
ta ,,. or
leather
20 'Soapy foomt
22 Ouotllonablo
24 Nothing
25 FHm•r poper
28 Cooked
tlowly
31 Superfotlvo
ondlnt ·
32 Cllrut fruit
34 lellow
35 Reaortol
New Moxlco

11-1-H

.All
.10182

•u
.KU3

EAST
•Q10 92

.3

UIHI

.A Q 10

SOUTH

•u
.AKQJ6S
.AK

.78 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer.: South
Solltb
BARN~·

1•
••

OL' BULLET PURELY
LOVES HIDE-AN'-

411

COUIIft

w•• , lUll-

•••••
COlli

530M-..G
54 !~MIIi't ••lit
58 Language
auflla
57 Speed
COIIIttl
58 Olllrcran
5(1 Etemally
( - I.)

eo Heovy otone

81 Grt¥01 rfdgeo
82 Guided

DOWN
1 Woge,.
2 Brother or

z•

W..l Norl~ Eut
Pus
Pus
PusPuaPua
Opening lead: • 7

SEEK II

Have a rule,
use that rule
By PbUiip Alder
Robert Frost supposedly said, ·A
jury consists of 12 pet'SOIIJI chosen to
decide who has the better lawyer."
Who cares about the Law of the Land?
There are many laws - well, rules
- that we learn for application at tht
bridge table. However, it's no gooc
knowing these rules if we don't appl) ,
the right one at the appropriate
moment.
How should the play go in today's
deal after West has led the spade seven against four hearts?
Declarer had one spade loser and
could afford two club losers. But if
East held the club queen and ace,
could South avoid three losers In the
suit?
•
At trick one, South played a low
spade from the dummy. East won with
the queen and switched to a diamond.
Declarer won with the ace, drew
trumps, cashed the diamond king,
played a spade to dummy's ace and
ruffed dummy's last spade in his hand.
Now South played a club to dummy's
jack.
East won with the queen but didn't
enjoy the experienee. A spade or diamond return would concede a ruff·
and-discard. And cashing the club ace
was equally hopeless.
Well played by South, but East had
only himself to blame. If West's opening lead was frimi shortage, South bad
the K-J and East's play was probably
Irrelevant. But If the seven was
fourth-highest, East could apply the
Rule of Eleven. There are four spades
above the seven in the other three
bands - and East could see them all.
So East should clay the spade two at
Irick one. With uck, West will switch
to a club at trick two and the contract
can be defeated.

AREN'T '1'0V

ON 11-lli: OTHER
TEAM, SWeETIE'

II

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock
118t 8-10 2.5.hacl. U,OOOml.t
$3800, good oond., tor lnforma.{

61 Farm Equ!Pment

lion 3M-875-6t4t.

'71 1135 Ma-·Fo;suoon with

19111 GUC Sierra 2SOO Aaldng
$7,800: 814-441.0731.
1992 Chtv. S·10 P.U. Auto
$5,915; 18t1 Chav. Sllv....ct
4x~ 1983 Chav. v.a Auto $2,915j
19ot Chov 8-10 Bla..r $4 1~ !
Two 1988 Toyota P.U. Auto; nlg~
MIIN, R~mo Good $2,815: 11~
Dodge
Chi~.
10 P.U.,Yllla
AUI!!is.~UN7
1... Toyola
P.U
$1,695: 1980 chtv. P.U. V-t, Aut
Run• Gr..t $1,1t5• 1988
4x4 1 Ton PU $5,3M: 11184
Von $2,415; 1M&amp; Chov 8-10
Bluar; 11184 Chov. S·1D 81~
19841 Chev. 314 P.U. 1)!115: ~,g
Auto Soln, Hwy. 1ou N., tl4o;

• 1 05 Hft'• 1 0 hOUrl,
$10,000; 814-'lll2-3034.
150 lluooy Forg..on w~oll l&gt;lr
• conopy, $4800: 304.&amp;75-71182.
COv0

454 lntamatlonal Tractor With
loldor $5,150: 240 ln1linatlonal

Wllh Plow $2,500; 4020 John

o-. $8,180, 61,·288o8522.

ca.. 1210 dltlll lroctor, -

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

HoUand grinder mixer, New

ALL Yard Solei Mull Bo Paid In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. ·
tho doy i&gt;lM lho od lo lo run.

dloo, Ill good eoncl• . 304-273-

4215.

Sunday Millon • 2:00 p.m.

Friday. Monday ed'Ufon - 2:00

Solo i Cht~;~obtoo, 2'L...,po,
1 SwNper,
Conclt!on, 114245-tltl.

p.m. Saturdly.
Rt. 110 In VInton, Tu...-wed., t-

?J.Now Curtalno, Bodclothlng,
F hlng Luroo. Tore. Lolo Moro.

Thi'M piece living roam auhe,
crNm, excellent cOndhloni bedroom ouho, good condlllon: 814o

Mat h1m1 NIIW.

a

Ho~

land 711. hoy bind, John Dooro
1240 4 row plantor, AC no till
~nter, KrauM 12ft. tractor

m-em. .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

7IJ ChivY 1 lon, w..k.
$400i Halmn WI'8Cker, bed ancl

1

l

~

448-G815.

~f!lllla ~~~~ti;""tw. 73 Vans &amp; 4-WD~s

304=:!1 or l.aoD-277-3917.

I

eta.v. 350· auto., fllr
cond.. t1850, 304.&amp;111-2487
63
Livestock
1985 fUll ol.. Bronoo XLT, 351o
onglno,
cattle
Hauling:
An)11mt, Clovoltnd
Anywhoro. PLA Rlllol&gt;oro Ohio, arnffmlcaeNtte, aluminum tur.
Every Mondor. Chuck Wllllomo, bin wMela, new tlre1, rune
Trlplo CrAk Trucking. 814-245- gml, 814-MI-2010.
1975 4WD

SOG8.

holot, $400; pllono 814-38'7o0882.
Twin olze wood ooptalno bod, 2

M,Ohlo • Wnl VIrginia, 304·
773-5785.

trwu and box 1prlng1, 150, 114-

9

Unldon UST WOO ootoiiHo
rocolvao whh 10" doh,: 1988
Ptyrnouth VIP, 4 door, 40,400
o~glnol mlln: ooourno 22
month IIIII- 18t1 BMW 318 IS,
oxcetlont

31180.

drawtn and 4 ahtlvea with matlii:Z.2788.

