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                  <text>•• ••
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ou

Ohio Lottery

beats
Connecticut

Pick 3:
746
Pick 4:
6949
Super Lotto:
l-13·28-37-39-45
Kicker:
4· 7. 2-4-6-5

PageS

1..- toll lOt Ill uPIIer' jeeu.

40 perceat dianee olin~.
Friday, blah nflr 40.

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Vol. 44, NO. 174
Copyright 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, ~ecember 30, 1993

1994GMC
Safari Conversion
2At this Price!
19SI4·FORD TEMPO GL
.

Air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, loaded!
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Young Buyer Rebate ..................... -$300
Don Wood Discount .. ................ :....,$351

.1~3 FORD ESCORT LX
Air conditioning, AM/FM cassette, loaded!
Retail ...........................:.............. $11,401
Value Package .... .......................... -$502
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Young Buyer Rebate ............... ,..... -$300

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~5994·

• CLOSING ·PROBABLE • The ·Middlepori
Sunc:try store wt~ dose following a goln,-out-of
business we·unless a buyer. Is found. Th1rty-one
st Qres .o r. Wil •Car Ent~rP,rIses, I nc. were 'taken

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0

· over ~1 Bank One, MllwJiukee Monaay. Three
stores bave alreadr been dosed aod six other&amp;,
Including the one m Middleport, are slated for
closing.

. However the general fund will
still finish ihe yeat with a balance
,of $251,'67S.7'0 .due to a 1993
beginning balance pf $463,829.34
carried over from 1992, he
'explained.
In addition, Frank pointed out
the county took in $71 ,838. 73 less
in 1993 lban in 1992 mosdy due to
lower interest earned on investments and less intercounty personal
tax.P,aid.
.
I recommend you (commis·
sioners) make the budget based on
receipts as much as you can, "
Franlt said. ''These f~gures III'C not a
certification (of estima.ted
resources) but they are f~gures you
canFranlt
use." said the figures alone are

Suildryst()re .to close
·~;,~...."':~l~:~owa
ff
t .
(/q,ors
if
Qyyer"
""etfpun,d
_
flepub
·~an~
sc~_
flt .... ~ on .
.,~:By,-CH'A1inNBV'OEPt:D · · j;fiil,tKy.;: ~~M~flleny, Kf~l
~eifa'S
pJe,Cige::t'(),.Slm-pfi~ ~alt ·. .car~.
:, · ·' · Sentlntl News Stair
· · the )'¥fi&lt;ldfeP,On Sundry S,tore
opcratM by W1l-Car Enterprises,
Inc. will close its doors in !h&lt;i next
few weelcs unless a buyer IS found
(or tile business. .
, John }l,ussell, official with Bank
One, Columbus, said Wednesday
afternoon that B'ank One, MilwaulceC the. secured lender for Wii·Car
En~iprises, Inc. took control of the
company on Monday.
Russell said that of the 31 WilCar stores three have already .been
closed •.and six albers. will be stru:ting going·out-of-busmcss sates m
the next few days.
The Middleport store is one of
the .six which is scbcdulcd for closi'ng, although Russell said it may
not close if a buyer comes forward.
The. others are located in Olive

Cir: nesf sale;rhe' $1!id
no inforclcvlliC, Wapakopneta, Ohto, and ,, m&amp;J!9J~~'on ~[)e~ th'at ~~ ·to start, or
P!\tii\!Ky.
· ., ' : '' ·,'' · when lhC sfl)re will cl~
' The stores wh1ch have already
Burldlamer emphastzed that at
been 9losed are .located in Grac~- !his ti~c J!te Pomeroy Sundry Sto~
land and Pamtsvllle, Ky., and Ceh· •s contmumg to operate and that 11
na. 1
•
is not ·a ffected by Blink One's
Russell said.that the bank is now action of laking control of !be comevalunting the remaining 22 stores, pany.
·
to check the ·viability of keeping
Announcement of the probable
those"bpcn. He said that the objcc- Sundry Store closing was a second
tivc is, to find owners for all 31 cc.onomic ·blow to Meigs County
storcs.and that there has been some th1s month.
interest expressed in a number of
. Earli'cr it was announced that
them:"
.
Fishers Bi~ Wheel Inc. had liled a
.. Russell said that the .~ank is mq~ion With ba~krup!CY. court in
vtgorously scckmg buyers .
Delaware to ltqmdatc tiS mventory
Brian Burkhamer, manager of and discontinue retail operations. A
the. ll!)meroy and Middleport hearing on that motion has been
Sundry., Stores, said that there are scheduled for Jan. 5. If the motion
five full-time employees at the is approved than all stores, includ·
Middleport store.
ing the one located on Laurel Cliff
As for the going-out-of-busi- Road ncar Pomeroy, will close.
·

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) A lawyc~ for one of five inmates
indicted in an I f·day prison riot
said it will be hard to find an unbi·
ased jury in Scioto County, where
the·prison is lOcated.
But state prosecutors will
oppqse any effort to move the tri als, said Stev~ Manin, a spo~esman
for the special prosecutor investigating the case.
Meanwhile , a federal judge
decided Wednesday to let the state
continue segregated cell assign ments for another three months at
the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility ncar Lucasville.
John Par.kcr, a lawyer from
Cleveland, told The Cincinnati Post
for a story published Wednesday
that he will ask to have his client,
inma1c Darnell Alexander, tried
elsewhere.
Parker said pretrial publicity

will make ~t· difficult tO get a fair
trial in ~cioto Co.unty. 'The cou~ty
is so small that many potenual
jurors likely know, someone .w,ho
works at the maxtmum·securny
prison or were influenced by the
riot in other ways, he said.
Parker did not return tclephone
calls seeking further comment
Wednesday.
·
Alexander, 36, and four other
inmates were indicted Tuesday on
charges of kidnapping guard
Mich ae l Hensley of Coal Grove.
He was one of five guards held
hostage throughout the prison siege
that began April II .
Prosccuwrs said a grand jury
will continue investigating the riot,
which left nine inmates and guard
Robert Vallandingham dead.
The inmates arc to be arraigned
Jan . 5 in Scioto County Common
Pleas Court.

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By JJM FREEMAN
Seatillel News Stair
MorQ IDOne)' Was spent f'rolll the
county (lel1eral fund lban receivl,ld
during 1993, tr~surer Howard
Frank told the Meigs
Board
ofCommissionm,Wed
y.
During the COIIlmissioners' regular weekly meeting, Frank
explained the general fund received
. $2,817,838.73 in receipts (money
took in .from taxes, etc.) while
$3,,029,992.37 was disbursed ... or

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•For Lamps .
tt!•IVlli Lock Brakes
•Aluminum Wheels
•Power Windows &amp; Locks
•Cruise Control
I ' •l.IUaG· OHC Engine
•AM/F~ Cassette
Transmission
•Floor Mats
Cassette
•Loaded I

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994 PONTI~~.
GRANDAM

~·

A Multimedia .,c, ""'"peper :

Treasurer updates commissio-n
o_n county general fund. status

16,994~

SALE.PRICE ..... $9494 SALE'PRICE
. ,, ••••. sa993

2 Sections, t 2 Pogoe 35 cent( ·

.

WASHIIIIGtdN (AP) 7"' Prest. dent Clintim Pn&gt;mi$es to simplify
health care and free Americans
from ''the m\)St bureaucratic systern ·that exists anywhere in the
world.'' Bul ,Republicans see Jess
c~oice for patients _ and even
more red tape.
.
"Simplicity is 'I will do what 1
am told by ihe go~crnment. They'll
tell me what I can buy, where 1 can
buy it and how much I'll pay for
it'" complained Rep. Dick Armcy
R~ Texas
'
"Thi~tcen hundred pages of red
tape " spuucrcd House Republican
Whip Newt Gingrich
·
Clinton's critics are attacking
two key features of 'his health
reform plan. One is the creation.of
a powerful National Heald! Board
that could set limits on private
hcalthinsurancepremiums;lhe
other is a requirement that most
Americans buy their coverage

payments ~o re:-ward health plans •
Zelman says dicrc could be as
that enrolled stckcr, htgher-cost · many as 250 allmnccs nationwide.
paueniS.
.
They could achtcvc economtcs of
Laura D' And,rea Tyson, chatr- s.cale by enrolling 500,000 to S milmon of t~c Prc~•dcnt s Cou~cll or bon people each.
Econom1c Advtsers, has cst•mat.cd
"From the conswner's point of
that !be alliances may need 10 htrc view, it's incredibly simple," said
50,000 people. But W~ltcr Zelman, Zelman. • 'The consumer gets a
an architect of the Chn1011 propos- brochure that says, 'Here are the 10
nI, says those workers wtll be 10 IS plans in your region in which·
replacing staff ~;YhO now perform you can enroll. !'fere's the price
stmtlar tasks at htghcr ~osiS.
you and your family have to pey to
He estimates the alliances' over· enroll in that plan. And here's
head will take 2 cents to 2.5 cents some information to help yOU'
from each health care dollar, ":ith choose bet,wccn the plans."'
the health plans thcm~lv~ runnmg
The alliance collects the money
up 10 cents in admtmstrauve costs. from employers and dispe111e1 1ft'
But many small and medium-sized miums to the health plans. 11 abo
businesses now watch 16 cents to would figure out the subsidies
20 cents of their premium dollars small businesses and low-income
go for overhead.
families.

for

[). efense w· a·~ nts l·nmates
tried outsid~ Sci.oto ·c.ounty . ~~~:r:r:~:~:::::::~~:::

Jobless claims plummet
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans filing the
first time for unemployment benefilS plummeted by 39,000 last week
to the lowest level in nearly five
years, !be government said !odaY.
in the rcpon that shows JUS.t how
volatile the job market really ts, the
Labor Department said initial
claims declined to a seasonally
adjusted 291,000 in the week ended
Dec. 25, down from a revised
330,000 for the previous week.
That was the lowest level since
Feb. 4, !989, when initial claims
totaled 286,000.
Economists had predicted a
decline in part because of th e

Christmas h?liday . Inhial claims
usun lly decline m holiday weeks.
But the drop of 39,000 was nearly
four times what they had expect~.
The huge decrease ~as fueled m
part by fewer layoffs m constr~C ·
uon, manufactunng and the texttle
mdustry.
.
The four-week movmg avemge
of initial jobless cl~ims dechned
7,750 from !be prcv10us week 10 a
seasonally adJ.USted 321,000, the
lowest level smce Sept. 9, 1989.
EconomtsiS prefer to I!Se that figure
as a mea~ ure of hmng .trends
because tits much les.s vola~le than
th e weekly number, whtch has
swung up and down over the last
few months.

Secretary Donna Shalala told a
Investigators have said their congressional panel in October that
work was slowc4 by the large num- the National Hcallh Board would
ber of inmatcs - 409- who par- be a "relatively minor oversight
ticipated and damages to the cell- board.'' 13ut an internal memo from ·
block the~ controlled during the HHS lawyers indicated the board
standoff. Inmatcs set fires, tore out would have 250 employees and a
fixtures, destroyed furniture and S2 billion budget to start.
scallcred debris.
One of the issues in the riot was
The board, consisting of seven
f
ulltimc
presidential appointees,
mndom cell assignmcniS, which led
would
decide
whether new treat·
to integrated ceiling. The state
meniS
were
"medically
necessary"
dropped the practice after the riot
and
pass
judgment
on
changes
in
10 ease racial tensions.
·
the
basic
benefit
package.
U.S. _I)istrict JudgeS . Arthur
It would have a committee to
Spicgcf"'iireviously ruled th.a t the
Ohio Department of Rchabtlltauon monitor the prices of breakthrough
and Correction had to resume ran· drugs and pressure companies to
dom assignments by Jan. I. How- keep prices down.
And it would tell the health
ever. on Wcdnesduy he extended
alliances and corporate health plans
the deadlin e to April 1.
Prison officials said they needed how much they could spend on
the ex tm time because renovations Clinton's benefit package. It would
10 the riot torn cellblock wi II not be compute premium target s and
develop a way to "risk adju st"
completed until April.

--Local briefs----.
Meigs Courthouse will close Friday
The Meigs County Counhouse will be closed Friday in observance of New Year's Day, according to Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun Judge Fred W. Crow III. The offices will re-open for
business between 8:30a.m. and 4:30p.m. Monday.

Meigs Mine 31 back to capacity
Southern Ohio Coals Company's Meigs Mine 31 returned to full
production Monday after a week of slowed work because land
above one section of the mine slipped, said Jeff Rennie, spokesman
for American Electric Power.
Last week, 39 more workers were recalled to rehabilitate Meigs
Mine 3 I, Rennie said. Only 25 of 300 workers have not been called
back since July II when Mine 31 was flooded with nearly 800 million gallons or watcr from an adjoining abandoned mine, he added.

FLYING TRASH - Brian Reeves of J&amp;L Sanltallon aecures .
the tarp to his tbree·ton load of trash from Portland, Bashan aad
Racine Wednesday afternoon off Eagle Ridge Road outside
Bashan. The Harrisonville resident said despite what people mlgbt
think many trash pick-ups do not smell -except some from local
sc hools. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

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Thursday, December 30,1893 .

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OHIO Weather
Friday, Dec:. Jl

After the holidays hunger continues
·.,

111 Coart sueet
PoaeJOF, Oblo

Hubble seems in good shape after three weeks :

Weather

Page-2- The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
,Thursday, December 30, 1993

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Accu-Weathe..- forecast for

·.

WASHINGTON - Ambition maybe (Congress) did .me a favor week fast, Gephardl had run up a service. " But if we can' t afford to
bums like a fire in the belly for when they eliminated it But its a $2598.15 bill on the wr.aycrs' tab get the food through the front door,
DINOTBD TO THB ll'f1'BRB8T8 OJ' THB IUIQ&amp;..IIASOJII .AREA . soine politicl$1s. Rep. Tony Hall, rough way to go...
at one of Washington s fan ciest we' ll take what they give us out the
D-Oh1o, bopes to redirecl that
To focus attention on hunger restaurants, La Bmsserie, according baclc.,.
to congressional record$.
" fire" so some of it burns for
On one 15-minute collection
those with nolhins in their storn·
Most of WashinJton. D.C.. con- stop last week at the quasi- governduelS business dunng ritzy recep· menial Federal National Mortgage
IChS.
Jac~
Some 20 million Americans arc
lions and expense-account dinnef$. Association, Hart picked up
ROBERT L WINGE'IT
suffering from hunger. Hall knows
They at least serve as an informal , enough Pork Chile Verde to feed
Publisher
food stamp program for Congress' 60 hungry people and enough food
their pli~ht gets hlghlishled during
the hohday season - but what
Ulldcrpaid;young staff. .
overall to feed 200. A day earlier,
'
about the morqings after ChristWhat the young and 1/le hungry the Kitchen received two choice
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
mas, when holiday warmth slips
don't devour goes often gqes to the c·uts of steak from Sen. Russell
General Ma~~~ger
Controller
after losing his select committee, D.C. Central Kitchen, 11)e city' s Feingold , D-Wis. They had been
iniiJ a deep freeze?
" People begin to feel around the Hall endured a llu'ee-week hunger · largest provider of food to the poor. gifts from an agricullllre lobbyist
I.J!TIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbo.uld be leu chaD 300
holiday season that lhov need to do slrike that strained his llealth, yet They take the leftovers from WashThese are sops more than soluwords. All leUm ue ~= to ediliDc ODd mual be signed wilh nime,
1And it nor·
more,''
Hall
told·
us.
'
wor)lcd
like
a
two-by-four
in
set·
ingtOn's
:panies
and
cii!Crcd
evenlS.
lions.
"Hunger in Ameria~ is hidaddress ll!ld llllepbone n
• No UllliJDOd lotten will be publisbed. Le..-.
mally
leaves
then!
after
Dec.
2S.
I
den
because
you don 'I see it, you
W,
his
col~'s
attention,
The
KilChen
also
collects
approxishould be in good ~~~~. ~Ina lauu, 1101 penonllities.
wish we could keep this feeling the
'1 feel · ashamed," House ma~ely 1,500-2,000 poun~ offood have· to look for it," Hall warned
whole vear because it's not Majority ~ Richard Oephardt. that would nonnally be d\rown out us. "But if you're dilisem and you
enough.''
D-Mo., told Hall two days after he from restaurants, conventions and go to the food banks and to, the
Twelve years qo, Hall launched ended the fast in ApriL "You have grocery stores. SQme 110·million churches that serve rou'll sec it
a polipcal crusad~ asainst l:unger em~ us in the risht way." . tons of food reportedly sets lhrown ha~
.· n.... you'll see them ·by the
' ..
from Capitol Hill l!y !ilanding
•
· But if ·the majority leader was awar eVIllY re!lf across the country. hu
waist·&lt;leep in a garbage' dumpster rCcl ~faced, J!erhlps 1:.0 was afraid
· ' A lot of the names of lh'e food
to draniat:ze food waste. His scav- lhat Hall wu awa of his liSle for I can't cveri pronounce, lhey're so
Copyright 1993, United Feaenger hunt yielded a vcri1able expensive,French c.uisine. The . fancy," says Melvin Han. a driver ture Syndicate, Inc.
By WALTER R. MEARS
garbage gourmet including crab month before· bailing Hall's three
· for ·the Kitchen's
food CQ!Ieetion
.
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AP S~ Correspoaileat
quiche appeti~. and cheese and
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WASHINGTON (AP) _; Americans arc on the case, ·President
raspberry clesst:tts.
Clinlal siid, prcains for a crime eontrollaw to make their streees
"I got·in the dum~" said
safer, their boinei more IICCIJJ'e.
Hall, who served as a
Caps
Just u they wac 2S years ago;
volunteer in tht 1960s. '"We toOk
.•
Then, u now, ·c'rimo wu a major JIC!Iilical issue, ranked atop the
thefood we found ... and hld.a feast
lis1 cA !lomcslic COiicems In public opuiion polls.
he~ for Congress. It showed that
Now, u then. ihere arc clitrercnces 1111 where to put the emphasis
the 1~ of food which .is· throWn
andJeSOUJteSindcaling·witllit-punishmcntorprcvenlion.
out n perfectly sood· food . I
And the pll'lilels.doa't,encl thele.
relilember it was a heck of a menu
"Violence scarred and lacerated American politics through
- ,they had everything."
''
1968,'' Thoodolo S. Whilli wrote in his ''Making of~ President"
Hall realized that the dril'!'in~
chronicle of that cam~. "Crinie and killing, robbery md loot·
off the plates of Washington s elne
lng, perversim ... riot: smping, usassination all pounded on Americould feed the
A lot of this
cans. .. "
food ... cottld be going nOt only to
Otl)er concems, even the Vietnam war, would pass. White said
the homeless, but to th!l hungry
then, b!JtDOt the ~ of law and order, not the basic questions he
whether they be senior citizens or
saw in It
·
children' or church groups or what"Wbat kind of people were we, what kind of people did we seek
ever," he · told our associate
to become, what ldlld of new communities did we need to crcato,
Andrew Coote.
what n:straints were required on expressions or purpose of commuLast January, Hall was dealt a
niCalion lhatllllllrished violence?!'
·
sc~back when Congress voted to
"Lawleanea ls 'crumbllnJ t_!le foundations of American soci·
abolish his Select Committee. on
ety," tho 1968 Republican platform said, pledgins an all'-llllt cruHunger. It had been a small
sadc against crime.
homage Congress paid to the
"My pverriding concern ..• Is for ufe .streets in America,"
hunger .crisis since Halt's select
Dernoc:rali,\1 Prcsiilei:t Lyndon B. Johnson said~ he signed a 1968
committee was the smallest In
•
criine control bill he said Would help ll41he shadow offear.
Consress wit.h a budget of
1M a fuU goneraliop later, fear pc;nlsts over crime and violence
$330,000. Since then, he has creal· .
•
that now seems more random, and so more menacing. .
ed .a new HtmgOI' Caucus and cor. When the Senate puscd ill I~ Violent Crime Coritrol ani! Law
railed 70 colleagues 111 his cause.
Enfon:ement Act, the Dcmoctat who guided it lhronsh called the
"Dare I say (losing the select
NFA
biD ''a dnliDJJilc *P in stanmlng the tide of violenc:e that's overcommittee) wu probablt the bosl (8&gt;-~
whelmins this natiOn." Sen. Joseph R. Biden of Pclaware said
!bing that hu happened?" asked
!'INft.
t.-vdr
·
crime was the sinsle most prcaing iiSue on the minds of Ameri·
Hall. "It's caused a lot of people to
~lfWtl,.l ~
~
(J
~"
cans. ·
.,
·,. , , .
:
getl\ctive in Jb!l coun~y.... So
PQlls'ihllicJtc 'thla hIS now, bUt1hill•• bctrl' t"IOIIlcidB~......- ·
;, M ,~'lk . , · ·: • · - -...
_,.,.,.
.... ~ ;...
··to.
"" •·
·· "
,.H,M• '
·
and so baS the conpionl1 etron to~ with iL Law enforcement '

FA.

Anderson

By

and

Michael Binstein

~

W. VA.

Ice

.

By The A$sociated Press
Ohio temperatures could rise Southern Ohio
above the freezing mark before the
Tonight...Mostly cloudy with a
end of the year. Tbe National chance of flurries. Low 15 to20. Soulh~eather~says_:eadingscould west wi~ 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
h:tthe m:d-30s by Fnday afternoon snow is 40•percenL
and possibly even the 40-degree
Friday.. .Panly cloudy and not as
mark in southern Ohio.
cold. High near 40.
·
The warmer condilions should
Oullook 'for the res1 new years
help cleanup efforts in .extreme weekend...A chance of rain or snow
norlheasl Ohio where another 6 io NewYearsDay ...FairSunday.Lowsin
12 inches of snow fell overnight the 20s. Highs 35 to 40 Saturday and
Drifling from winds of 20-30 mph around 3P Sunday.
made some roads impassable.
Around the nation
Areas of northeast Ohio OUl·
Winter weather gripped much of
side the snowbelt received light thenalionWednesday,withmorefrigid
amounts of new snow or flurries. temperatures in the East and snow in
Clearing skies over Ohio al- portions of the Midwest and mid-At·
lowed temperarurcs to dip into the !antic region .
single digilS in many areas this
At midday, snow was falling
mornmg.
around the Great Lakes, the lower Ohio
It willbealittlewarmertonight Valley and the central Appalachians.
with lows near 20.
Freezing rain made driving hazardous
The record-high temperature. in Norlh·Carolina.
forthisdateatlheColumbusweather
Rain fell in coastal areas of the
Sl8tion was63degrecs in 1964 while Carolinas and Georgia, and the Aorida
the record low was 12 below zero in Panhandlt and across southern Texas.
1880. Sunset tonight will beat 5:16
Binghamton, N.Y.. near the Pennp.m. and sunrise Friday ar7:53 a.m. sylvania line, set a morning low temperalllrl1~ ~rd with 11 readins of 3
Extendeclrorecast
New Year's Day...Chance of degrees ~low zero. Other record lows
rain or snow. Lows in the 20s and included '10 degrees in Bridgepon,
highs-35 to 40.
· Conn., and 15 below in Montpelier, Vt
Sunday...Fair. Lows in the 20s
MackinawCityinnorthemMichiand highs around 30.
gan received at least five inches of new
Monday ...Chance of snow. snow. Nearoy Otarlevoix received at
Lows in the 20s and highs around leas! seven inches.
30.

lli£,CtiK9f 9IJQ'

R' b
~~~~=:t2~~~v:l;:~:~ef: _epu 1ican par~n·oia runs deep
·j

IPIQ:c!:J'~;.;. ~cepdo~. The r~ steps to regulate the com-

mcn:e in handguns were·in Johnson's 1968 crime bil~ lhC Brady
bill, with its five-day wallins period. wu !lie last act of Congress in
1993. ·
,
In "thO unfmishocl crime ~ill, the Senate voleld to ban 19 types of
is!anlt ~ 1bat rcmaina to be settled with the House, which
·IPPfOvcd a aeries of separate anti-crime bills. Congn:ss will have to
~ion a f:nal version thla winter. Clinton WilliS it done quickly.
• And Sen. Boll Dole, ~Republican leader, qrecd lhat crime control ahol!!d be !~ .priority. "It's Jhe number one priority of the
American ~to. ',!lei said.
·

~~=-~d~~=d·~~~:!!e~~:r~~~

Arc Republicans paranOid?
We 81 tho Spcar.'Foundalion, a
small but penevenn~thinlc tank,

::0
~d~y~'j!. ~ ,:.i~
tiflc
the
study

of the =

;~ine
10·thesis.
Usin.

d~

8 "Web-

stetnary
. ·~.~~rut:: ~ealareparanoid~

"characteriZed by suspici~,
periecuiOry '!rends qr megaloma-

or simply -seneric conservatives
who manifeat paranoid traits. We ·
did determine, however, that t!le .
more conservative. the individual,

r
h Sipear
.,osep

·

thoJnoreparanoidlheyseemiObe.
Plranciid ReputilicanWconserva·

masazine Policy Review fbr this
astounding discovery. Mererson
e'len .dug 250 quoccs lhlt somehow gOIIe . out of Jhe corili:cndium. For ~aedmJ)Ieh·•. B~lett'srcurious 1Y mus 1 IS z:nget rom
Richard Nillon: "The successful
IC!Ider docs not talk down to peopic. He lif~ them up." Or this
mind-bender from Ronald Reagan:
"This administration's objective

:&amp;

the air.
A handful of Democrats in
Congress arc '?ina to reinstate the ·
Fairness Doclrme, which calls for :
balanced programmiqg. Why? To :
hush Rush, of course. Until recent- .
ly, Armed Forces Radio and Television did not cmy Rush's shows.
Why? According to Rep. Robert
Doman, Wa,cko-Calif., excuse me,
R-Calif., the "liheralleadership at

HQme sales surge to}-year high
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Sales economists, who were expecting an
of new homes shot up 11.3 percent increase of 2 percent or 3 percent.
in November to the highest rate in II followed a revised 2.2 perccnl
more than seven years, the govern- drop in Ocrober, previously· report·
ment said today. Most of the gain ed as a ·6.5 percent decline. Sales
carne in the WesL
had soared 15.4 percent in Septem·
.,
· New, single-family homes sold ber.
at a seasonally adjusted annual rate
Tbe West accounted for the bulk
of 807,000, the highest level since of the advance. Sales there skyApril 1986, the departments of , rocketed 133.8 percent to a seasonalCommerce and Housing and Urban ly adjusted annual miC of 273,000,
Development said.
the h:ghestlevel since March 1979.
The November gain surprised

~~~cu:=~~~p~l~~ =-~office~':= 7~·~oo:~y, vigorous, grow- ~lagon" considers him dan·

==cs.

really hearini from the geoplc that ... they just have to hive more
eluded that pooplo of" Ibis polldcaJ bespectacled accountants, is "a
_(Meyerson mlsht be on to somesecurity on thcif ~··in ihc:ir achools, in their communilies,'' he
demon~ para- 'J&gt;emocralic lap !loi or a con11rcs· tb:ng here. Nowhere in
.. said a week ~o.
·
here ad·"·- ,__ .l..l. ~ional watchdof' (Rep. Chnsto· "Bartlett's," for example, will you
1
10 • ..., "'""'"~""• pher Cox, R-Calif.). They see femi- find this quote from Sen. Robert
"The Anierican people arc still on it,'' he said.
·
pause
.......
"-··biD
...........
S8
9
b"lli
·
'·"·-•
"d
•
fi
Jlftl1isa!ls
who
pcc~,dle
picldng nism
as "a socialist,
n..•- R•Kan .: "Lilie 1s· very impor.,.., ....,..,..
au....,....,. . 1 on 111 ,...,...,. at .or a :veon RqjubllC:ani 1o check aofcolwnn
Utlcal
· tha anti-family ........,
1
year P*UJ18li 10 hire 100,000 more polioc olr:cers, a Clinton camwrote on Oct, 9, 1989, iii which 1 po
movement I~ tant to Americans." Or this one
peign pledge. He said there now is bipartisan support in Congress
• saiii:T&gt;emocraiS ousl!t lo be called ;j;~~~:C~!~~ ffOII) ~ ~yle: "Haws» ... is in
Cotildclitiolial oolleemca and for other enforcement steps in the Sen"Dumocrall, .. and one of April 4, des
capitalism d become 1
the Pacif"m. )
,, ·
b"
~r
(Re
Pa
Rill
esA
clusic
case
of
persecution
,
in
which
described
' ate crime bilf. Tbe'presiclent h!IB just announced $50 million in
1990
1
pants under existins JIIOinllns 10 add police in 74 cities. "Help is
Democrats as crabs because they arc~-"~ thet ~vl·cws). ~li.! compleJI is exhibited by Rush Lim·
on the
Clinton Wcf.
,
ha:ve "no bacL'--·, walk sideways
....,,.,......,
,....,.. bau8hh • the
. one-man media d!achine
., '
· htened
'""'""
erals as tole,railt
and
while w o c1a1ms h:s
· tal ent IS
· 'On 1oan
I1 n
to ...
"" sent carefuDy; a rush 19 rcspond to he1g
and molt every
elecu"on ·year 10
.
. hcaring,
• to
1ess and from God. R
·
•··
proble
consetvaiJves
arc
cart
ber
crime coacerns can
ms. A dQz.e!l Wnshington, D.C.,
soft, squishy things."
judgmental'' (Hcri••~e Foundalion
emem the reception
~ officCn were~ Dec. 14 for bri~ and druf conspira- ·
1
1 b ·
ua1
• "-· 8
-.
on the White House lawn last fall
• 10 of them had been hired durins a bumed recru1tinas dri"vc - tum
- ~·
JDJI, an eq
oppor- •euuw roce Frohnen). ·
for talk show hosts? Hwldreds of
1am..:.....!ru.
.__.. · 198n 1990
,_,.,
Did you know that "Bartletl's · bbe · k h ed
gress ,.....,.. :n
7"
•
• e SF reJI!lrl
. on Republicans F Ill · Q tat"
.. "II£ II
Jl r JOC s s ow up; but not
,.
I
Th"
I
am
ar
uo
tons
wt
u
y
Rush. Why? Becauie those sneaky
labe : . IS s a ·omitS quotei from chnservatives? Clintoilites
carrJCS
a
warnmg
scheduled the event
Walter R. Mean, \'lee praldellt 1Dd columnist tor 'File AlsoprcliJDinary
study,
md
we
arc
no1
We
can
thank
Adam
Meyerso·n,
when
they
knew
he had to be 00
elated Pr-. hal reported on WIISblnc*Ja and natlollll pOlitics
yet
sure
whether
it
is
Republicans
editor
of
the
Heritage
Foundation
"
for more than 30 years.
·.
.· .