Wanted to Buy

AnUqull and u11d turnhure, no
item too large or too small. will

buy on• plect or complltt
houtehold, also want.O. old

JOIN AWINNING TEAM
Aa A Loodor In .Tho Rnonclol

This newepaper wtl not
llnowlngly acx:epl
aMrtlse..,..slor lllalollale
whldllo In vtolallon of lho

S.rvlc• Arva, Btlna A Member
Of Our Consumer Fffiance Team

blcycln, call Olby Mortln, 614- MtiRI Hiving A Good Platt TD

992·7441.

Start. Ate Yitu Stlf..MoiiVIttd,

Decorated 11onewarv, Will tal..
phonn, old lampe oki thtr·
momtten, old clock., lnliqut
turnhure. Alvarlrw An11quea.

Our,_,.

AIHrtlvo And Enfor Dolling

With People? A

Pft~Ant

low.
ore hoowby
lnformod lhol Ill -lngo

Ptr·

06nllhy And Good Sklllo
Aro A Mull. Rnponolbllhln In·
cludo Actlvhloo R-od To
Ru8a Moore, owner. &amp;14-f92. CIOdll,
Slln
AcCGUIII
25,21. Wo buy totaloo.
Monogomfn1 Aiiil Accounting.

ldtterUMd In ltd ntw~P~Ptr
819 l'lalltlle on an equal

OI&gt;I&gt;OIIunlr -

J &amp; D'a Auto P1rta and Sllvagt, For Immediate Coneldaratlotl
1110 buying Junk c•rs &amp; trucli:l. Contact: Guy Morrow At 814-

448-2208.

304·773-5343.

Real Estate

Junk Auto'• To Buy Will Plclc.Up

EQUAL
OPPORTUNnY
AppHoncn1 Any Other Motalo
EMPLOYER MIFIH
Froo, 814-4o6-JIIZ8 lloloro 9 P.M. NON-SMOKING AND DRUG 31 Homes for Sale
FREE ENVIRONMENT
W1nt to buy: electric traln1 &amp;
2 Bedroome, New Heat Pump,
ICC:HIOrlll. 304..QS.1712.
I::--:--:---,--,.-.,-.,-- Stor11ge Building, 314 Ac111 Lind,
NHded: plrl tiii'NI help for buay
W1nted To Buy: Junk Cart &amp; tax oftict. Send ...sume c/o Tht

i.:':O c~'roT':fH~~~S~. R"'

Merc~~rvlllt

Area, State Routt

NO, $25,000, 814•2504215.

Dally Son11nol, PO BOX 729H,
Po""'oy, Ohio 4111111.
Jolforaon Avo., tg. kftchon a
Ullllty room1 3br.,140tct20
Wtntod To Bur: Junk Auloo I:Po=rt-:t;:lm:':'o:-poo="'ftlo=n=-=ov=o:::lll~b:-:lo--:-ln dln!ng,
FHA opprovoo. Somomllt
wtlh Or WithoUt Motoro. Coli loclll cloctor'o onlco. Mull l&gt;l lot,
LIIJY Uvoly. 814&lt;l88o9:103.
flmllar wnnounnce billing, Roolty, 304.al'5o3030 or 878o3431.
PRICE REDUCTION • 4
Wlntod ·To Buy: Rott Torrlor
=~f:/~cou~~'l/1:; MAJOR
Bodroom1 2 112 Bat~ Homo On 4
EHhor Y01mg Oo Puppy: 814·3'11- lokorf,._do~. l 1m from Ac,_
""'· Now tt20 500, Mort
2728.
a:ooam to. 1:
11 br. Wldo'o Lond 18 Avolllblo • 110 Acroo m11
Wlntod To Buy: Slondlng Tim· oHicoloclllod In PlooNnl Volloy, On A Jolnlna Form Thll Hlo An
ber &amp; Pine, Good Prien, 814· Hotpllll. No telephone lnqulrn Aoklng
Prlco 01 $104,800.
358-111106.
pllioo.
l.ocl'lid Rio Orondo. C.ll
9111 Connoll AI Donn• Sonmoro
Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
Roolty At (8141 384.a259.
Colnl, Gold Rln,s, Sliver Colnt,
Gold Colno. M..S. Coin Shop, Shipping &amp; Rocolvtng Clerk, Old H-• Wllh 1 Aero, Along
151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
CDL Llc1111H Protorrod. Apply In Rlvor 3 Mlloo From Gllllpollo,
At:
Burtllo
011 Rl. 7, 115,000, 814-441-7243, 814W.nted to buy: used mobile ~~~~1 Mondor -Frldoy, ~3.:;711;..;·2:;.:4;;.79:;.:._ _ _ _ _ __
h o - 614-448-11175
WANTED: onglno lor 1988 Ford Trucking Compony In Ook Hill, 32 Moblta Homes
FHIIVI,- 4op.1 1.3 lhor, noodod Ohio lo Sloklng Exportonco
for Sale
ASAP, coll510·992·21551 8:30am- Slml Tractor IT11IIar Drl'ioro.
5:00pm., or 814-fi2-2o28 after Excollont Pay, Exporltncod 1m Forroot Pork, 12x85 2 Bodo
5:00pn).
D~varo Only. Clll814-682·7773.
room, WIBioooTotol Eloc:lrfc,

="'

p,,..,.,

condnlon,

mllooge: 814-m.am.

1ow

.!:'.1....·

304~'fUtl:~,

WATER UN!,.SPECIAL: 314 lncll
200 PSI t11 •• 8; 1 Inch 200 PBI
W.IO; R&lt;&gt;n Evono Enta=o,
Jockton, Ol!lo, 1-IDHfl' 28.
WATER STORAGE TANKS
Al&gt;o1io And Ground FDA
Appn&gt;Vod For Potoblo Wolor.
Ron Ev1n1 Enlerprl_., J•ck.

oon, Ohio, 1-800-137-91128.

7t

~

50 IIOOC.SmE. "'~
Pt..lf.&gt; ~WEEK'~

DATE BOOK
Dec. 6, 1993

;;;;;-:;-:::~~~~-::-..

Transportation

UIIIHy lrollor, I'd', $200.
10 OOOib hitch, lito FISO, $'/$.
Flb';;iioo toppar for 8-10, $250.

,.