:J;"

P-•• . .

.. ~

I want to help Old Rush out
here, .so I've got a couple oftips for
him. You know all this fuss abou1
violence· on TV, Rush? 1 hear it's
rcally a Democralic plot to get you.
Once violence is outlawed, they're
going to give you a V rating. And
Ross Perot's new talk show?
Rumor has it he's after your job.
And Rush, that Dluohead out in
Colorado you endorsed who holds
bake sales to promote conscrvalive
causes? Check out his polilical eredentials. I suspect he's really
spreadins the subliminal message
that
. Rush is a cupcake.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Assodadon.

.
.
.
·
·

.Treasurer. .. conunu~d from Page 1

·
·

:ttend thal musl be stopped or
•Je'/ersCd.

Berryls World

--..,._r-

l

,.. '
.

·

·~

~- ...........

owm ·fh.ls constant campaigning NEVER end?"
'

/)

This past year I was appointed
local Un:led Way rcpresentalive for
my company and spent several
weeks evaluating agencies that
receive United Way funds. Once
we'd made budget recommendations for each agency for the
upcoming year, we began to plan
for a new campaisn to raise money
to fund our rccornmendalions.
I don't know if United Way
brass realized we were tired and
wondering if all this bard work
rcallx pays off, but the speaker they
chose for the campaign kickoff
breakfast coaldn't hive done better
to remind us whit we're doing this
for. His name is David Cook, a
three-piece-suited bear of a man
who directs southwest Missouri's
Girl Scouu program. In a gentle
manner that didn't prepare us for
tho impact of his words. he remind·
ed us of why we were there.
Cook told us he had been spcalt·
ing in another city when the mother
of a young Girl ScOut came up and
asked him if he would como to her
home 10 visit her daughter. It wu
an unusual r:eque1t, lie said, but
since he had some extra time he
agreed• .
When he reached the home the
moth~ led him to the girl's bed·
room, which was completely d8t.

zation did when it discovered that children are in trouble would
many American girls suffer from require a sociologist to explain, but .
low self-esteem and developed a that doesn't really matter because :
by the time we figure it out they'll
series of programs to combat it actually reach their inten4ed tar~et. be lost. What mauers is that so
I have thought about'lhlt httle many of them can be saved, and by
girl often this year. On the news such a simple remedy:·one adult 10
we' ve seen the funerl!IS· of dead care about one child, to become
her badges on her chest, was a lit~e children and·we've heard kids talk involved in his or her life, to love
girl. She was blind, and ·she "bad • about ~guns they've seen carried and support the child, 10 model
such severe p_hys!cal deformities bX fellow classmate!' and .the how life can be lived productively
that my first mstmct was to step ldllinss they've seen in their ne:gh- and happily.
To the·millions of us with giflS
back. But I went up ':0 the bed and borhoods. A recent Metropolitan
to
give
one of the many helping
she tol.d me she had JUSI wanted to Life Insurance Company poll agenciesinthat
serve these children, I
meet me so she could tell me what revealed th'at 22 percent of all bOys
know
you're
just
for someGirl Scouling hid meant to her life. in American schools say they hive one to nudge you,wailing
as
David
Cook
"She went on to teD me that at · carried a gun or knife iO school at
nudged
those
of
us
wilhin
the
school, the kids tormented her some lime and 11 percent of teach·
sound
of
his
voice.
Never
have
so
because of her physical condition eri and 23 percent of sbldenlS say many of other people's children
and beca~ of a learning clisabili· they hive been the victims of vio- needed you.
ty. She sa:d she l!8d seen no IC8SOII lence in or ncar their schools.
. Copyrlght1993 NEWSPAPER
for ber Ill have been bol1'l until she
The reasons so many of our ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
and her Girl Scout troop got into
the Girl Scotil units on self-esteem.
She said it was then that she began
to discover thai there was worth
and value to her life, and she stan·
By The ,Auoclaled Press
ed to fee18qo,d about herself and to
~oday is Tiwrsday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1993. There is one day
lefun the year.
·
be glad thit'sheha!l been tiotn."
When Cook finiJhed speaking
Today's Highljaht in Hi~:
there WliS ·absolute silence in the
. On Dec. 30; 1922, Vladlm:r I. Lenin proclaimed the establishment of
hill. It is seldom we receive such the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
On this elate:
J
graphic eYidelrcc that the dccisioos
we make in a boanlroOm - sueh
In 1853, the United States boughl some 45,000 square miles of land
as the Girl Scgpts ilati~nal organi- from Mexico in a deal known u the Gadsden Purchase.
,

.

;· Fr!Lnk pinpointed April, May,
::August llld September u months
•whe"ri the county may experience
cashOow trouble due to limited tax
seulcments during those months.
The C!IUDly gei:cral fund is used
br. almo.st all county offices for
b:lls, payroll and other expendirurcs.
In other mauers, the commis-

One by one, ·kids' lives ca~ be saved

•

Cloudy Cloudy

Mercury to rise Friday

..

1

S1.011!y Pt

C 1993 A(;Cu· Weather. lnc.

poor: ••

1lllftK.,l\Nrll:.RlJ.Y

six-to-eight-week checkout period
he had predicted.
One of the milestones in the
Hubble's recommissionin)! after "ilS
repair was the movinf of mirrors
into the telescope's hs hl path to
provide corrected images to three
sc ientific instrumenlS. That was
done successfully last weekend for
two of the instr uments. with the
third scheduled later.
The asuonaulS replaced the telescope's wide-field planetary camem, which had iiS own corrections,
and th.al checkout also was on
sc hed~le .

"We are going to, in the next
1wo weelcs or so make the fi rst
auempts to take test observations

''\VIten she turned on the light I
understood whr, it hid beeQ dade,"
Cook told ~s. 'Tbere lr,ins on the
bed in a Girl Scout umform, with

The Daily Sentinel

Sarah Overstreet

-The Alooc!llhd Prtu, llld 1110 Oblo

!low:; ; Allodlli... !loUout Ad-iJII
Re-ltallwe, B...um !1-:per Salu,
733 Third .Ua011e, llow Yort. New York
111017.
I'OSTMASTD: Seod- chaqw 10 The
Dolly SeiiLIOI, Ll l COlli SL, I'Omoroy, Olllo ,
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Today in history ·

_. _....

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llo MICiipdou by moll pellllittocl Ia •••
- - - ,...,. la a'lllable.

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· -············· .. •••••• ·••..····:..........$45.&amp;0
!2-···················
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'·I

..

.,

sion:

,. .
Approved a transfer of
$61.28 Wllh the comrnOJI pleas
court.
:,
·
- Ap~ved payins an animal
loss claull! of $200 to Sally Ball,
Albany, for a holstein heifer kiDed
Dec. 24 by dogs.
- Set I· p.m. Fridar as the reguJar commission meeting time and
date. The commission will next
meet on Jan, 7. ·
Present were Commission Pres·
ident Rob~rt Hartenbach, Vice
1 Presidenl JliOCl Howard Tackeu
and Fred Hpffman. Also present
was Clerk Gloria Klocs.

of real science cargelS and see what
we' ve got," Weilcnold reporters.
To date, he said, the instrument's fain t object camera and the
widc-fJeld camera have takt:n only
images of star fields for purposes
of aligning and focusing the Hubblc.
.
David Leckron e, the se nior
Hubble projccl scientist, said cnginccn will try in the next two weeks
to observe a nebula, two quasars, a
far -away spiral salaxy and an
" eruptive star' ; that appears to
have ejected considerable material.

Replacement of the HubbJe·' s
elcctncity-producing solar arrays
apgears to hi~ achieved iu ob~·:
tivc of rcmovu:g lhe ~ of a J•l· •
tering that shook the !elcacopc each:
of the 32 1imes a day h nlovCi! from·
daylight into darkness and vice :
versa.
:
"The Hubble has to be the most .
jiucr-froc spacecraft ever," Weiler:
said. " The new solar panels seem ·
to have reduced jitter by at least a:
facwr of 10. We soo a few twangs :
occasionally, much less frequency, ·
causing no :mpact whatsoever." :

--Area deaths

·

Nellie Norris

Wayne Cleland

Nellie B. Norris, 71 , of Carroll,
died Wednesday, Dec. 29, 1993. at
Mount Carmel East Hospital in
Columbus.
Born Aug. 22, 1922, in Middleport, the daughter of lhe late
Thomas Jr. and Mary Ann Gwynn
Lewis, she was the retired employ·
cc of Columbus and Southern
Power Co . and graduated fro m
Middleport Hijlh School.
She is surv:ved by her husband,
Richard C. Norris; son and daughter-in-law, Randy and Carol Norris
of Carroll ; daughter, Pamela
North c of Carroll, daughter and
son-in-law, Connie and Stephen
Rccs of Pataslcala; seven grandchildren; three great-grandchildren;
and sister, Ella Mae Daugherty of
Middleport.
She was preceded in death by
two si sters, three bll&gt;thers, and a
son, Thomas "Rick" Schoonover.
Services will be held at 11:30
a.m. Friday at the Spence Funeml
Home, Canal Winchester. Burial
will follow at the Franklin Hill s
Memorial Garden. Lithopolis.

Wayne E. Clelanll, 69, of Dexter:
Road, Rutland, died Wednesday,:
Dec. 29, 1993, at Veterans Memo-:
rial Hospital after an extended iU-:
ness.
•
Born April 10, 1924, at Dexter.:
to the late Floyd D. and Neva.
Blanch Cleland, he was a lllfChanic .
He is survived by wife, Palricia
Cleland of Rutland; sons, Roger,
Johnny, and Keith Cleland all of
Columbu s, Larry Cleland of
Pomeroy, Tom Cleland or
Chesh ire, and Floyd Cleland of
Rutland; daughters, Palricia Markin
of Aorida, Lora Cleland and Alon·
na Grim both of Middleport, two
step-sons, Michael and Douglas
Champeon both of Langsville;
bro1hcrs, Dutch Cleland of New
York, Wendell Cleland of Rutland;
sisters, Jean and June Redman of
Red House, W.Va., Malline Wheel·
er of Stewart, Aundcne Wheeler of
Dexter, Francis Cotterill of Columbus, Helen Gardner of Rulland and
Janice Hampton of Langsville; several grandchildren, great-grandchildren , nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
first wife, Anna Cleland Hart; son,
Ronald Cleland; grandson , Ro~ er
Grimm; granddaughter. Krisuan
Grimm ; a sister, Jeannette Cleland;
and brother, Danny R. Cleland.
Services will be held at I p.m .
Friday at the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland with Pastor Paul
Taylor officiating. Burial will be at
Wright CcmeLCry, Langsvi lle.
Fri ends may call 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. at the funeral home.

treated and not transported; 5:38
a.m. Racine to Slate Route 124 in
Portland for Oarcnce Price who
was transported to VMH; 6:08 a.m.
Rutland to Rutland for Jack Cleland who was transported to VMH;
ed:
· Tuesday - 9:33 a.m. :Middle- 6:25 a.m. Pomeroy to Royal Oak
pan to Ash Slreet for James Harri- Reson for Charlotte Gosset who
son who was transported to Holzer was treated and not transported;
Medical Center; 1:49 p.m. 6:35 a.m. Syracuse to Royal Oak
Pomeroy to Children's Home Road Reson for Charlotte Gosset who
for Margaret O'Donnell who was was transported to VMH.
Wednesday - 9:05 a.rn .
transported 10 Veterans Memorial
Hospital; 4:11 p.m. Syracuse 1o Pomeroy to Mulberry HeighlS for
Rose Valley for Brian Richharl Pearl Hawthorne who was transwho was transported to VMH; 4:32 ported to Veterans Memorial Hosp.m. Middleport to Page Street for pital; 10:40 a.m. Syracuse to
Gladys Profit who was treated and Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitanot tranSPOrted; 4:41 p.m. Chester tion Center for Mary Doss who was
to State 'Route 7 for power lines transported to VMH; 3:44 p.m.
down; 5:59 p.m. Racine to Racine Rutland to Dewhorst Lane for
for Mary Smith who waS transport· Audrey Pauerson who was transed to VMH; 6:40 p.m. Middleport ported to Holzer Medical Center;
to South Front Sueet for Harry Tip- 6:44 p.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy
ton who was transported to VMH; Nursing and Rehabilitalion Center
8:58 p.m. Rutland Ill Dexter Road for Mary WiUiams who was trans·
for Wayne Oeland who was trans· · ported to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
ported to VMH.
6:~.2 p.m. Tuppers Plains to State ·
Wednesday- 1:07 a.m. Racine Route 681 for Floyd Hank who was Eldon Kraeuter
10 Racine for Cora Beegle who was transported to Camden-Clark HosEldon R. Kraeuter, 92, of North
lransported 10 St. Jo~ph's Ho$pi- pital
Broadway
Road, Racine, died
t.al; 1:12 a.m. Reedsville to Mount
Thursday - No runs reported.
Wednesday,
Dec. 29, 1993; at VetOlive Road for unknown who was
erans Memorial Hospital's Extended Care Center.
..
Born Feb. 27, 1901 , in Meigs
County, the son of the late John
Kracuter and Elizabeth Weber
Kraeuter, he worked at the Ohio
Department of Transportation. He
was a member of the Racine United
Methodist Church ; Gmnd Chapter
of Royal Arch Masons of Ohio, of
Pomeroy; Grand Council of Royal
and Select Masons of Ohio; Ohio
Valley Commandery, Kn ights
Tcmplar, of Pom eroy; Ancie nt
Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley of
Columbus; AAONMS of Colum ·
bus Aladdin Shrine Temple and a
1917 graduate of Rac:ne High
School.
He is survived ·by IWo daughters
and sons-in -law , Dolores and
Lawrence Wolfe, and Roberta and
Dale Maidens all of Racine; grandchildren, Laren Riffle, Colin Maidens and Christi Maidens all of
Racine , and Kent Wolfe of
Kingston; and four grcal-grandchil. drcn.
He was preceded in death by his
wife , Lucill e Byers Kraeuter;
daughter, Leda Mae Kraeuter;
brother, Raymond Krider; and sis·
tcr, Mabel Van Meter.
Funeml services will held at I
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home, Pomeroy. with Rev. Ken
Molter officiating. He will be
buried in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call between 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. Saturday at the funeral home.
A Masonic memorial service
will be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday
at the funeml home.
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to 19 calls for assistance
between Tuesday and Thursday
mornings. Units responding includ-

..