=

Rlc:k PArson Auction Company,

1987 Bronco II, bell""'. Condlo
Holotoln Bull Calf No Sunday
Colli, 614-!188.a524.
lion,
- B
New
Running
~-St.
Air COndhlon , llllncla
Roglotorod
llmouoln·brad
$8
• t14-3Uf
cowo, bnd holtor. yoorllng and Tronoonlulon,
9091.
i
2 yr. old bulle, 814:-ega.ms:
1988 Nluon 4x4 Pothllndar,
84 H &amp; G 1
lo-._.... cond., . -. c,.._ _a..!y~,..:..ra.;...n:.:.._,_- 8Uo33w.
'
U...
..._1 N 50 &amp;
~r,· oquoro - n, ••·
up.
So urdoy only piCKUp. 304-87&amp;- 74
MotOrcycleS

full time auctlonHr, compllll.e
auction
IINict.
UcenMCI

BORN LOSER

Autos for 5ale

tm 780 Yamo".!r, kvt., runo
304-1 ....281•.

76

Auto Parts&amp;

M-f

Accessories

HIM 10 ~NK O!.FFEINEFREE:. COFFEE.
.

-1170
="""Mov"""~"ck"""'30;.,.2 ,.:;.:;11;,;1;_n_da-rd-, &amp; Lug Aluminum Turl&gt;o -to,
aooc1 l!odJ, runo otron11o $750 or 15 Inch In Dlomotor, 11 Inch
Wldo, Will Fn a.-11 Moloro,
frodo~ood fronl-ld~vo $128.
814oll71o2721.

.... 3
2t18.
1172 Plymoutll Duller drog car,
440 1uto., 5500 eonve11ar
1lectronlct, tnme. brakt, weld
whett8, tubbed, 114-112-1407.
1980 Buick Skylork, $400, 814-

Today is the 340th
day of 1993 and the

good, $350.

CAtiD!3 CXX:il::R "TOLD

1

H t W

ted

Y8Cincy For School Hu,.e, Oal-

~~~::ect~~-2-:,.":."f,::Z

448·7117.

room•,

Exctlflnt

ron!, 111 tor oroly Sl'l'llilio., call 1•

eoo.a374~. Hk 1or Millo.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ''I'm a rock fan . so I alwayo perk up rockln'. you know what I mean?" - (Singer I John Hlllt1.

rOCk's

THAT DAILY
PUUIII

Q Rearrange

lttttrl of the
four Krombled word1 b.
low to lorm four words.

I

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1

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C0 N K K
s • I I
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the

".~. retor." the wife told her hus·. band. ' You don't even know

FHAT

what a carburetor is," the hUS·
band sighed. "Well," she an~ swered , "I know I drove the car

Ir-'TI-'TI"''-;I..;.;,I.;.a....,l'..,.o e:!D..~~~.~ ·;":
L_.l..-.l..-.1..-..L.-..L.-.J.

' ""'kl• quo••d

by liliong 1n the miumg words

you de_.elop from step No. 3 below

.:t. PR IN T NUMBERED
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES

A
V

UNSCRAMBlE FORI
ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Mishap- Bound - Tangy· Viking - POINTING
You're considered intelligent if you find the flaw in

a

friends reasoning. You're considered wise if you refrain
from POINTING it out.
.

DECEMBER 61

-:---:-:--....:.....:._Aj

I'll F~ Awa1 (CC)

Friends: Reunion

II Dal~s Cowboys

epm.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

THE BEST

warranty. non\XEI*'I 1ft.
1 ,.., of frle 101

v"i"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Clltbmy

IMONDAY

COncltlon,

~na•, ~

FREE PIZZA .

Now gu lonko, ono lon ~nrq__
w,_&gt;
rodlatoro, 111110,
:llltl-1434.
Building
oto. 0 • R A~lpley, WY. 3041182 C.moro m, now 380 on- 372·3133 or 1
273'1321.
Supplies
glno1 rlmo &amp; tlroo, S3500.
Block, brick, _., olpoo, wln- 304"'7WM8.
79 Campara&amp;
dawll, llntela, etc. C'audt Win·
Motor Homes
lonl, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 114- 1982 Chov. Cllobri!Y Front
Whool Drlv!1. Porfoct Condhlon, ::1m=-:tu~l::;ly;.;.:oo.:.:l.;.f_.::.:nl,:;o;::-::,...,111,..1l"''":
-~
$800, 814-2....- .
camper, M;. exc. cond• ....aJS. :
1982 Oldo Dotto 1111, t1100; 11184 1584.
.
•
.
I
CS$Chtvott~ UOO: 1m
T
plck141, UOOi good can.
dft
lllOd IO Mil, nogotllbll,
Serv1ces
81
5:1,
1983 TIA Poco Cor C.r'o Tolllod8lNow 350 llolor, Tlroo R•r End
Home
r
Monr More Now Porto t1,700,
Improvements
,
080 814-448-3787
:
1984 Chov. Citation, $980 080,
rurto good. 304-675-18414 oftor

====ii

IJ'r.

clay of ftrJl.

,.,.,..~

(k

TODA:Y'S HISTORY: Olt this day in
1969, a free concert in Altamont
Speedway at Livermore, Calif., turned
tragic. A spectator was fatally stabbed
by a member of the Hell's Angels mo ·
lorcycle gang during the Rolling
Stones' set.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: William S.
Hart (!871).1946), actor; Joyce Kilmer
08811-1918), poet; Ira Gershwin (1896·
1983), lyricist·

Budget Prlcod Tl'onomloolono
Uood I rol&gt;ulft, Ill typoo, 11art!
l.'l~~nor t14-24Wm,

llo Coumy Schoolo, School 8834
Num C.rtlflcallon Or BS In · :=:;:·~:::::7::'=-::-:':':'"=-::::-:­
Nurolng And R.N. Roqlllrod. 814- 11174 K l - With Lol, 3 Bodo

1
I p an
Wonlodo · - to bruoh hoo Nowly Romodllod, 8'14-9.
AVON 'I' All ...,.., I Shlrtoy 1 omoll lot In Roclno, 814-1411: tm 3 lodroom Mobile Homo,
:30;prn;:·
814-24fl.11818
Evonlngo, $4,800
,.:':pol::'"~·:'04::,m.::14:Zt::.::::::£2M:;;O;•:"ar;;;5;
Firm.
11111 BrNI-..d Mobllo Homo,
S lodroomt, 'Garden Tub, A~
ready Sot-Up, cau 114-245-t822
Aftorl P.M.
1182 Homo ltldO Trollor; H•
Spoclouo Roomo With C rt! Celllngo Throug-. Throo ,
' llodroom, TWo Ioiii. Huge Guo
don Tub In llutor Botfi. o.or
1200 Sq. Fl. Lolo Of s...,.._
Hu All Tho Lind In
.._ Thin 0no v-. ~~­
Coudtuon, MUll ._ To ..,.
_..... Clll 114-24J.20t2
LMv• 1111 ~ a• tr No AneWtr.
18M Aednwn 14x70, 3bdrm., -.
oltlrtlng1 otopo, blooko, ·

15... PEPPERONI-

,--..,

""'="",_....,..,...,......,_,,.,.,...,......,.

Em ployment Serv1ces

76th

AND I eAID ~"THS&lt;E

---.t');:t.;.

~ti!IIII.':Jlii;Ut
'Mi ~

t.+-1-+-

TiMt•dlty. O.c. 7, 1913
Your londneu lor lravollooks like " might
be gratified In lhe rear ahead. Numerous
short .lr}ps are .lhdlcaled. as well as ~ne
jO~mey.or consldilrablallme and longlh.
SAGITTARIUS, (Nov . 23· Dtc. 21)
Persons wllh whom you 're aeaoolaled
mlgh1 liy 10 1111 you today you're unduly
opllmiallq regarding your expectations.
Odn't bu~ whal they'ra saying because
you're rlg.llt. They're wrong. Know where
lo look tor romanOe and you'll find il. The
Aatro;~ ra~ h Malchmaker Instantly

"

reveals "'hich signs are romantically per· GEMINI (lily 21..Juno 201 Your probabili·
lecl lor you . Mail $2 and a long, sell· lies, for success look very good loday,
addressed stamped, envelope lo because you'll realize rl is people, not
Malchmakar, c/o lhls newspaper, P.O. lhings, thai makes the world go around .
Box 4465, New York, N.Y. 10163.
Gelling along wilh others is your strong
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jon. 11) You will su~.
be much more eftectlveiOday II you keep CANCER (June 21..July 22) Today you
your intentions to yourself . Plan your can enhance your efficiency by selecting
ob)eclives, bul don't dlacuss lhem wllh IaSka' or a$81gnments you truly enjoy per·
others until you 've done what you have forming. Ira the sense at acoomplishment
sel oullo do.
!hal provides gratification.
.
AquARIUS (Jan. 2CJ.Ftb. 11) This could LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Be se lective
be a very Interesting day wtlere you might regar!llng peii008 wilh whom you ch006e
leam two valuable lessons from your per· lo aoclaNze today. 11 you pick people who
son a! experiences. Whal you .dlscoyer will :don1 lhlnk as you do, lha day could be a
be pullo use soon .
bum-.
PIScES (Ftll, »March ZO) If your goals VliiQO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) This mlghl be
are clearly dellned tOday you, should .do lha riQht day for you 10 go bargain hunling,
·exceptionally 'well In compelillve develop· Blflecially If you'ra looklnlllfpr a big t~kel
men11. However, If they are f~zy or dis- IMm lhal t111e a pertin.nlldy need.
toried, lha oppos~e could be Irue.
UIRA,(Sept. ~ 23) You could have
ARIES (March 21·Aprll11) Olscuaslng an abul1dance of good ideas today !hal
complicated 111ues with aasoclalea could lhouldn1 be1.kept 10 yourHW. Brighlll11nk·
work out wall tor you loday. Yoll mlghl find. lng trl~nda .will N~Preclalo and perhapa
some akceptlonal counselonl 81 your dla- even Improve upon your ofttrlnga.
pout.
'
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~Nov. 22) II somell1ing
TAURU8 (Apr112CJ.Mty 20) You may have profllable develope lor you today, end
a apeclal . ~nack today lor helping other&amp; ~ 11 an axcellenl chance It mlghl. Ills
aort oullhalr llnanc:i8l Clllemmat. If lhay f,ol• likely ID be englneefed by a (riend worklow your tuggaltions, II could !)UI l~em lng on your btlha" behind lhe scenes.
beck In lha blaCk.
·

....

(CCj

0

"l

I

t

•
'•

�Ohio Lottery

Meigs
defeats
Southern

Pick 3:'
217
Pick 4:
. 9715
Buckeye 5:
3-6-24-26-35

PageS

GIFf TO HOSPITAL • An annual project of