'"-'•nt

WASHINGTON (AP) - Near·
ly three weeks after the Hubble
Space Telescope was released from
ilS repair bench on the space shuttle
Endeavour, its ground handlers
said Wednesday, "So far so good.
We .have absolutely no sign of
problems.."
The Hubble, ri lted with new
optical systems to correct the
defeclS of its main mirror and new
parts to fi x broken guidance and
power systems, is in the midst of a
planned, long checkout since its
release Dec. 10.
Hubble scientist Ed Weiler said
things are soing so well that the
telescope wiU be ready to make ilS
filS! pictures on the low end of the

EMS responds to 19 calls

The foremost concern
of 1968 Is still .f oremost

•

The Dilly Sentinel hgl 3

,,

·Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Robert Bell
Robert D. Bell , 70, of Raci ne
died Wed nesday, Dec. 29, 1993 . a;
a Zanesvi lle Hospi tal.
Mr. Be ll was a long-tim e
employee of Rockwell International. He was a member of the Colum bus Federation of Musicians, Local
103.
Surviving are his wife, Marian
Simpson Bell , Racine; children
Robert Bell of Johnstown, Neb .:
Betty Hcrmsmeycr of Ainsworth
Ncb., Matthew Bell and Jenny Bell:
both of Sacramento , Calif, and
Chnstopher Bell of Sioux Narrow
Oncario, Canada; and eigh1 grand:
children. A brother, Donald Bell
preceded him in death.
'
Friends may call 2 to 5 p.m .
Sunday at the Sehocdinger East
Chapel, 5360 East Livingston Ave.,
Columbus where services will be
held 31 10 a.m. Monday. Graveside
services will be held at 12:30 Mon.
day at the Letart FAils Cemetery
Letart Falls with the Rev. Rogc;
Grace officiating.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

'

7

COLONY THEATRE

NO BUITERFINGERS • Sbawn Holly, above, tossed moving
items to L.J, Mitch recently. The two, wbo both live in Middleport,
moved storage ltema out of the 116 Mulberry Avenue building so
the 1partment can be lived in. (Photo by Georce Al:ate}

TONIGHT THAll THURS.

-

Stocks
Am Elc Power ................... 37 518
Ashland Oil ........................33 7/8
AT&amp;T .......:.......... ......... ..... 52 3/4
Bank One ...:................ .......39 1/8
Bob Evans.,:,......................21 7/8
Clwmins Sl!op ............. ...........II
Champioo lnil.................... 19 1/4
City Holdins ........ .............•32 1/4
Federal MQ.&amp;.ij! ..... .. ...... ......29 518
GoodyearT4R ................. .45 1/8
Lands End ... :.-......:..............46 3/8
Limited Inc.·............:............ ... .17
Multimedia Ide ........................34
Point Banc01p ..... ... .............: .... 15
Reliance Eleclric....:...........16 3/4
Robbins~Myers .............. .. 18 112
Shoney· ~ Inc ........................... .24
Star B... .... ,............ ..........34 3/4
Wendy lnt'l............ .......... .. l7 1/8
Worthillglon J/!d·...............19 3/4
Stock repor ts are the Ul :3q
a.m. quotes ~vlded by Advest
of Gallipolis.

WINTER CLEARANCE
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DECEMBER 31,

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�•

By The Bend

The D,aily Sentine1
.

Pege

Common treatment prevents colon cancer

GOSPEL SING PLANNED • The group The C011querors will
appear the Point Pleasant High Sdiool Auditorium Friday Dec. 31
for a New Year's Eve Gospel Sing starling at 8 p.m. Other per·
formers to appear are Sounds or Praise, The Lordsmen, Renee·
lions Trio, Eternity, Kathy Stebbins and Dorsey Jolmson. Concessions will be available and admission is free.

Dairy Barn opens
Community Gallery
The Dairy Bam Cultural Arts
Center is opening a Community
Gallery Ibis year.
To open Jan. 7. this new program enables local artists to show·
case their artwork at the Dairy
Bam. 8000 Dairy Lane.
Ron Kroutel and Patrice Wolf of
Athens will be lhe fust artists to
display their work through the
Communi!)' Gallery, Jan. 7 through
23.
This husband and wife team will
feature 31 of their paintings and
drawings. Ron is a professor of art
at Ohio University. Patrice is the
Director of An in England Study
Abroad program at OU and is also
a studio artisl/painter. The opening
reception is Jan. 10 from 6 to 8
p.m. in conjunction with two other
openinJS at the Seigfred and
Trisolim Galleries.

Athens artists Ginger Brooker
and Ronald Gibbons will be featured Jan. 28 through Feb. 20 with
the opening reception on Jan 28
from 6 to 8 p.m.
Brooker will display Cyber
Stills, a video installabon. Gibbons
is a print artist and will showcase
Payable to the Bearer on Demand.
which is made up of 12 lithographs
and drawings that resemble modem
money.
Gallery hours are Tuesday
throu~h Sunday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Admission is free to everyone
including the opening receptions. If
you would like more infonnation,
please call lhe Dairy Barn at 5924981.
The next major exhibition at the
Dairy Barn is Area Art on View,
March 26 through May 8.

been

deadliest malignancy, trailing only
"We have
waiting for ' this
lung cancer
·
for a loog. long ti~c," commented
Colon cancer starts with precan- Dr. Helen M. Shields of Boston's
C111Uus growths called adcnomatous
Beth Israel Hospital. "We arc
polyps. Various methods of look·
finally supponed by data that will
mg for these growths have become stand the test of tinie."
routine parts of physical exams for
Winawer, a researcher at Memoolder Americans.
rial Sloan-Ketterini(Canccr Center
The tests are performed on the in New York, c6nducted the
common sense belief that removing decade-long Nation~! Polyp Study
the growths will prevent cancer with physicians at' six other U.S.
from developing.
hospitals. The results were pub·
"There has not, until now, been
lished in Thursday's New England
evidence to suppon that," said Dr. Journal of Medicine. ·
Sidney J. Winawer. the study's
The study was conducted on
principal author. ''We have provid·
I ,418 men and women who had
ed evidence that now makes that · had at least one adeno.matous polyp
belief a fact."
removed sometime during 1980 to
The study is unlikely to change 1990. They were then given fol·
medical practice, but it provides low-up exams, called colonoreassuring evidence that doctors' scopics, for an average of six years.
ef[orts to remove polyps are worthDuring that time; colon cancer
while.

By SHARON COHEN
Associated Press Writer
From her first breath, the odds
were stacked against Angela Lakeberg: She was a Siamese twin. She
shared a malfonned hean with her
sister. And a rare. risky operation
offered only a sliver of hope for
survival.
Yet on Wednesday, Angela
marked a milestone, turning 6
months old - far too young to

Navy Seaman Oarence E. Rice
Navy Seaman Clarence E. Rice,
son or Patricia A. and Clarence E.
Rice Jr.• of Route I, Point Pleasant,
recently graduated from lhe subma·
rine course.
At the sub school in Groton,
Conn., he learned the basic lheory,
construction and operation of
nuclear-powered submarines.
The 1991 Point Pleasant High
School graduate joined the Navy in
Marcl\ 1993.

~

Sure, I'm just as guilty as you

.
.
' 1

·'

.

'

-.

CASH 8 CARRY
• Living Room Tables ..•.•.. Starting at $9goo

Lamp Table •.•••......•..•...••. Starting at $129 ·
• Camel Back • lradltlonal • Country
• Contemporary
&lt;

• DESKS ..•.••............. *19900

• Lamps ................. ~··············Starting at $49

ALL
CHRISTMAS

AND UP

·• CE-DAR CHEST ...... •1ggoo

D'AYBED
Reg. $100001/2 OFF NOW

AND UP

• CURIOS .................. •199

.AND UP

·~

CtHDmn'litY ,Calen!lllr· items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
,. must be received in advance to
•assure publication in the eaten·
~dar.

..
~

THURSDAY

sso

ORANGE TOWNSHIP- The

Orange Township trustees will
meet at 7 p.m . Thursday at the
home of Clerk Pauy Calloway. The
organizational meeting will be
held on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
home of the clerk.

LETART- The Letart Township trustees will meet Friday at
10:30 a.m. for the end of year and
organizational meeting.
REEDSVILLE- The Olive
Township Board of Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at the Shade River
Forestry Building on Joppa Road to
discuss zoning matters. A business
meeting will follow at 7:30 p.m.
The trustees organizational meeting
will be held at 7 p.m. Jan. 4 at the
s;1mc building.
CARPENTER -

Columbia

: AND UP

DEC. 31

Township Board of Trus1ees will
hold its regular end of year meeting
at 7 p.m. at the fire station. An
organizational meeting for 199_i,
will follow ,
POMEROY • The Salisbury
Township trustees will meet Thursday at? p.m. at the township hall at
Rock Springs.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT· The Rose of
Sharon Holiness Church will hold a
watch night service at 7 p.m. Fri·
day. There will be speakers and
special singers. The church is localed at the end of Depot Street on
Leading Creed Road.
SYRACUSE- The Sutton
Township Trustees will hold their

fina~ meeting at 7-:30p.m. Friday
(31 dec.) in the Syracuse munici·
pal building.

BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township trustees will meet at 1
p.m. Friday at the town hall for the
year-end meeting.
POMEROY . Mt. Hermon Unit·
ed Brethren Church will have a
New Year's Eve service Friday at
10 p.m. There will be praise ser·
vice, movies and refreshments.
RUTLAND . A watch service
will be held at the Rutland Free
Will Baptist church from 7 p.m. to
midnight Friday.
MIDDLEPORT · A New Year's
EvedancewillbeheldattheAmeriean Legion annex on Mill Street in

By JOHN CURRAN
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A judge
ordered the state transportation
authority on Wednesday to accept a
series of racy ads encouraging the
usc of condoms to prevent AIDS .
U.S. District Judge Rya Zobel
said advertising space on subways
and trolleys met the defmition of a
public forum and the authority violated the First Amendment when it
turned down the ads.
The six ads by the AIDS Action
Commiuee of Massachusetts picture a brightly colored, wrapped
condom against a white background.
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority rejected or
wanted changes in these headlines:

Not Exactly As Shown

Wate..,all

Almond Color

.

'

SSES
P'RINGS
NOWO SAL.E.

All
AND

. ·'Opportunities for mass prev_entiOn of senous and common b_Irlh
defects come along only once m a
generation." said Dr. Richard B.
Johnston Jr. o~ the Mar~~ of
D1mes, wh1ch prrused the deciSion.
Congress requucd FDA to regulate s~pplement labels under a
1990 la w, but the plan generated
f1erce opposu10n from th e $4 btl·
lion supplements mdusuy. ,
, Flyers and c_ommerc~als, mclud·
m~ one m which movie star Mel
Gtbson was ''arrested'' for possessmg V1tam10 C, told some 76
million consumers lhat the govern·
1es of supp1ement would restrict~
ments. The campaign generated
hundreds of thousands ~f letters to
Congress. where leg•slauon IS
pending that could significantly
change the regulations.
Th · d
the r les
e '" us try says . .~. h
would prevent even pnnung nc
· antt-ox•
· ·dants " on a 1abel or d1s·
10
·
·
· ·f'
· 1 bo 1
semmau
. ng sctenu •c aruc cs a u
nutnents.
' 'Do we want to have ~ market•
place w here the on 1Y th 10g con •
su mers can get arc gcncnc names
- Formula I, Formula 2 - with

•

I

I

I

Yll

••n-IDUIII
LEAIIAUJfFI84AIUIIl.
SAIEI¥1111
' ,' _ _ , _ _ ,Ottl _ _ _ _

I

-Mate folic acid the second
supplement allowed to make health
claims. Calcium products already
can say they l)fevent osteoporosis.
- Require tl•at, by July, other
health claims be supported by significant scientific agreement. The
same standard apphes to foods .
- Reqmre that nutnents 10 supplements be listed in a contents
panel on the label, JUSt as they are
on foods, by July 1995.
-Establish recommended daily
intakes of seven nutrients previously not recognized on labels. They
are Vitamin K selenium chloride
• .
•
. •
manganese. fluonde,
chromium
and molybdenum.

b' l
H
. •
Riverside osptta 1 s mo 1 e
mammography will visit Meigs
County on Jan. 31 offering free or
low cost mammography to women.
Ten appointments11re st•.11 avail bl
a c,· accordi ng to Norma Torres,
R. N.. nursing director.
be Appointments may be made tween 8 a.m.
and 4 p.m. Monday through Friday

by calling the department, 9926626.
Torres said that the full pay for
mammography is $55 but that there
is a special fund that Riverside has
for those who havefo:f of being
low income. The in ormation is to
be presented on the day of the
mammography.

'7
Mammography t0 make VIS/
· •ts

Middlepon Friday night beginning
at 9 p.m. C. J. and the Country
Gentlemen will provide the music
for the public dance.

L01TRIDGE • A New Year's
Eve party will be held at the Lottridge Community Center from
8:30p.m. Friday to 12:15 a.m. Saturday. There will be a band and the
public is invited to attend. The center is located on Athens County
Road 53.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Lcng Bottom will have a New Year's Eve
service beginning at 9 p.m . There
will be special singing and fellowship. Pastor Sreve Reed invites the
public .
COOLVILLE- A New Year's

Eve dance wiU be held from 9 p.m.
to I a.m. at the Frost community
building located between Stewan
and Coolville. Music will be by the
Happy Hollow Boys Band. Cost is
$3 for singles and $5 for couples.

SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE· A meeting
of Harrisonville Lodge 411 sched·
uled for Jan. I has hccn postponed
until 7:30 on Jan. 7.
SUNDAY
CHESTER - The lzaalc Walton
club will hold a muzzleloadcr shoot
at I p.m. at the lzaak Walton Farm.
MONDAY
CHESTER - The Chester
Township Trustees will meet a1 7
p.m. Jan. 3 for its organizational
meeting for the new year.

- "One of these will make you
I. I,OOOth of an inch larger;''

-"Simply having one on hand
won't do any good;"
- "Haven't you ~ot enough to
wony about in bed?' . _ .

- "Tell him you don 't l&lt;now
how it will ever fi~"
-"Even if you don't have one,
carry one."
One that read, "You ' ve got to
be puuing me on," was accepted.

Our lobbies will be closed
Samrday,January 1
in obsenance of New Years Day.
All ollkts wlU oiBene regular business bours oo New Yem El't.

But if you~ an A1M cud
with one of1hese symbols. ..

'

CHOICE OF FIRMNESS
CHOICE OF COLO.R
CHOICE OF STYLE
Sure air bags work great in front-end
but only
a safety belt can protect you from side
collistons.
So buckle up. And you1! cover "'ut!U&gt; angles.

no infonnation"' · asked Tony Martincz of the Nuiritional Health
Alliance.
That won't be the case, responded the FDA's Mitch Zeiler, the
agency's special assistant for poli·
cy. The rules say health food stores
can distribute reprints of scientific
studies or ma gazine anicles, and
products can highlight ingredients
us long as they say those· nutrients
perform some unproven [unction.
. 'This should put an end to the
brouhaha created in Congress by
h , d
, 1 bb . .. 'd
1 e mSilusuylasdeo
f lhy•ncg, saf1
8 ruce verg
o
S.
. th p bl' I e enter or
CI~~ce
.e u IC merest
e rues.

Subway ordered to carry racy advertisements

-PRICE THRU

•RECLINERS ............ *;19goo
'

FDA releases regulations for dietary supplements

=~============================================~~~~~~========~====~======~~==~~~==~~==~~~~~==
=
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REGULAR
RETAIL

00

,.,,ney

•

net will meet at 5 p.m. in its
~ 0 ffiICC.
•
• CLIFTON - Evangelist James
; Hobbs of Portsmouth will be the
guest speaker at Clifton Tabernacle
Church in Clifton. W. Va. Thursday at7 p.m. The public is invited.
PORTLAND _ The Lebanon
Township tru stees will meet at 7
p.m. at the township building.

50% 0FF

• HALL TREES ......... 519goo

It must be a difficult holiday
season for Maj. Glenna Rummel
(Ret.) who spent years working in
Meigs County to pro.vide Chrislmas
for many underpnvileged families.
She is far away from Meigs
County now and I did receive a
post-Christmas note from her.
Many of you will be interested. It
reads, in part;
"! just want to share a loving
Meny Chrislmas and a Happy New
Year.
"I want to thanlt you, lhe public,
for your attendance at my farewell
meetings at the Salvation Army
and my niece's house, Janet and
Harry Leffle, in Minersville on
Sept. 12. Thanks for the pictures
that were taken and mailed to me.
It was a joy to see all of you. May
the Lord bless you.
·
"A few days later, I was
dropped in this city, Asbury Park,
N.J., by my sister, Albena Hawse,
and her daughter, Meredith Trave·
naris. I'll be glad to answer anyone
who wishes to write to me at the
Retired Officers Residence, The
Salvation Army, Room 320, 210
Fifth Ave., Asbury Park, N. J.
07712."
Glenna further comments that
she lives in a seven story building
wilh an of lhe services and requirements anyone needs. The nearby
shopping malls are huge, she says,
and apparently, she's still doing her
thing in helping others. She comments that the Army workers were
allowed to sit inside the malls with
their fund kettles and it was so nice
to be wann.
One must feel only admiration
for Glenna who has served the
Lord so failhfully for so long.

:: ' How about those Christmas
')'lhitc elephants that you received?
;: If you got some stuff that you
CiJR 't exchange or that you have
;~bsolurely no use for, the Women's
;t\uxiliary of Veterans Memorial
1lospital will be glad to hear from
you.
The auxiliary is asking all resi·
dents to contribute their "white elephants" to a fund raiser which the
,hospital's volunteer organization
will hold in lhe future. Keeping in
. mind that one man's trash is anothBy LAU~AN NEERG~ARD
-er man's treasure, the auxiliary
Associated Press WCiter
(lC(!Uests lhat you collect all of your
WASHINGTON (AP)
·''white elephants" into one herd
Beginning this ~ummer, dietary
. and turn lhem over to the unit The
supplements cant c181!f1 they pre"herd" can be left in the hospital
vent cancer or allev.ate AIDS,
.lobby and will be stock piled for
thwart hau loss or promote vmlity
.the big public sale being planned
unless they can prove 11.
. ,
•&lt;by the organization. Auxiliary
The Food and Drug Admmtstra:members ask that you exclude
lion released new labehn~ regula·.clothing items from your contribuuons Wednesday that w1ll force
'tion. They're looking for all of
d1etary supplemeuts to live up to
those items which someone lhought
the same standards as foods.
.-re cute and were "the real you"
The rules won't take any supple·
ments off the shelves. the FDA
·~ during the holiday seas!)n. Think
about it. There was the office gift
stressed But they will require prior
· on supexchange, the gadget gifts from
approval· for health clauns
plement bottles, in catalogs or
Aunt Maude, that "unique" what·
11
implied by a product's catchy
~ not from Cousin Minnie. ·The
~E sources are unlimited. Let's face it
name.
We all have some "white ele·
"Consumers should have access
io phants" that we can contribute to
to dietary supplements that are
k d"
= lhe auxiliary cause.
truthfully labeled and mar etc •
~
If you have some donations and
said FDA Commissioner David
can't get them to the hospital lobby
Kessler. "These ru Ies enabl e t he
· • ed chmces.
·
..
-just give the auxiliary a ring.
public to make m.orm
FDA
=They 'II make some son of arrangeAlso Wednes d ay, ·t h·e • I'
:'lftllnts to get your contributions
contammg •0 •c
Don'tlook now but it's iime to ' allowed products
· prevents common
: from you to lhem. To the best of make their New Year's Resolu· acid to say u
Cmy know ledge this is the first time lions. Aren't you ticlcled to death I birth defects when taken in the first
weeks of pregnancy.
;. lhat such a sale has been planned reminded you? Do keep smiling.

~ RUTLAND - The Board of
~~ading Creek Conservancy Dis-

ITEMS

AND UP

, For days before Christmas we
nSlmg will r'sto the familiar strains
of Berlin s "I'm Dreaming of a
')Vhitc CluistmaS" and it was won~ul when il happened. We real·
I~ wanted that! However, Mother
'Nature tool: some of us more seri.ously than we had intended. We
·were thinking more of a one day
~ pn followed by sunshine and
warm temperatures. Is there a
song that we can sing to get the
~ow machine shut down?

on a county-wide basis. It should
be interesting, fun and a real fmancial shot in the ann for the auxil·
iary. I'm taking some things in
right away. What better time to
clear out some space for essentials?
I' 11 be at lhe sale too. How could I
resist all those "treasures"?

something to friends whose
daughter was unmarried and
pregnant and whose son contracted
AIDS.
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Loo • -tl•
Your response was beautiful You
._
said a phone call or note can be
~:'to~
enonnously helpful to people who
arc struggling with problems. I
would also like to encourage
suppo1t Cor those who have a family . your trouble," says it all. -member accused (or convicted) of a GRATEFUL IN WISCONSIN
crime.
DEAR WISCONSIN: Many
. My family recently went through people are inclined not to say
this experience. Most of my friends anything for fear they will cause
wem too embmassed to bring up embarrassment or open old wounds.
the subject. I didn't want to leave Wrong. A word of compassion
the house for fear I'd run into aapprecndei~:,uragement is always
someone I mew. Some mornings I
could barely get out of bed and face
Dear Ann Landers: My son-in·
the day.
law is a heallh Creak. He has spent a
When I began to receive notes of smallfortuneonexerciseequipment
comfort and encouragement, I and works out faithfully every day,
discovered how remarkable the but the man is never wilhout a can
healing power of true friendship can of beer in his hand.
be.
PleaseteUyourreaderswha!beer
Please tell your readers that any docs to their brains.
show of concern will help. The SHREWSBURY, MASS.
simple sentence, "I'm sorry about
DEAR SHREWSBURY: I have

no
regardless of the cxcusea they give.
it was their choice to go down dlat
road Omated. the mediaenc:Cllll'fea
pre-marital sex, but the boaom line
is that we are responsiblo Cor our
own decisions.
1 clcn't know bow many people
feel as I do, but I'd like to say
110mething to other teens. You never
have to do anything you do not want
to do to please someone else, and
nothing should be more imponant
to you than your opinion of
toes.
yourself. •• INDEPENDENT IN
Dear Ann Landers: May I TEXAS
respond to the woman whose
DEAR INDY: Teen readers will
17-year-old daughter was having sex listen to one of their own. Thanks
with her boyfriend? The mother said for sounding off.
the media was partly responsible for
Do you have qlll!stions about su,
her daughtei's morals.
but 110 one to ta/Jc to? An11 I.anthrs'
1 am a IS-year-old girl who has booldet, "Su tw1. tilt Teen-Ager,"
been exposed 10 the same 'IV shows. is frank tw1. to tilt point. StNJ a
music, movies and publicity as that self-addressed, lo11g, businell•:rizt
woman's daughter. I also have been envelope a11li 11 check or
orpressured to have sex by some of tkr for $3 .65 (this inclu&amp;s postage
the guys I've dated. I have chosen to a11li ha11d!i11g) to : Teens, c/o An11
abstain until! am married. and I Latulers,P.O. Bo:dl562 , Chicago.
stand fmn by my decision.
111. 60611-0562 . (l11 Canada, u11li
Not all youngpeoplearesleeping $4.45.)
around. I realize that manv of my

~--------------------C-o_m_m_u_n-it_y_c_a_le-n-da-r--------~--------~

u

•

wbo wondered if she should say

but I
welcome the oppcx1Uility 10 tell them
again. Tbese are the facts, folks:
Moa '-"contains 2 percent to 6
percent ak:ohol Usually, ~g
-orelgblcansofbeerwillCIUSC
major impairment, including
ineapon&amp;ible behavior and diff'leull)'
in walldng and ~ng. Aft# IS
beers, most·people·wiJJ pass OUL
Tolerance to alcohol is unpredict·
able. Some people get cockeyed on
one drink, while others seem to have
hoUow legs with sponges in their

~

•

".. Wall Pl~te Rac.;~ •....•.•••.•••. ~tarting at $9500
• Floor Lamps ••.•••.•...•.•.•..•. Startlng at ·$?goo .• f:
• ·Solid Oak Mag .

are.

!

STOREWIDE 20% TO 50% OFF
SOFAS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Startlng at $39900
HIDE·A·IED SOFAS •••••••••• Starting at $49900

a 1eUlt from a New Jersey woman •

..•

.

-

F!~l!en:~~p Annelps a~L 1,~.~an~!! ~~ds~ ~er~~

by Bob Hoeflich

,,

Raphaely, director or critical care women visited the baby this monlll,
at Children's Hospital of Philadel- bringing "Popeye" and other cartoon tapes and a Christmas dress
phia. "This is unusuaL It's an
for the red-haired infant who wears
extraordinary challenge we've been
a
wrist rattle and loves bright colable to meet at the moment She
has been able to cope. We're ors, lullabies- and cuddling. · ·
Raphacly wouldn't predict when
pleased at that."
Angela could go home to Indiaria.
" She's hanging in there. She's
looking .real good," said Georgia ' The baby was removed last Fridi!y
from an iron lung, he said, and
Welsh, sister of Angela's mother,
she's now hooked up to a ventilator
Rcitha "Joey" Lakcberg, who
thr,~uu:h a nose tube. She is fe;d
declined to be interviewed. Both
pnothcr Ulbc.

know she has rewritten medical
history and defied predictions lhat
she stood only a I percent chance
of making it through surgery. She
remains in intensive care in a
Philadelphia hospital, breathing
with a respirator. but she is grow·
ing, her hean is working well and
doctors are hopeful about her
future.
"Amazing? I don't know that
definition," said Dr. Russell

In the service-Cpl Donald R. Slone
Marine Lance Cpl. Donald R.
Slone. 1991 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School in Gallipo·
lis, recently returned from a combined arms exercise in Twenty
Nine Palms. Calif.
Slone participate.d in three
weeks of training in the Mojave
Dcsen with high temperaUires and
hostile renain a given.
Slone joined the Marine Corps
in A)l1il1992.

4:

was discovered·in 11 ve people. 'l'lle
tumors were relatively small ~'ld
had not produced any c~r symptoms. The researchers calculatid
that if the polyps had not ~.II
removed, they would have foun~
about 45 cancer cases during th~
period.
"This is the flfSI demonstratidh
of a reduction in colon cancer incl·
dence by removing .adenomatoi,\S
polyps," Winawer said.
·
The cancer society recommertlb
that doctors perform digital rectal
exams on patients ann11ally after
age 40. For after age SO, it ur~
annual tests for blood in the ~.
which can indicate cancer ,p_r
polyps. At this ase. it also ret01J1:·
mends examining the lower colon
with a tube called a sigmoidoscOjic
every three to five years.
·'

Separated twin defies odds, turns 6 months old

Ohio

1993

eat of the Bend...

Thursday, Decemb« 30, 1_.
I

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A longawaited study provides the first
conclusive proof that finding and
removing precancerous growths
can dramatically lower the rislt of
colon cancer, lhe nation's seconddeadliest malignancy. ~earchers
say.
Hunting down these growths,
known as polyps. has become a
cornerstone of colon cancer pre·
vention in recent years. But until
now. there has been only circumstantial evidence it works.
The new report found that
removal of polyps cuts the colon
cancer risk by 90 percent.
Colon cancer will strike 152,000
Americans this year and 57,000
will die, accordi ng to the American
Cancer Society. It's the second·

December

•,

1 ONLY- Lowest price ever

·-

•COr-.TEMPORARY SECTIONAL, pub back,
NCIInlng
Baantt
sectional , with
81GI,.Gid
COII\partment