members of Meigs County Granges is to make
· stuffed toys to be 'iven .during the year to chil·
dren who are hospttallzed or visit the emergency
room at Veterans Memlll'lal Hospital. This year
about 50 were presented by Rhonda Dailey, RN,
BSN, director of nurses, third _from left, by Opal

Dyer, project chairman. Stuffed to1s were provided by Star, Hemlock, Rock Sprmgs, Racine,
and Harrisonville Granges. Delivering them to
the hospital were, from the left, Mary Virginia
Easterday, Racine Grange, Barbara Fry, Rock
Springs, (Dailey and Dyer) Dorothy Smith,
Racine, and Rosalie Story, Hemlock.

da Stewart, Alitanda EUis, Lillie Lambert, Lacy
HOI, April Copplck, John Taylor, Michael Stew·
art, Matt Holley, Justin Good.e, Clay Stone,
Erica Haning, Elsa ObUnger, James E. Duncan,
Chris Wolfe, Samantha TUley, Brittany Kina,
Josh Stanley, Shawna Davis, Jessica Howell,
Sheena Ash, Sarah Stobart, Megan Garnes,
Michele Imboden, David Tucker, Melissa
Pauley, Jamie Stover, Amy Stover, Kara Bunln·
gton, Jessi~a Blaettnar, Joshua Hysell, Dusty
Lee, Tasba Green, Jay Green, Matt Wandllog,
Joshua Milard, Adam Doczi, Joey Bush,
Stephanie Hartley, Adam Pine-Pellegrlno, Don·
aid Russell, Jr., Brittany Cremeans, Christopher
Trader, Jon Me Daniel, James 1\.. McDaniel,
Amber Wellman, Lula Webb, Courtni VanMeter, Cheryl Partlow, Shannon Partlow,
Phillip Murdock, and David Tucker.

DEMONSTRATION FOR PARENTS •
Annual parent meeting of the Meigs Local
School District was held recently at the .Salls·
bury Elementary. Parents were given an
overview of the Chapter 1 program and the role
that the director, classroom teacher, Chapter 1
teacher, principal and State Department have to
make the program successful. Attending were
Wendy Halar, director; Paula Chancey, VIcki
Haley, Linda McManus, Janet Hoffman, Bryan
Zirkle, Elizabetlt Story, Teresa Carr, Debbie
Davis, Barb MatheWB Crow, Ron Drexler, Tim
Lawson, Tara Barber, and Judy McCarthy,
teachers. Each school gave a dlrrerent presenta·
lion for tbe pare~tta attending. Studenta participating, pictured here In no particular order,
were William Hanning, Lester Aeiker, Joshua
Althouse, Michael Clark, Justin Warner, Miran·

Vol. 44, NO. 157

a

3,400 bluebird boxes stretching
375 miles along Route 20 across
the agrarian heartland of upstate
New York. "It will be great for the
bluebirds, and for the conservation
movement," he said.
The Eastern Bluebird, with bril·
liant azure-and-russet plumage and
a lilting song, has long been celebrated as a symbol of happiness.
But the birds had vinually disap·
peared from their native range east
of the Rocldes by 1960. New York
state has the bluebird - the state
bird - on its "special concern"
list. a category below threatened or
endangered.
North America's other two
species of bluebird - the Moun. tain Bluebird of the Rocldcs and
the Western Bluebird of the West
Coast - have also declined.
The problem is a shortage of
natural nest sites. Bluebirds like
holes in old trees. Development
took over some of their habitat.
Prolific and aggressive European
starlings and English house spar·
rows, imported in the 19th cenwry,
took over much of the rest of iL
Nest boxes have helped the
Eastern Bluebird rebound. Members of the North 1\.merican Blue·
bird Society reponed 11,000 young
bluebirds fledging from 13,400
boxes nationwide in 1980. In 1992,
70,700 fledged from 47,000 boxes.
Bruce Peterjohn of the U.S. Fish

and Wildlife Service said the num·
ber of Eastern Bluebirds has
increased at an annual rate of about
6 percent over the last 10 years.
Over the same period, the Western
Bluebird declined by 2 percent a
year, and the Mountain Bluebird
mcreased by 2.7 pen:ent annually.
But bluebird restoration doesn't
mean nailing a birdhouse 10 a lree.
The design, placement and maintenance of the box are critical.
The ideal nest box offers protection from the elements and appeals
to bluebirds while keeping out
competing birds and hungry rac·
coons . It also should be easy to
open for observation and cleaning.
The angular wooden box
designed ,by Dick Peterson, a fumi.
tore-maker in Brooklyn Center,
Minn., is getting rave reviews.
"My tests have shown the
Peterson box to be the most frequently used (by bluebirds) of all
box types by a wide margin," said
Kevin Berner, research director of
the North American Bluebird Soci.
ety and an assistant professor of
wildlife studies at the State Univer·
sity of New York at Cobleskill.
Berner i's field-testing variations
on six basic box designs; he moni- .
tors around 140 boxes on campus
and elsewhere in Schoharie County.
The Peterson bpx's slanted roof
also is reputed to keep raccoons

"Poetry and art gives you a way
to express yourself without being
ashamed," said Savage, an inmate
at the Connecticut Correctional
Center at Cheshire. "If I'm going
to· be here I might as weil learn as
much as I can, and I've learned
how 10 open up and express myself
in a lot of ways."
Arts programs have been
expanding at prisons across the
country. They've become a way to
By RENU SEHGAL
build self-esteem among inmates
Associated Press Writer
and to keep them engaged in pro-CHESHIRE, Conn. (AP) t.fichael Savage says prison has ductive acuvities.
As prisons have become more
transformed him from a violent
crowded, .Connecticut prison officriminal into a poet
:He entered prison in 1986 at the cials say arts programs have proven
a relatively inexpensive way to
a~ of 19, and would have been
free now if it hadn't been for the gain the cooperation of inmates,
code he once followed. After being make them less violent and give
sent away for five years for stab· them an outlet other than l1angs.
bing a person in a street fi~ht, he The sale of inmate art plus mmate
stabbed another person m pnson liS welfare funds make up most of the
he was about 10 go home, and got budget.
"As the number of inmates
another five.
·"In jail, you have to always doing considerably more time
have a macho attitude," said Sav- increases, we are being challenged
age, 26, of Waterbury, who admits to create viable treatment programs
10 help inmates to become involved
he was a very violent person.
Today, Savage says he is a· in constructive activities," .said
changed man, and he credits a Doug Kulmacz, director of volun·
poetry class he enrolled in earlier teer services for the Connecticut
Department of Correction.
this year.

EDITOR'S NOTE- There's a
trend in prisons in Connecticut•. '!&gt;
let inmates learn about and paructpate in the arts, as a less violent
outlet than gangs. Arts programs
have been expanding at prisons
across the country. They've
become a way 10 build self-esteem
among inmates and to keep them
engaged in productive activities.

-Community calendar· Community Calendar items Masonic Temple. Officers will be
appear two days before an event installed. Refreshments will be
aticl the day or that event. Items served.
must be received· in advance to
EAST MEIGS · Eastern Athie!·
assure publication In the calenic
Boosters
will meet Tuesday at 8
dar.
p.m. in the high school cafeteria.
MONDAY
SYRA.CUSE • The Sutton
MIDDLEPORT • Christmas
Towllllhip Trustees will meet Mon- bazaar and luncheon will be held
day at 7:30p.m. at the Syracuse Tuesday from 11 am. 10 7.p.m. in