Reg. $172000

~~~~~------------~------•
OPEN DAILY
11L·SPM -~
FREE DELIVERY
446·3045
.
Visa, MasterCard,

1/2 ·Off

"..

:

INDUCTED • New members were Inducted into the Meigs
Chapter, National Honor Society, in recent ceremonies at Meigs
High School. All were juniors. They are left to rigbt, rront, Shlolo
Moore,· Stephannie Thomas, Crystal Vaughan, Sarah Anderson,
and Kelley Grueser; and back, Jamie Ord, Mandy Jones, Brian
Smith, Jason Taylor, Kim Janey, and Heidi Huffman. ·

;"
l:;lberfield relives 1937 flood
c•
he and his friends found ways 1:0
~

•

Many towns in Southeast Ohio
the Ohio River.
Industry, transponation. water and
mmerce have been provided by
he large body of water. But the
hio River has not always been
riendly. Soutlltast Ohic Magazine
lives the I937 flood in its upcomg winter issue.
The flood of 1937 was South·
t Ohio's worst disaster ever. It
magee! many river towns in
(\igs, Lawrence and Scioto couil-

lit'! built along

ITEMS SUBJEO TO

PRIOR SALE
CORNER OF THIRD 6
OUVE
GALUPOUS, OHIO .J'f~

.. _ A
.. ,•• •• W .

F
F
es.

:_ . ~eroy resident Robert Elberremembers the flood and how

-·

enjoy it. In Ironton, 13,300 rest·
dents were left homeless as water
destroyed both homes and busincsses. Only r,hest sections of
Ironton were
- in thef lood.
Portsmout ,tried to stop the
flood by building a 60-foot flood
wall, but it only fell to leave the
town in disaster. It became the
hardest hittown:between Cincin·
nati and PittsburBhRemember the !lood and learn
how towns were destroyed by the
1937 uagedy in the winter issue of
Soutlltast Ohic magazine.

SpeeiaJ
Wee•end Hours

Friday, 08(. 31 st 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sat., Jan. 1st 10 a.m.·2 p.m.
Sun. Jan. 2nd 10 a.m.·4 p.m.

you have 24-hour aa:ess to your
aa:ounts ev'!}' clay of the year

at our Supeaener madilites.

MartcUa Downtown Office, Serond !l Pulnam ~
Fronlier 0180!, FronUer Sh&gt;pping Cenler
Kroger 0180!, Washington Cerner
Seoond l ~ $5. Dme-up
Athens I Nonh&lt;A&gt;W1&amp;reec
80 I East Slate &amp;teet
Belpre 1902 Washington BouleYanl
1be Plains 70 N. Plalm Rd., O&gt;untty Qlmers Sh&gt;pptng Plm
Other ob In Lowell, Middleparl, Nelsomllle, and Reno

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 30,

Who Will It Be? .

1~

Art You Expecting
A Special Delivery?

FIRST
BABY
OF'94
COttTEST

If you're expecting a
bundle of joy around the
first of the year, you can
win a bundle of great
prizes for you and baby
from participating
sponsors on these pages.

Thursday, December 30, 1993

Listed-on these pages are gifts offered by local merchan·ts that ~~
go to the·first Babylt of f994 born of eigs County parents.
Parents of children born ·after llllidnigltt, December 3J, 1993; are
=

asked to send their Name, Address and Doctor's Report to the
Daily Sentinel by no later titan J2:00 Noon on January J0, J994,
•

FIRST BABY OF 1994 RULES
1. Winning baby must be born to parents who are legal residents of
Meigs County.
2. All such babies are eligtible.
3. Exact time of birth must be specified in written statement by
attending physician.
4. Application must be filed in the office by noon, January 10, 1994.
5. In case of tie, award wm be distributed at the discretion of the
contest committee.

Just refer to the Official
Rules listed here and
best of luck to all of you!

"IT'S 601116 TO
BE A BEAUTIFUL BABY"

The Shoe Place
In
dleport
Will Give The
First Baby of
1994A

1994 A
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.-J

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~ :!_t~ ' /.-:-t;.~.
./. /;,i'.bl'-

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OUR GIFT
TO THE
FIRST BABY
OF 1994

I

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s10.00 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
SWISHER·LOHSE
PHARMACY

A FREE BABY FLORAL
ARUNGEMENT
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992·2955
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992·6669
253
SECOND
OHID

THE FIRST
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POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

'POMEROY, OHIO

992·6454

TO THE
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THE FIRST
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Our Gift ·
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Baby

1994
'

A ''FREE'' ICE
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$25.00 Gift
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OHIO

FROM THE

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POMERO_,, OHIO .

..

992·5177

POMEROY,.OHIO

WE WILL ·

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A 3 PIECE
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SET

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A s10
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,.......

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POMEROY, OHIO

.

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1994

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POMEROY .

OUR GIFT
TO
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OF 1994
A PACKAGE OF

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TO THE PARENTS OF
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THE FIRST BABY OF 1994 ·
GROW'S
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THE FIRST
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s20 Gift
,.
Certificate ~~!~/-"~,-:r) ·

~

A $1 0.00 GIFT
CERTIFICATE
ON THE •T" IN MIDDLEPORT

WILL
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1s20

GIFT CERTIFICATE
FROM

FRUTH PHARMACY
992·6491
786 North Second
Middleport, Ohio

FOR THE
FIRST

ARRIVAL
OF 1994
WE WILL
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'

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992·2054
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'

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._ . 992·2644

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Lots of Luck!

'

POMEROY,OHIO

1994
,,...,A

Compliments of

.

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FRANCIS FLORIST
OUR GIFT TO
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...

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OHIO

.-

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992·5627

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$15 GIFT
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•

~----~~~~~~~~~~~~--------CLARK'S
WE WILL
JEWELRY
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TO
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....,..... MOTHER OF
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Bahy
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and

The Dally ~ntlnei--Pige-7 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

93 Mill Street

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Middleport
992·6657

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

�·Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday,

In college hoops,

December 30, 1993
Page-8

·

OU Boocats post 85-76 win over No. 14 Connecti.c ut
By The Associated Press
The way No. 14 Connecticut
had been playing, the trip to
Hawaii the week after Christmas
was supposed to be win three
games, accept the Big Island Invitational championship trophy and
head back for the rigors of the Big

They stood up to us.''
The Bobcats (7-3) made 17 of
21 foul shots in the final 2: 13, the
crowning touch after a night of
mixing up defenses that frustrated
Connecticut, which trailed the
whole game after a tie at 2.
Gary Trent scored 11 of his I 9
East.
points in the flrst eight minutes as
· The Huskies had cruised to the Bobcats tool: a 20-8 lead on the
eight victories to open the season, way to leading 42-28 at halftime.
lbe laiCst a 40-point opening-rou nd
Geno Ford had 22 points to lead
win over Texas-Arlington in the the Bobcats, while Donyell Martournament at Hila. On Wednesday shall, who had a career-high 33
night, they ran into a problem they points Tuesday night, had 22. He
lWldn't faced all season: playing scored six points in an 8-0 run that
c•tch up.
brought the Huskies within 55-49,
· Ohio University took command the closest they would get in the
early and then made the free throws second half.
d~wn the stretch to hand the
"We were able to handle their
Huskies an 85-76 semifinal loss.
pressure and stop Connecticut's
: "Just like you can't simulate trans ilion game," Ohio coach
apr press, you can't simulate some- Larry Hunter said. "Our guards
body getting ahead on you and say, played well and our bench respond'Come on, let's make up points.' ed when we got into foul trouble. It
Obviously, I don't think we did a was an overall team victory."
good job of that," Connecticut
In other games involving ranked
epoch Jim Calhoun said. "We tried teams Wednesday night, it was:
tm catch them down the stretch. We
No. 4 Temple 63, Fairleigh DickinfOIIIcd them, but they hit the shots. son 51; No. 6 Kansas 73, Rhode

Island 60; No. 9 Massachusetts 94,
Maryland 80; No. II .Louisville 83,
Florida 68; No. 15 Georgia Tech
71, St. John's 69; No. 17 Wisconsin 103, Grambling State 83; No.
19 Syracuse 85, Colgate 74 ; and
No. 20 Olclahoma State 79, Cal
Santa Barbara 74.
No. 4 Temple 63
Fairleigh Dickinson S1
The Owls (5-1) took third place
in the ECAC Holiday Festival at
New York behind Aaron McKie's
18 points and 17 each from Eddie
Jones and Rick Brunson. Brunson's
rebound baslcet wilh 4:00 left was
the Owls' last field goal of the
game. He made all eight free
throws he took in the final I :39.
Tanner Robinson had I 4 points to
lead the Knights (4-4).
No. 6 Kansas 73, Rhode Island 60
The Jayhawks (12-1) dominated
the backboards and overcome 28
turnovers to advance to the championship game of lhe Golden Harvest Classic against Southern
Methodist. Richard Scott had 17
points and 7-foot-2 Greg Ostertag
pulled down a career-high 13

rebounds for Kansas, the host for
the tournament played In Kansas
City, Mo. Kyle Ivey-Jones led the
Rams (3-2) with 22 points.
No. 9 Massachusetts 94
Maryland 80
Lou Roe scored 30 points and
Mike Williams had career-highs of
25 points and I 0 assists as the MinuteAnen (9-1) won their own Hall of
Fame Classic at Springfield. Massachusetts tool: advantage of foul
trouble by Maryland freshman center Joe Smith to open an 11-point
lead midway through the second
half. Smilh led the Terrapins (7-2)
with 22 points, despile not scoring
for the flnal 6:47.
No. 11 Louisville 83
Florida 68
Dwayne Morton had 22 points
as the Cardinals (7 -I) advanced to
the championship game of the
Rainbow Classic at Honolulu.
Florida (8-2) was down 16 but rallied wilhin 65-57 wilh 2:47 left on
Craig Brown's three-pointer. The
Cardinals made four of their next
six free throws and the Gators

IENE.UL
.HAULING

never got closer than I0 the rest of 0), who blew away from a 55-47
the way. Dametri Hill had a career- lead with a 19-4 -ion. Dan Avery
high 28 points for the Gators, who had 22 points and 12 rebounds for
held Louisville's Clifford Rozier to , the visiting Tigers (4-5), who have
a season-low four points.
lost four in.a row.
No. 15 Georgia Tech 71
No. 19 Syracuse 85, Colgate 74
St. John's 69
The Orangemen (8-1) went on a
The Yellow Jackets (9-1) bene- 17-0 run for a 69-42 lead in the
fitted from what appeared to be a hom e victory. John Wallace had 24
bad call to win the ECAC Holiday points to lead Syracuse. Tuclcer
Festival at Madison Square Gar- Neale, th e leading scorer for the
den. With lhe score 69-69, Georgia Red Raiders (4-5) at 25 points per
Tech called a timeout with 26 sec- game, bounced back from a 3-foronds left on the game clock and 22 13 fust half to finish with 20.
on the 35-second shot clock. Tmvis
No. 20 Oklahoma St. 79
Best dribbled out the time and
Cal Santa Barbara 74
found lvano Newbill for a layup
Randy Rulherford had 15 of his
that appeared to be late, but it was I 7 points in the second half when
the game's final points with 3.6 the Cowboys (8-4) broke from a
seconds to play. Martice Moore led 27-27 halftime tie in the consolathe Yellow Jackets with 19 points, tion round of the Rain bow Classic.
while Charles Minlend had 14 to Olclahoma State center Bryant (Big
lead the Redmen (7-3), who had Country) Reeves continued to
won five straight.
s1ruggle with I 0 points, giving him
No. 17 Wisconsin 103
14 in the two tournament games.
Grambling St. 83
The Gauchos (3-6), who closed
Freshman center Rashard Grif- within 77-74 wilh two seconds left
flth had 20 points, seven rebounds on a three -pointer, were led by
and four blocks for the Badgers (8- Doug Muse's 20 points.

-

Regular-season action

R01Jillar........, finales
FrtdoJ
Minn.CIOtl at Wuhinaton. 3 p.m.

Syncu&amp;e 85, Colg•te 74

Sllln•y, Jaa. 2

Bu.ffdo at Indian~, 1 pm.

a..EYEI..ANDat~,l

0.U.. 11 N.Y. Oi.aru. I p.m.

p.m.

GIDCII Ba)' at~ I p.m.
Miami. at New En&amp;l~nd, I p.m
PhoaW. • Adana., l p.m.
SauJo atKan&amp;u cu.y. , .m.
Da!vcr 11 LA. Ra.i.dc:n, p.m.
San Ditto 11 Tampi Bay,4p.m.
Oticaao at LA. Ram&amp;, 4 p.m.
aNCINNATI 11 New Orteuu. 4 p.m.
N.Y. Jeu atHOUI~ . I p.m.

1

MOftdiiJ, J•L 3
Philldelphia at $111 Fnncilco, 9 p.m.

AFCinden

.

Quu~er•cu

• Player

AtLCam. YdL TOinL

South
Aultin Peay 117, Bryan 57
C11.adcl 63, N.C.·Cbensboro 46
Dctroil Mercy 61, Albany, Ga. 54
Onte 65. Florida AAM .53
Tloll111e Ill, Lchip 59
Wasncr 57, Mi~mi 55
Mklwest
Ball St. 78, Alaalta·Anchorage 77
Bradlc~ 70, Miuis&amp;ippi 58
lll.·OUcaao 116, North Put: 71
Wilconsin 103, Gnmblina St. 83
Younp~ St. 80, ~t. Connecticut
SL62

South•at
Texaa93, Ullh. 91 (2 01}

F•r West
UC Jtvine 16,fOWI 78

· Elway, Den ......... ~ 15 323 3669 22 10
· MonlMI, K.C. .... 270 163 1934 12 6
: &amp;i1110n, NYL ..447 :zn JJ02 16 to
Kelly, Bu/.. .........443 273 32.57 17 II

w

Tournament action
ASU- Tribune Clauic

Hc.\ellcr, Rai . ... .378 211 2932 II 10

Charnpionlhlp
Arizona S1. 13, Villanova 62 (OT)

R......

Third plaa
Miuisaippi St. 85, N. ArizonJ 64

· PloJ,.

AIL Yda. A'I.LG TD

Albertton'• Holkbly CUic
F1nl round

: n....... sur.......l29 120:1 3.7 -n s
, C. Wam::n, Sci . ..273 1012

3.9 4S

7

Ruudl,N.E ....... 210 1060
· 0 . Brown, Hou ... l73 917
lamiW.,.0......223 IJ6

lB 21
5.3 26
3.7 l4

7
5

..........

Ployw

&lt;1

No. Ydo. A'I-J.GTD

Boile SL 78, Slippczy Rock 62
SW l..ou.iaiana 96, Alcorn SL 59
All Collf!ae Tourftllmenl
Ji'lnt n~Uncf
Oklahomo 63, E K&lt;r~-y S4

. SlluabUir, Hou.....77
Lanabome.lnd ..... 76
' Stwpo, lla&gt; ..........7S
~ Bllde~~, Sea ........ ... 75

904 11.7 41
917 12.9 n
880 11 .7 63
876 11.7 41

5
3
7
3

Tournament action
Sparlin Cl~pk:
Michiaan St. 62, Bowlina Green 49
Shrine
Firat round
Oh.io .Domink:an 97, SMwncc St. 83
MarietU 91, Wayn.Of.bura, Pl. 74
Jaycee ClaNk
Flrll round
WiUcnbcra IZ7, ShenmdOih 84
Bufhlo Si.. 72, B•ldwin-W•II•ce 61
(OJ)
Mole Hole CIUIIc
Firat round
Oh.io Nonbern 81 , Grove City 67
Second round
WOOJle'l' 99, Canoll, Wis. 69
Purple and Gold
ChompiCNhlp
Def11nce 99, Capilal92
Third place
Hin.m9B,~ . N.Y . 70

uoi' Club Clu.llc

Third pa.ce
Wilmington 91, Poudun, N.Y. IIJ
Holiday TournUHnl
Pint rouod
Spring Arbcr, Micll., 94. Tiffin ll
MVPCiaaJic
lllnt rouDd
Toledo 69, Delaware 65
Mumy St., Ky. 82, Columbil, N.Y. 66
Slorm)' Pttrel C1UJic
flral round
Moun~ Unlon-19, N.C. W•leyan 73

leaden

Q-

. ... Jet'
AtLCGM.
. Y"""i, S.F............3 299
Aikman, 0.1 ....... 362 247
· Simm1, NYG ...... 37S 231
·. Hobon. Au ..... .... 406 250
: BriJ&amp;cr, Phil... ..... 266 ISS

.......

.

Yda. TDinL
liS I Tl 16
:1920 14 6
2131 15 9
2147 24 t6
ISSS II 4

Opanlqlloon

0\ll&lt;lllcrpo 94, Adrian 82

71

Ohio H.S. scores
AU 52, Ridsemont 29
Akron Mlnchclt.er 72. Nonoo 6.5
Beaver Filii, Pa. SO, Alliance 45
Belpre 40, Maricna 38 (01)
Bia Walnut 50. Licking Vall . 46
Botkins 7.5, Si~ey l...ehmanS8
Bowliq Grun 74, Tol. Otqstian 47

46

Falber Ryan 63, Col. Ready 48
Fmtari• 65, Van 8UI"eelo 62
Gahanna 65, Col. linden-McKinley 60

Ouncr, N.C. 47, Whi.leha.ll42
Oilmour 62, Madilon 49
Gla!.villc .59, Oitud S9
Groveport S4, Akron CenL·Howcr 52

Brooifield 64, M.Jplewood SO
BuckoyoS7, Ctowirlod54 (0'1)
Celina S7, Col. Brig:s 54
CcnlcrbwJ 73, Ncwuk C11h. 58
Cin. Anderson 80, New R.i.dunond 65
CU.. Lo..tand 68. Cin. Turpin ~2
Cin. Madeira 5&amp;, Cin. SL Beman! 47
Cin. St. X•vicr64, Cin. Princeton 42
Clay 61, Millbury l.Uo 46
Cle. Bcnedic:tine 72. Lakewood St .
Edward ~0
Ptine.~ville

Hubblrd 58, W. Middlc&amp;u J6
Klne:u Lakou. 61, New Riegcl47
LaBrae 10, Windham 60

LU:ewood. 54, Johnstown 39
Loudonville 60, Northwestern 51
Mancluow 72, Nonon 6S
Mllllficld Sr. 71. Mauillon Pony 64
Mand'"teld St. Pe:aen 18,Cardinaton 51
~lretLI7S, Port Clinta1 71
Mari011 Ell)in 69, Berlin Hilond 64
Marion l....oCil69, Day. Me~dowd~e 67
Muysvillc 69, Jonathan Alder 64
Medin• Bucltcyc S7, C lovcrt ~r S4
M"""' 76, Pcny 33

Riwenide

63
CoJ. Ct.ntcnnial 66, Col. W1ttenon 65
(0'1)

Miami Trace 70, London 41

Midpark 52, Norm1ndy 50
Midvicw 60, Columbil 41
Mounl Vernon, Ind . 60, Thom u
WorthmgiOII 52
N. Ollnalcd 74, f1irvicw 71
N. Ro)'llton S9;Cie. Wes1 Tech Ill

Col. St. Chuia 57, Col. Licking Hll.

51

75

Covinpn (Ky.) Cuh. 71, Col. Hutley
c.twood 69, Cavontry S7
Cuyahop Falls 64, Johnton City, N.Y.

Si

Cvy.hoga H11. 68, Orona• Chr. 62

Day. Chaminadc-Ju}ienno
. _ _ _ (KJ.) Triotity S9