Municipal Building.
the basement of' the Heath United
Methodist Church. Pies, candies,
,·, POMEROY· The Meigs Band craft items and more will be for
Boosters will meet Monday at 7 sale. The event is sponsored by
Jt.m. in the high school band room. Eleanor Circle.
All band parents are encouraged 10
a~ the meeting.
SYRACUSE • "Christruas
Around the World• will be present·
• ,MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· ed at Carleton School Tuesday at 7
port Garden Club will have its p.m. The public is invited to attend.
annual Chrisunas dinner, program
alld gift exchange Monday at 6:30
OLIVE TOWNSHIP • The
p,lll. at Seyler's House ofTreasll!llS Olive Township Trustees will meet
ll)fOmeioY·
at 7:30 p.m. at the Shade River
State Forestry building on Joppa
; LETART · The Lelart Township Road Tuesday.
Ttitstees will' !JICCI Monday at 6
p._rn. at the office building:
WEDNESDAY
;· ·
TUESDAY i
RACINE • The Southern Junior
" MJDDLEPORT • The Middle· High Boosters wil meet Wednes·~n MasOnic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM 'day at 7 p.m. at the school. All par·
wjll meet at 7:30 Tuesday. the ents are urged 10 attend.

at

,,

(

.

'}

,

With arts programs, "We have a
unique opportunity as a stopgap in
these inmates' lives to re-culture
them," Kulmacz said.
In May, a group of prisoners
from the Connecticut Correctional
Center in New Haven painted The
Little Mermaid on the cafeteria
walls of the New Raven's Clinton
Avenue Language Academy, an
elementary magnet school. The
school would not have been able 10
afford it otherwise, said Bonnie
Winchester, a school department ·
spokeswoman.
Connecticut, which has 22 state
prisons, brings in artists from tile
community to teach inmates the
arts - from sculpture 10 painting
and creative writing 10 IDUSIC.
Some form of arts programming
exists in every state, but there has
never been a national survey, says
Kay Wood Bailey. arts administra·
tor for the Delaware Department of
Correction and president of the
International Correctional Arts
Network.
Says Bailey: "The arts are the
Cinderella of corrections. We're
hidden but of great value."
Pedro de Clet. 30, serving a 9
1/2-year sentence for possession of
narcotics at Cheshire, would agree.
"The classes have freed me
mentally and spiritually from the
bonds of this place and what goes
on here," he said. "You're treated
like you're not even human here like we have no minds, hearts or
souls.''
The arts let inmates be people
rather than be turned into "monsters in this university of crime,"
de Clet said.
'·'A lo( of people are here
because they've never been able to
speak from inside. It helps them to
trust.'~ he said. "It bas turned me
armmd. It's a great gift 10 me."

~

CHlCAGO (AP) - David Let·
terman used to be flauered 10 get a
standing ovation at the start of
every show.
•'Then it hit me that these peopic were standing bec,use: Oh,
Dave bas a job,''. Letterman said in
an interview in the January issue of
PlayboY,·
.
.
Don t get hill) wrong - he did
appreciate the honor the first night
the "Late Sbov.: with David Letter·
man" aired on CBS, after he
jumped sh.ip from NBC.
He'd feared, lhou~h. that it was
gomg to be aU downhill from there.
" I fully expected the bottom to

· Continued on page 3

Poll reveals
Ohioans support
health plan

Savinfs Bond Giveaway j

CINCINNATI (1\.P) - Fiftyone percent of Ohioans responding
to a poll said they supported the
concept of universal health cover-

~

age.
But only 10 percent of Ohioans
interviewed for the Ohio Poll
released Monday· said they would
be willing 10 pay $300 or more a
year in lllltes 10 support universal
coverage.
Of those interviewed, 51 percent
said they would be willing to pay
more taxes to provide universal
health coverage for aU Ohioans and
37 percent said they would not
want to pay m~ taxes. One per·
cent had no opinion and 11 percent
declined to say yes or no, saying
their answer would depend on what
was offered.
The University of Cincinnati's
Instil!lte for Policy Research conducted the telephone survey Oct.
22 througlt Nov. 3, interviewing
842 adults selected at random from
around state.
The Cincinnati Post110d the uni·
versity sponsored the poll. The
margin of error is 3.4 percentage
points.
Thirty-seven percent of those
questioned said they \Y()uld not be
willing to pay more taxes to support universal coverage. Six percent said they would be wiiling to
pay less than $100 in additional
taxes: IS. pen:ent said !hey would
pay $100 to $299; 10 percent said
they would pay $300 or more; and
32 percent had no opinion.

t
(2) s100 Savings Bonds
Below and Win

~

*

~~ .
Separate drawings will
'- be held. You must fill in aD blanks · .f.
~
and deposit at
,_·i ~.
Farmers Bank or mail to
~
Farmers Bank,
~
~
Box 626, Pomeroy, Ohio.

f

! :~-----------------lJi
i
t• -~it
_,·-*·
'j

drop out on the second night," he
said. "Then when the ratings didn't
go down, it became like a whole
new universe. It was like, Oh my
God! You me1111 we actually have a
chance of sue~. ))ere. ~d that
has kind of beernhc mood smce.''
·RADNOR; Pa. (1\.P) ..:.. Daryl
Hannah plays a larger-th.~n-life
character in ber latest movte, but
doesn't want he(' own life blown
out OfPI'OJlOrtion.
. "PC(,ple in the p_ublic eye are
made into cartoon characters and it
bas nothjngll) do witll realitf, who
they are at wh3t they feel,' Hannsh said

Addr•o:

I

Dahl oiBirlll:--......,---------- I

1

Pto... Complete All Bl1111ka To Bo Eligible

! . ('FB
"""""-.

'

I

-------------------Your Bank (o'"li(f:...
J Farmers

'

!&gt;

-

~

j

..__,
Member FDIC

,,~

992-2}36
221 WEST SKOND
:~o POMEROt OHIO

985-3385
-·
STATE ROUTE 7
!&gt;
. ·TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

UNTIL
~BRISTMAS
11

"We also greatly appreciate the contribution of Evan
Davis to thecampaign, another example of the supponand.
dedication the community has demonstrated in this cam-:
pll\gn," he added.
•
"The partnership between the public and private sector&amp;
at the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Cominu~
nity College is a winning combination of resources ·fOt;
everyone," Kidd said. "Public education offers thebenefi~
of being accessible 10 all local residents, while the private .
institution offers additional options in education."
:
Barry Dorsey, Ed.D ., president of the University of RiQ
Grande and Rio Grande Community College, told thoso
attending the event, "This campaign will provide funds for
student scholarships and the development of additional
programs that will prepare Rio Grande's students 10 corn•
pete effectively in the workplace."

'

f«.

Happy Holidays t
fDI Oott•e Coupe•

Nowo""per

Pomeroy village
employees granted ~
Christmas bonuses.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Development Director Donald
Jalceway won state controllers'
approval of a $13.5 million loan for
a shopping center that will cover
about five blocks of downtown
Ponsmouth in southern Ohio.
He told the state Controlling
Board on Monday' that the project
will revitalize Portsmouth and
Scioto COunty. Soutl!ern Ohio has
some of the poorest counties in the
state.
The county had an unemploy·
ment rate ol 9.4 pment in October,