Newcqlle, Pl. 17, Col. DeSalCII 56
Oak Ht.rbor 72. Sandulky St MatYI .58
Oak Hill72,llclr:aon 53

67,

Portimouz.h n ,Col. Mifflin 61

Patunan 74, Cot Independence

Elyria 64, Clancnta, T11. 54
Elyria W. 62, N. Ridpillc S6
Flill&gt;onlcJ 76, Buckayo Voll. S7
Folnnanti!O.~ ...... S7Uf
fWport lludmg 63, Clo. Luhcmo E.

Boys' action

Cit. Hcrights 78,

~1.·

(0'1)

Obulin 66, Elpio Calh. S6
Ouawa Hilll72, N. Ballimon:: 10

Puumoutto 2. 46. Minford "
Ripley 64, w...... Bn&gt;wn S3

Treaaure•"
105 Butternut Avt. Pomtrov

Como and experience
our elegant Food and
Shopa. Something lor
avaryono. Book your
Chrlalmaa P~rtlea now.
Mooting rooma are ol&amp;o
available.
CaU 882-3466-1192-3818
Wo look forward to
aarvlng you.
Howard L. Wrlteael

aon
Public Notice
BIG BENDWATER
DISTRICT
PROPOSED OFFICIAL
PLAN
LEGAL .NOTICE

.To all poraona, public

-corpar•tlan1, 1nd e;enclea
or the
government

•••t•
lnt-lld:

57

Public nolle• Ia hereby
given: November 24, 1993,
there woo o Petition filed lor
tho creation ol o public
body known •• the Big
Bond Water Olotrlct; "ld
·Potlllon waa flied lor ftte
creation ol 1 Water Olltrlct
· j)UI'IIuant to tho provlolono
and 1uthorlty ol Thle 6119
of the Ohio RoviMtl Code.
Tho luU text ol 1ald Petition
le IYIIIable al tho llolga
county Common Pteao
Coull, Clerk of Courto, Larry
Sponcer'a Olftce, Monday
lhraugh Friday, 8:30a.m. lo
4:30 p.m. A Prellmlnory
Hoirtng· on lllo Podtlon lor
oallbllohmont ol tho Walor
Dlilrlct will be hold on the
11ilh day ol January, 1994 al
I :00 p.m. In tho Mel go
Counly Common Pleat
Court, Third Floor
Courtroon, Po1111roy, Ohio.
Any ond 111 obltcllona to
lho told Water Olatricl or to
the lormotlon ol oold Water

Tol. Whilmcr ~. Tol. Bowaher 51
Tol. Woodward 64, Libetty Ccruer 60
Tuaearawu Vall. 64, Ctrfolhon 46
Uniontown Uk.CI 6.5. Grccnsbw'g GTCCn
Upper Sci01o Y1ll. T! , Marion P1eaum

V1Ucy View 79, EatOn 6S
W. Memphi•70, Clc. VA · SJ 62

W•lsh Jesu i179, Suungsville 74
Wun:n Kcnnody 51, Miner•! Ridge 37
Wuhington C.H. 59, Col. Bexle~ 55
W•useon67, Toi. Rogers 66
Wncrly 53, Lalhun We.tem 49

Con

Trace 73, Faitvicw 67
Wclllton 70, Cocoa Be.ach, Aa. 69
Wcsum-ille N. 79, Wcctenlillc S. 53
Westfall 46, Cin:lcville 43 (OT)
Young. C1lvary 62, Slippery Rock 44

Ser~~lftull

La Salle 109, Tcm. .eoTech 93

OtUo 8.5, COflftoc&amp;.ian 76
CODMiatJGII bndtet
Ch•minade 92, Texaa·Arlinpon 91

I 1211

4.0 29

2

Sanden, Del....... 243 I ll S
Oroob, Waah .....209 99.5

4.6 42

3
3

4.8 85

Recdven

No.
Sho,.., 0.8 ........ 106
Ric:c. s.f..............92
... ltvin, Dal ... ........... 8.5
l'laJer

Yda. A¥8-I..GTD
1241 11 .7 54 11
!&lt;SO IS.S 80 14
1210 IS. I 61 1

Rison, Atl ............. ll 1183

14.4 SJ IS

C. c;..,.., Min ......79 9Si 12 1 Si

9

Basketball
NBA standings ·
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlaintk Olvldon

T-

W L Pet.

NewYca ............• \7 7 .70&amp;
Orlondo ............. .. IS 12 .SS6
Miami .... ........... 12 12 .500
NowJcney ............ \1 16
Dauon ....... ............. \1 17
Philadclf~tia ........ .10
16

w..hJnston ..............a

.407
.393
.1115

t9 :296

Cenlnl Division
Allanlli .................. .l9 1 .131
ChicaJo .................. ll
K .692
Chlrlou.c ................ \.5 12 .556
CU!VELAND ..... \2 14 .462
h'&lt;li.lna ......
.10 15 .400
Dcuoi\ .. ................... .1 18 .301

Mi1MWI.OC ............... 7 20

.259

GB
J.S

s

7..5
8
I

1o.s

1
4.5

7

.u

11 ·
12.5

WllSTERN CONFERENCE
Mklw.l DMIIon

Tnm
W L Pet.
HcuUJn .... ............. 23 4 .152
Ul&gt;h ........... ............ 20 I .714
S1n Antonio ........... 17 II .6l17
ea.- ................. 13 13 .soo

GB

.296

1.5

.077

20.5

Minnaou ................l 19
O.llu ............... ........ 2 24

J.S
6..5
9.5

Podlk Dloloton
S..Ulc ....................22

3

.880

Phomix .. . ............. 20 S
Ponl...t ............ \7 11
Goldon Sw~.e .......... \114 12
L.A a;fi'OII ···· .... 11 IS

.ROO

2
6.5

.6/II

-'31

1.5

.423

IU

.32 1

14.S

Sacnmmso .. ............7 19 .'1119

ts.s

L.A. Ldcrs .............. 9 19

Weclnntboy's ...,...,.
- -.. tiD, 'IINhinp&gt;n 97
......... !12, Odoolo 90

auc. ..... - _ , ..
u..to uo.a- tm con

"*"'

99,t..A.
~
-114,LA.CIIfPonH

.

aow.sw..~.

ft'Jn:
-

...
I

'l'aia .. Pholni1. 9 p.m.
ot LA. CliA-·

10:!0 p.m.

'"'-'rtUJ

Public Notice
Diolrlcl oholt be made In
wrlling and llted with 1he
Melga Counly Common
Plea•

Courl . and

the

aocrollry ol tho Big Band
Water Dlalrlel allho pmce ol
Kothy Hyaall, Pomeroy
VIllage Wolor Oeportmenl,
320 E111 Moln Street,
Pomeroy,. Ohio, prior· 1o lhe
hearing on Januory 19,
11iH.
Big a.nd Wal · . atrial
by Bruce R-. . : ldont
(12) 23, 30; (1) 6-13; 4YC

t

-~.J

11olrd .....

Dr. hpper Clealc

Flrat round
South Ai•be.ma 94, AmcricJn U. 71
lJT.O,,uanoo&amp;al04. Alablma Sl. 88
ECo\C HoUd•J FaUv•l

!

lHINK

IJJ~'~v -(A~ IT

Ch•mplonahlp
Georgi• Toeh 71, S1. John's 69
Third place
Temple 63. f•irleiJ.h Oiclunson 51
Gnhkn Harwe.l Classic
First round
K1nus 73, Rhode Uland 60
Soulhem Meth. 18, E. Tcnneucc S1 84
Hal t* F1me Cl. . k
Chomplono.lp
MaUidtUICUI94, Maryland 10
Tlllrd plaice
Hanford 12, Hof'ltn S5

Shoulder Mount ............. '155
Hom Main ...................... '22
Squi!NI ............................'SS

PIERSON
BROTHERS

SPORTING GOODS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EVERY
SATURDAY
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
11110/1 mo. pd.

Co. Recycling
Open 7 days a week
Closed Holidays
9-5 WeekDays
9-3 Sat. Sun.
Coli to verify Curnnl prlcH
t 1 Cu. 52f per lb.
12 Cu. 5211 ... 1b.

!Wu. ..

YBr-:JOf
C....24f
8htll I CMt alum. 22•
t..ocatad Comer Rt7 &amp; 143

Phone 992-5114

L&amp;L
lAIN
33151PIItlnvtltH
...... OW.45771

Come by and register
for free Battery to be
ltJen away December
24, 1993. No ounchaae
requl;ed to register and
don~ have
present
to win.

CoiL o/ Owleolcn

AUboma 66
TlllnlpiMt

P..,.. St. 64, Dd.awae Sl S'l
IIIVP Holiday Cluolc

Fine round
Mumy SL ll. ColnmbU 66
Toledo 69, Dlllllwu. 6S
MoriiiCiouk

IHI FARIIDI

rtnt ......

O...oliO, SL I'Nr'• 72
Marillll, BuJrllo 71

Thlrdptoa
Buckncoll 80, lluvud73
R•lnbowCIIAk

c----~

Hawail67, BY&amp;rW¥111. 62
l.ouinillo 1:1, 68

~s..7t.ucs......_74

Clomao 73, . , 41
S....HalloM a ..... T ......._l

s-HaD 61, s.. Diop&gt;47

_,1!0

Stanlcol 73,
S,.riMCioiJic

rtnt .....

c....u 80, Gooad1Sculbom76

Micllipn SL 62,llowlill) 0nao 49
Su•Ca1111wiiCIINk

Plni-

T-BII'IIoi!O,-.o!s
VL c-n.n-w. .,....... 8&lt;.14
US Will C.Uolor Air 111M

TCIUrRI-l
Cho......blp
Tlilr4ploce

Ohio men's
college scores
Rqular_.,uon acdon

Jil--""'

CedaMIIo 77, LWo Erie 66
OIDo IJ. No.. Jot. C
ri I 76

'

•'

New car, used car-get your wheels
moving in the classifiedse

The Daily Sentinel
.

Mlddlepoll, Ohio
GREAT I!L!C110N AND
YAAETY OF QUAUTY
METALTOYI.
IlNaM 1:10-tllon.-Frl.

74241120 Allor 5:00

111111 ••·•IM IDIICI
Our Business is Security '
Alarm Systems
Closed Circuit TV
Security Cameras
New Haven W. V. 25265
Clleryl A. Jamea
wuu.m c. J•met

awsa..

CARPENTER SERVICE

·Room Adclllone

WICKS HAULING SERVICE
36970 BALL RUN RD.
POMEROY, OH.

-Gutter Work

·a.ctrlcalllld
Plunalng
-Roofing
-ln1erlor A Exterior
Plllntlng
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. Young 111
H2.e215
Pomeroy,

ROUDAY SPECIAL

$9 75 ATON SIZED LIMESTONE
10 TON MINIMUM

JEFF WICKERSHAM_. OWNER

WHALEY'S AUTO

PA.TS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair

Sweeper Repairs
Palla • Service • Bags • Bahs

NEW I USID PARTS FOR

Rllinbow1, Kirby, Electrolu•.
Hoover, Eureka. Tri-Star.

AUIIAUS I IIODElS

992-7013 ..
992·5553w
TOLl FIEI1-IG0-14H070
DAIWIII. OHIO

Regina,&amp;. mo11 ocher brilnds!

Pans Shipped UPS
Fast • Dependable Service!

Call Ben Cedar at Cedar Vacs
273-4098

7131/91/lln

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks

992·7878

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643

1n 1mo

(No Sunday Calls)

OWNER: Jeff Wick•.._
5110193

R&amp;C EICIYATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEP11C SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: L111111tone,
Dlr1, GriiVII and Coal
LlcanHd and Bonded

,..

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
.•"LIGJ1J'. 1:1~!..!1..1~&lt;;&gt;
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

USED RAILROAD TIES

ni.SJID K·9

ACADEMY
TUPPERS PLAINS
B•lc obedience,
law llllforcet'llllnt,
pereon•l protection,
llennal Mrvlct, pupa A
young dog• for ala.
Rottwellllr &amp;.Shepherd
Stud Service
By eppt. only

Downtown Revltallulton
Program. The ••cond
hearing will be h•ld on
Ja11uory 18, 1994 at• 7:30
p.m. In th• VIllage cfnceo.
All lnter11t1d cltlzono and
bualnoao and/or building
oWMra ere encouraged to

1tt1nd. For lurth•r
Information oonlect John
Mu- at992-3381.
(12) 30; (1) 3, 4, 1994

HOWARD
EICIYATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
andmACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
·~HOIIII!- IIJ!S­

TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUEO

UMEITONE-TRUCKINO
FRill: ESTIMATES

. Must want to niake excellent money
unlimited income potential!
Must want a permanent job with
an aggressive organization.
Must desire advancement.
Open Floor-Sell Both New and
Pre-Owned.
Must have professional attitude and
appearance.
Must be willing to learn and
f(lllow instructions.

2112192111n

Dog Kennels10'x10'x6' ..................... '225.95
Nita Lltea ................................. Starting lit 159.99
Applegate Round Bale Feeders &amp; Gates
-.No-r.- a. s·111•• a. Wild Slid s..ct
White Salt Block 50 lba. ............................. '4.25
Trace Mineral Block 50 lbe........................ •s.oo
••...,. At ....., Pikes • ..... C"nty

CHAP.MIN'S FEED STORE

12-30-112·TFN

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCnON
oGanogea .
oComplale

Remodallng
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915-4471
7122193

J.l.l.
coNmucnoN
&lt;Dozer oBeckhoe
&lt;Oitcher t0uq) Truck
und c~g, Ponda,
Water Linea, Septic•

FURNACES

IJcenH I Bonded
Cbarlle Hltfteld,
Operator

IMIII!ed -~ ltlo will
ft"-lng ...........

742·2903 .

Now haa beautWul Cocker Spaniel Puppies . Also
lellluring a 2 ft. common Black Tequ. Layaways are
now available for Christmas. Sale on our entire stock
of large aquariums. Many new ~ems .
187
Rd. Cheahire Oh 367.0117

ma.

Call IENim'S MOilLE HOME
HElBIG IND COOLIII
Galllpole, Oh.

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Haalth •
Accident • Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • A1ent
lox 119
Middleport, Ollio 45760
(614) 143·5264

NOVDfBEB SPECIAL
(BEAT THE BAN)

•

HENDERSON AND MASON STORE
WILL BE CLOSING DEC. 25TH
THROUGH JAN. 2, 1994
FOR THE HOLIDAYS.
Very Merry Christmas and A Very
Happy New Year- God Bless!

SEE HEAL FOR THt DEAU

HORINCO MAK 90 CAK4n ............5180
HORINCO UNI. SKS .._.___ ...._ .. '95
1200 ROUNDS NON-cORROSIVE..s130
CALL Ami 6:00
304-415·7256

111121111110.

•cL•
...
•011'1'8111 co•NNY

YOU ARE INTERESTED APPLY TO

446-9515
CADIT &amp; IPHOU111Y CLUIUIG
1
We give carpet and
uphollllery the
"SPECIAL CARE"
they dlllrYell
•drapery (on aile)
"'ine labrlce
•genentl cllllanlng

•octor

.

CALL 992-2155

I

'

•

I,

M-an ln-11 mlllllcf, but 1'1111111t IIIII,
moment IIIIer Maulice found hlmllll NCIMng
tilt lui brurit Ill tilt mummy'• wnth.

--.11 or Toll F,_ 1-tr.l-1111

AMERICAN GENEULLIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

5/14193/lfn

Help Wanted

(304) 882-3336

lh .......... lat.

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

992·3470

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

Vllld..trilo 9l.lltincil SL 7S

QUALITY Pllln' SHOP

4·18113-TFN

GRAVEL, SAND,
LIJIESTONI, TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT

M•tccn, _ _l
Cluo~hlp

(614)
667·6628

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

11

AT THE

PubliC Notice

HEARING
Tho VIllage ol Pomeroy
will hold tho flrat of two
pubUc hoarlngo on J•nuuy
5, 1114 ol 7:30 p.m. In the
VIllage oHictt ot 320 E.
Main .St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Tho purpooo of thll lloarlng
le to explain tho Ohio
Communl1y Otvtlopmont
Block Granl (CDBG)

By GARY LARSON

'"''

D.A. BOSTON
EXCAVATING

36970 Ball Run Roed

814-667·PETS

NOTICE OF PUBLIC

-CLRSSIFIED RDS-

c..,..,._...,
12.

LowaH~nlryllullelbiU Cluak

•DOXERS
•BACKHOE
• :mACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

•NawHo,..

PubliC Notice

Read the

11124/112Aln

WICK'S HAULING.
SERVIa

I

•

EVERY TlftJRSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoll
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

675-6755

1-100-714·1111

~

_._,_
YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT

w. ....... eoo ....

lbtterCJUik
Flnt tollllcl
North WCilmt 92, Northcas&amp;em 6S
Rider 69, Stee~m 67
Ion1Cia&amp;k:
Cll1mpklnlhlp
Goorae Muon 99, Wayeu.e 13
Third pa.c:e
Ion a 101, St. Fnncil, NY 86
Lobo lnvllalkllll•l
F1nl round
New MCJdco69, MiddleTcm. S6
Rice 71 , St Bonavenwrc 51

WOJIUo.,.. S7, Podllc 4S

,........., .. "'"'--'1'"·
p.m.
""

Wyomina73, Utah St 69 (OT)

s... ' .. ~ 7:!09.111.

.. - . 1:30p.e.

ago today that ,our
mother want to
Heaven. And I know
thllt we all min her
dearly But I know In
my he1rt th1t one
day we will be
together again• .
The Children of
Grace Welch

:Read the Best Seller

CowhoyShooWot
Chomplonlltl•

Pcm 11 . Oooadl79

... -

It's been 1 Jlear

614~2·5344

Monmouth , N.J. 59

Old Oomillion 70,ldoho So. 66

DEER HEADS
MOUNTED

3·16-93·TFN

Flnt round

Odlndo It

CLEVBUND 11 Mi;lwavt... I :JO

In

J&amp;diOn SL 64, Art au St. 60

Tbunday's pmn
w........,..
.. Nowv... 7:30,...
lotilmi, 7:!0 p.m.

OUeop. ~ 7;!0p.m.

2

ce. ... cluak

(0'1)

rt.rer
AU. Ydl. A•a.LGTD
E Smith, 0.\ ...... lS I 1311 5.3 62 9
· Bcuia, R.... ...... .lSS 1213 5.0 71 6

· Pcpm, ALl........210

HtwaU -Hilo 83, Ct!:iRhton 76
Cable Car C"teuk
F1nt rout1d
N.C. Chutou. it , Bullor61
Sanu Cla11 92. Holy Crou 74

6~ .

POMEROY, OHIO

liNGO

D/28/TFN

FREE ESTIMATES
949·2161

Toi. Scott 1OS, Akron SL. V-Sl.M 54
Tol. W1i1.e 60, Oregon Cardintl SU"iu:h

Wa~ne

(814) 1192·7474

1

Guttert
Downapouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

44

54

QUAUTY WORK &amp;
GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD

ROOFIHG

Rocky River 58, Amh~t411
S. Cl\ar!CIItc:D, W.V1. 62, Kenmore43
S. WebsLcr 74, Porllmouth CIJ~ 67
(OJ)
S..ndua.k~ PcD:ins 70, Mil1n Edison 60
Sidney 75, Day. Stebbins 71
Spring. Nonh 74, Spring. Shawnee S9
SL Heney ?S, Miuissinawa V1U. S4
St. J~h (C11if.) Notte Dame 68, Tol.
S1. Johns Jesuit S2
Tifftn Ctl.,.en.l6, Gibsonburg SO
Tipp Cit~ 77, Belmont 72
Tol. C1Lhol.ic 60, Co l. M1rion Funk lin

6l

IIIIOLD'S
PLUUII!IG,
HEiniG&amp;
COOUIG

"..,.lara Houao ol

1-304-773-5585

B.. blaodlftvllatloool

Wich ill St .

SAYRE OIKIING
614-742-2138
314m 1MO

Bowl in the New Year
at Eagle lanes
of Mason, W. Va.
Friday, Dec. 31, 1993
8 p.m. to ?

(0'1)

NFC

Reuonable Ratea
JoeN. Sayre

NEW·REPAIR

Clyde 57, Huron S3
Col. Brookhtven 55, Zanc~villc 53

Ch•mptonahlp
Ottc:Jbein 7S, Ca!lftl., K)' . 66

COAL

992-7878

Chefs Galley
•
Presents
RANDALL MULLINS
BAND
New Year's Eve
Make Reservations Now!
446·8154

TuJ.u 96. Ten~ Tech n

A. Milia, SD .......77 1043 13.S 66 6

~

Wca Memphis 70, St JOIIC:ph, Ohio, 62
Younaat.own St. 80, Cent. Conn. 62

GRA~~~=IL&amp;

Umeatone
Dirt
Gravel

New Year's Eve Party
8:00 pm untill2 :30 am
Champagne-Hors·D'Oeuvres
Party Favors-DJ Music
$12.00 single $17.00 Couple

.&amp;n"""f"'

Scoreboard
Major college scores

.. HIUUII

GALUPOUS DA!LY TRIBUNE
BOX CLA 302 • 825 THIRD AVE.

OHIO
•

trttlh'*''

WY013372

We epeclella In:
AREA WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATlONINSURANCE CLAIMS
24Hour
Et1111rgency Service

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport;

Ohio

The

BRIDGE

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle
1 Hew: r•n
colfiCII¥elr

PHILLIP
Announ ce1nents

11 llllnt
dtleatld
t38hlrptr
14 Worltarln I

Glrll! Glrltll Glrlll Totk To Thom
IOD-211&amp;-1155 Exi. IIH4 U.H Por
Min. MUll Bt 11 Vro. p,.,..ll Co.

......
.
-·r:t
....
.
.......
·-· ..... -.,.a..._'--·

(102) 1154-11120.

~~

4

Giveaway
10 puppltt, 5wb. old.l. molhor
Atgletered

Golden

tmrlever.

IIIII.

Horse Manure. 304-475-2249.

·· --:-::-:-~
_ , Homo,
coun11y 11¥1nt, Jim
Hill Rd, w-dryar. 4CI

Tr... For frM Wood, You Cui
and You Hlul614·388-8472.

--

1225/mo.,

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I

wlgoad roll- :104-e'IS-11121.

Lost &amp; Found

TWo lltdroom mobllo ,__ for

.....

Lost . Young FtR'NIII Seagle In

"" '""' .....

9107.

"II took you till the week after Christmas
to decide you didn't like it?!"

Lost: calico cal, 2·3 y•rt old,
lost in Burlingham, call kenneth

Doly, 614·992-2608.

__ ___

:t04l.oll: pertOn that found
brown wallet, Pl. PleaAnl area ,
plea.. raturn wallat &amp; papers.
couocr Reward! 304-895-3566.

11

Yard Sale

Help
...:....Wanted

11

want a ~~~hehhlr
way-cal Marilyn,
-2845

money

Help Wanted

Poettion. CellUlar &amp;
Motorola 1wo.wa~ l'ldlo u&amp;aa.
Jackson,
M1aon,
Wood
countlea In WV, Ollila, JacUon,
Ao• count-. In OH. Good op-

or 1-eOO..W.Z-63&amp;1.

ACTIVITY DIRECTOR

Gattlpotls
&amp; VIcinity

Two btd!QCNII, lurnlollod, goad,

Eneraetk: and enthwlallo ln-

portunl1y lor llltgr011ivt,

dlvkfual rw.ad lo coordlnete
tM ae11vlllea ~m for our