the latelt&gt; IDQ!Ith
~hich f~&amp;ures
. ~WCJ:C .available.,
. _ . .. .
Gov. George Voinovich and
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D·
Wheelersburg, said the pt;ojecl will
create more than SOO JObs within

BIRD BOX. Ray BrliiJIII of CobleSkUI, N.Y., checks in on a con·
ventional bluebird box. Tbe box at right, a Peterson box designed
by a Minn~ta..(\ltillture-maker; !'lso is catching on in N.W _York,
where the'bluelllrd•lioDu!aJibn.has increased steadily over tlte jlast
10 years. (AP·P.botolM"ike Groll)

t_i.

Letterman receives standing ovation

l------------~~~~~~~

Portsmouth
project gets
$13.5 million

Formal aris programs in state
prisons began in the 1970s through
President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Great Society program, Project
Culture. The project used a $1 million budget 10 improve and create
programs throughout the country.
Money cutbacks and lack of inter·
est slowly caused the project's
demise.
Several states have extensive
arts programming, bur by far the
most elaborate is in California The
state spent $2.6 million last year
for a full-time artist coordinator at
each of its 26 prison facilities and
at least 350 contractual artists.
California's program, which
began in 1979, received much legislative suppon after the release of
The Brewster Report, a 1983 study
by San Jose State University Pro·
fessor Lawrence G. Brewster on
the program's effect on inmates.
The study found a 75 percent to
81 percent reduction in violence by
inmates who participated in arts ~
programs, and that the inmates
were 40 percent less likely to return
10 prison after their release.
Critics say arts programs coddle
inmates.
Mike Ferrucci, executive assis·
tant to the director of the union representing Connecticut's correction
officers, said there are too many
programs for inmates.
"We're sending the message to
inmates that we're trying to make
life comfortable for them and get·
ling rid of the.punishment factor.
"We don't have the luxury of
space and staff. We don't even
have a stable and secure system .
Today's prison population has
•·,,!&gt;
many gangs and gang members.
The more you allow inmates to
mingle- outside of their cells, you're
allowing the time to do bad
'
things," Ferrucci said.

A Muldmadialnc.

Inc. and Worthington
addition, a contribution
Industries Inc., anhas been received from
nounced their suppon
Evan Davis, chairman
to the university with
"This campaign Will
oftheboardofOakHill
gifts cumulatively
B~~ are very grate·
amounting
to prollide fundS for StU•
$600,000.
dent SChO/aTShipS and
foliO John McConnell,
Bob Evans Farms
founder and chairman
of WorthinglOn Indus·
Inc. pledged $500,000 the Q8Ve/opment Of adtowards the construe· ditional programs...
tries lnc., for its expres·
tion of a new College
workof
thatsuppon
Rio Grande
of Business facility on
sion
for theis
doing in making higher
the Rio Grande cam·
education accessible to
pus, which will house
Ohio's
citizens.
especially
those
in
southern Ohio," Kidd
the Emerson E. Evans Board Room containing the at·
chiv,es of Bob Evans Farms Inc., according 10 Kidd. In continued.

RIO GRANDE· The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Coml!lunity College announced a four-year capital campaign to raise $6.5 million today during a morning
press conference. Jack Kidd, fli'SI vice president of the
university's board of truStees; announced that more than
$3 million ·. or 48 percent of the goal • already has been
pledged or given to the campaign.
Kidd indicated that recent gifts contributed by Dayton
businessman and investor John W. Berry amount to over
$750,000. Berry has given $608,000 and the Loren M.
Berry Foundation bas pledged $150,000 towards tfle establishment of an endowment for the Loren M. Berry
Center of Economic Education. The Center is one of eight
economic education centers in Ohio that provide instruc·
tion 10 high school teachers and students.
TwoColtimboscorpomtecontributon,BobEvansFanns

House sparrows are the worst
enemy of bluebirds, by many
accounts. The sparrows like nest
boxes and commonly peck the
weaker bluebirds to death to talce
over their homes.
·
Steve Gilbertson, a machinist in
Andover, Minn .. designed a nest
box made of PVC (polyvinyl chloride) plastic pipe. The smaU size4 inches•in diameter and 4 1/2
inches deep - makes it unappealing 10 sparrows, he said.
Berner said he has observed
bluebirds but no sparrows in PVC
boxes.

Art programs introduced at prisons

su1111y, b.lgb In lower 5011.

Rio Grande announces '$6.5 million capital campaign

from climbing on top and reaching
in for a snack.
But Mrs. Janetatos said she'll
stick with the classic rectangular
box originated by Thomas Musselman of Quincy, Ill., back in the
1930s.
"Now, if anyone came up with
a box that would keep out house
sparrows, that would be a real
breakthrough," Mrs. Janetatos
said.

Wayne Davis, a researcher at
the University of Kentucky,
designed a box with a narrow slot
across the lOp of lhe front. Davis
found that bluebirds like the slot,
which lets them escape sparrow
attacks. Berner said he's had spar·
rows nesting in slot boxes.

LOw loiiJcbt llt lower JGe,
doudy. Wedttesday partly

1 Section, 10 P - 35 cenhl

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 7, 1993

Muldmedlalnc.

In search of the perfect bluebird box
ByMARYESCH
Associated Press Writer
COBLESKILL, N.Y. (1\.P)Every bluebird fancier knows that
if r.ou want bluebirds you should
bwld nest box. The question is:
What kind of box?
A rectangular wooden box has
long been the standard.
However, a v-shaped, slantroofed structure designed by a
Minnesota furniture-maker is swift·
ly winning converts. Another Min·
nesotan is pushing plastic pipe. A
Kentucky researcher recommends
rectangular openings, rather than
round ones . Others advocate a
longer roof-overhang.
"What's the best house? Whenever bluebird people get together,
this is the big toptc. It goes on for
hours," Mary Janetatos, executive
director of. the North American
Bluebird Society in Silver Spring,
Md.,said.
Here in Schoharie County, the
hotbed of bluebird restorallon in
New York state, the leading boxes
are being tested side-by-side.
"We fledge about 2,000 bluebirds a year in this county. a third
of the state total," said Ray Briggs,
president of the New York State
Bluebird Society and a retired dairy
farmer and teacher. He estimates
that tbere are about 5,000 bluebird
boxes in Schoharie County alone.
Briggs has a vision: a trail of

•

·Gold
and maroon cards .will
Issued to academic
achievers at an b~nors assembly to be hMd
Wednesday morniti* at Meigs Hl&amp;h SchooL The
cards are a part of a Meigs High Honor Court
where the school recognizes achievement and

Meigs merchants awards
·acco~pllsh·
ments with merchandise
Rev1ewing
the program bere Is Jennie Dorsey, an involved
teacher left, with students, seated, Sarah Ander·
son, JaSon Miller, aad Jason Witherell, and Erin
Krawsczyn, standlog.

Acade·m ic achievers to be
honored by Meigs merchants
.

Meigs County merchants are
joining Meigs High School in a
program to reward the school's
academic achievers.
The new program is called the
Meigs High Honor Court and is a
part of the Effective Schools Pro·
gram which is funded through a
state rural demonstration program.
In a special assembly tomorrow
morning, students who made all
A's during the P.ast nine weeks
grading period wtll be issued gold
identification cards and stude.nts in
an A·B grade category w!ll be
given maroon cards. The lammated

.

cards note the level of achievement

centage. ?orne will be offering 10
and have a picture of the student.
percent diSCounts to the earner of a
The cards will note the students' gold card and five percent to the
academic achievement and the owner of a maroon card. Others
period for which their cards are will be offering the same discount
valid The cards are renewable at on both the gold and maroon card_s.
the end of each grading period if The placards will ~ ~tsp_layed '"
the students maintain the level of the wmdows of paructpaUng merachievement.
chants.
. . .
The merchants come into the
More par_uctpat!on from merpicture by offering merchandise chants ts bemg soh~lted and any
discounts to the students with the not contacted are mvtted 10 call the
cards. Participating m~rchants are school, 992-115_8, and talk 10 Fenbeing provided with Meigs High ton Taylor, pnnctpal, about the
Honor Court placard§ on wh1ch new program .
they designate the discount per·

Gallia mother, daughter
injured in autq crash
By JAMES LONG
OVP News Staff
A woman and her child were
hospitalized Monday afternoon
after their vehicle slid off State
Route 141 oh Ingalls Hill and
slammed into a tree, authorities
said.
Connie J. Clarke, 37, 76 Debbie ,
Drive, Gallipolis, was listed in stable condition this morning at Holz·
er Medical Center and is being
treated for multiple trauma.
Her dau~ta, Sarah J. Clarke, 4,
was LifcFlighted 10 Childrens Hos·
pital in Columbus where ()fflcials
said she' was in critical condition
and being treated for a head injury.
Officials at the Gallia-Meigs
Post of !he State Highway Patrol
were still unsure this morning as 10
wh&amp;t caused the crash, atthough it
was apparent from the accident
report that ~ and the wet road
could have been factors.
tn a voluntary statement,
· motorist David' E. Wiseman told
the patrol tljat ju.St before complet·
ing a left turn onto S.R. 141 from
Saunders Drive he noticed the
Clarte vehicle moving "Cllt:eeding·
Iy faSl" down the hill, about 250
feet away. He reported that the
driver paSsed him at atiOut 100·feet

Continued on page 3
&lt;\

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stair
Christmas bonuses for village
employees was a main topic of dis·
cussion at MondaY. night's meeting
of the Pomeroy Village Council.
Mter discussion, council members approved Chrisunas bonuses
totaling $4,650 for village employ·
ees.
Four supervisors and 17 full ·
time employees will receive $200
while two pan-time employees will
receive $.150 each.~ addition, two
new employees and one special
part-time employee will get $50
apiece.
Last year, the village gave
bonuses totaling $5,250.
Employees will receive their
bonuses this week.
John Anderson, village adminis·
trator, explained that the U.S .
Army Corps of Engineers bas fund·
ing available for study and advance
engineering for riverbank development projects to aid recreation and
tourism.
Andetson explained there would
be no fliUIDcial obligation from the
village to have the corps conduct
the study . Council• authorized
Anderson to pursue the matter.
Council also indicated interest
in 1'ursuing a grant for downtown
revttalization.
Mayor Bruce Reed read a leuer
from the Big Bend Sternwheel Fcs·
tival Committee commending the
village for its suppon of the festi·
val. In addition, Reed read a lcner
praising the tum lane at the junction of Lincoln Heights and Butter·
nuCAvenue.
Councilman Larry Wehrung
said he had received several posi·
tive comments on the Christmas
decorations in downtown Pomeroy.
"Pomeroy as a whole looks real ·
ly nice." be said.
Reed mirrored Wchrung's com-

ments: "I have been ~caring gooil
remarks on Pomeroy."
Lon~·time Councilwoman Beuy
Baromck commented that sh~ ·
would not be attendinJ the next
council meeting, effecbvely m~
ing the Monday meeting her lasL :
"It has been a pleasure to serve
with you," she said.
:
"Betty has served the village ror
a long time," Reed said.
•
"Betty has done a real good
job." Webrung commented. "We
are going to miss you."
Reed explainCd tliilthe rme for
parking in handicapped zones
recently went from $5 to $10 and
that the fine for parlcing for more
than two hours on village streets
was doubled 10 $2.
In other matters, council:
- Discussed complaints regarding the village police deparunent
- Approved the highest bid
from Jeffers' Excavating 10 purchase the village's old ladder and
rescue truck for $1,037.
- Approved the minutes of the
Nov. 15 meeting and the mayor's
report of$5,592.
' - Approved resolutions canceling cheeks from the village more
than a year outstanding and trans·
ferring $45,000 into the sl!eet fund
and $21,000 into the,utility fund
from the general fund.
- Approved a contract with
Columbus Southern Power to
maintain the villages 285 sueet
lights for $2,541.15.
- Paid bills.
Present were council members
Betty Baronick, Scott Dillon, Larry
Wehrung, Thomas Werry and Bifl
Young, Mayor Bruce Reed and
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy Hyseil.
Also attending were Village
Administrator John Anderson and
Councilman-elect George Wright.
Not attend ing was Councilman
John Blaettnar.

r--Local briefs-___,
Man pleads to sex charge

A Marietta man pleaded guilty to a charge of gross sexual imposition Monday afternoon.
Ronald Lott. 27, had been having a sexual relationship with a 12·
year-&lt;lid girl from around the middle of September.
.
Gross sco:ual imposition is a felony of the third degree wh1ch carries a maximum penalty of 10 years confmement and a $5,000 fine.
Sentencing is scheduled for toda y in the Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court of Judge Fred W. Crow Ill .

Two sentenced in B&amp;Es
Two 19-year·old Reedsville men were sentenced Monday after
pleading guilty to the recent breaking and enter mg of Tuppers
Plains businesses.
Erick Adams pleaded guilty Monday afternoon to last Wednes·
day's breaking and entering of Bahr' s Ashland Servtce Stabon. Carl
Marcum pleaded guilty 10 the same breaking and entering in addi·
tion to the Nov. 9 brealdng and entering of the Tuppers Plains General Store.
The two wt:le arrested Friday morning by deputies of the Meigs

County Sheriffs Depanmenl
Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III sentenced Adams to 18
months confinement while Marcum was sentenced to two consecutive IS-month terms, the maximum term aUowed by law.
The sentences will be suspended if the two are accepted into the
SEPTA program. In addition, they must pay restitution and $500
costs of prosecution.

$100,000 judgment sought
In a suit ftled last week in the Meigs County Court of Common
Pless, a Clover, S.C., woman is seeking a $100,000 judgment from
a Middlepon woman for injuries allegedly stemming from an
November, 1991, automObile ttCcidenL
Conlinued on page 3

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