~~~~

Havon, Rl. 33, $210/mo., 304·
112-2418tnyllmt.

CloM O..lly Shol Gunt, 6 22

44

2815.
53

Allltt AIIO c.-w, 114-3'11-

Apartment
for Rent
2 Bedroom Aport.,..r, r.-lod:
4M 112 Fourth Av-. $231111o.
$150 810¥1, Roll'latrator, Wiler
Fumithtd, 814-44-3170.

molivll:ed IndividUal, mu.t Mve

Avon S.lla ftHH At Work Or

Center

au

School,
Schoot•r·
School, 614-4Q-822 .

T &amp; T L1wn Service, 11wn,
llndSCI~~. llump l'ltnOYII,
and 1ut era~":!.· :JCM-173-5~02
or 1-80D-5:JB-

.

Wanted To Buy : Standing Timber &amp; Pint, Good PrlcH, 614·

381-111011.

Top Prl- Paid: All Did U.S.
Coins, Gold AI"'•· Sltvar CcHn1,

Gold Colno. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenw, Galllpolit.

llpo, $80, 614-112·7:112.

=I'll•

o..-

No

No

Employment Services

Nloe 2 or 3
~~~~~~~~~=
::r:;hlo~ ~~
In Middlopot1,

' ·

·

lj';=

· .. -

Ont ~.;..... • ; - In ~.
-·-"
t:hlpcwt, all uti '- lurniMwll,
10 cup .llr. Colfoo, •111 1n
1250/m0., 1200 rtop.M, 114-14.. box, 110, IM 141 2.H.
2317.

AlrMI _ _ _ _ _agln

al1tl88--llogol
CW I

••• liiltioii

biMd

CLRSSIFIED RD5

...,., or

1Mb llrfiUd'l ..........
lmlhlllan or clloalrnNIIon."

TNo .. _

_

... ""

--........

lonowlngtf OOOipl

-ltlnvlololtonal . .

11w. our- n 11o1111y
lnlorrned ...... to. . . .

.t~·atvrtln ... nt tpqo•r

do~nEXTRA

•

et'#a on an 1qU11

...-' .......

t-

- .•.

~r:t.""'"'
" ' WV. ii04i
,
·
I

W!;LL, T~AT'5

,

ENOU6H
READING FOR
TONI6~T..

81
Improvements

Auto• for Sale

IIAIEIIENT
I
WATEAPIIOCI'IHG
•
"-IIIDNII tllotlmt --.11
.... LoCif .... Will. ~'!
Coli 1-100-217-0171 Or 11443704blllllllocitra Wolorp:ooflng. ~
to ohocl'im.
·-

1114 Chovy Chovtllo,

1185 ,Chevy
door, llUto.,

114-~·1113.

1188 c;.·..ro v-e Auto, PW, Pll,
~!'J....~• P - Halch, AC.
~"'· Cltonl f4.100. 114-

Doo:w -

- o r $11510,

1100 Oltrir ~.::o l n l -

=-"-ublloo

llonol
·...........
-114- 72 ll\ICkl for Sale
281.f522.
1877 Ford, 314 lon, 1450. 304John Dooro 4020 Troclor, 175-2457.

::,m::::::-::.....,::7.::-d:--,--:.-.~--

·'-=·

fi,IISO; 5000 Ford P,ISO; 100

FOI&lt;I $2.750. IM•211 11122ump rue., --p.,
olntlo· 0111, now dump bod,
' - prlelnt 0f1 ttuoqYomo choln muot,d - lo •-lalo, 15700,
11W1 l I C~Ill C lw,'..,.,. ·you l't4.'N2•UQ3.
buy,.,_'!.~-'-ollluol 304o
l.,._ll121 or I"'!!'H11'3el7.
1t8l Tj!yllll )tick up ~x4, flvt

82

Plumbing &amp;

Heating

,·, ..

F"'mon'oHNII::aAncl~

lnotoll.tllort And !ltrvioo.

c.rtllied. Jlealdant._.,
clal. 114-211-tl11.

11:4

~~a~ ·

·w~:'

.

Electrical &amp;

btd
'':.':''.1llllchlna • - · nlco 111111

I

..$2,100~ ~324.

now -

&amp;ooD, mEI'ol AATII£,
PfD6£ TELL OS WI-\~T Til£
f'ET11JFt£D ~T 1':&gt;

eom.n.,

lpMdJ . ~ ........

- . . . Gr'•-llor, How
Hollon:l 7fi. .Hor llndb:,.no.tlll
Com Ptontor, ;John '
240
Com Pllnltr, K:o- 12ft.
oil good cond.

31

34 Simpler

38 ColtluiiiiM
41 Ciearne43 Not late
45 Jacoll't 1011
48RIIM
C2 Wft., II.)
48 Gravel rtclge
51 Yoko-

I

or

deal.

I

1114 Font F110 11,- Millo, ....., U ~~: Cen:IMton h,IIOO 114- R - r Eloclricot,

Hom11 for Sail

Pr!Mdl114 3M -

1111248114.

R-

Anrtlmo.

3 rr ord brick -htrrlr~d
- . 2112 btlhoA

:::=.. ::l~m;,

32 Mobile Homu
•
lor Bale

Fumlahld

Room a

's

.

1111....lOft wv.

Uiod LMv!iox Htlol

~

:wmN-~

MY DAD~ wrtV&amp;. HAD
Tl-IE e.AME lV OET
Fa&lt;! 15 Y54RS ...

I

P-.

.
1\-\t flit!'

AhoriP.II.
,
Wonl lo buy Stroh Covtnlry
btngto torutloto, 304.ali·2431.
WATER UN&amp; SPECIAL: ath,.h
200 PSI $11.15; 1 ltlch 200 Pill
132.50; Ron lvono lnll'll!llitt,

~0\l'Rf NOT
~EAfliN6 II

S\HII.T IN

DECEtv'IBER
11\IIKE&lt;; ~cl)
L&lt;XlK VAIN .

"'f"-· Ol:lo, t-.a»aa.
STORAGE

TANKS

G:ound FDA

. _ And -

ApPro¥1d "For PG181111 Wiler. ·
Ron Ev•no EniOIP!Ioo~ ~oek·
ton, Ohio, 1.aoo.ur..a.

Hounhold

.

-- ~

While Oltndtrd ziBoua -~~~~
coblritl, 1100, 114'

• --=.::Good:.:::,;.::::='
::::--- ~.•nd
VI'RA FURIITURE
614-441-3118 Or--~~

Z.nllh C h - - - 'IO'DAVSAIIIAICASH
• - TV, aood oondftlon, 8121,
OR IIINT-2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT) _a1_4-,;;,;H2;,;;.·,;;,;114;,;;33;;;.• - - - - -

a

.ASTRO·GRAPH

BaveA

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
•'

Rapp~ and· ~

Rcn!Jis

Call our oJ!icefor paid Ill .......,_ ,...,.,,

I
-

9·------..1
10•--..;:.....,..._ _-1

-- -·- ..

Do-.
-1\11-.on0

AKC mlnl::ruro
"'!'!
old_J)IIO;
$111v; 114--·l'Mt.

-------1

AKC Roalotnd.A..ncon llock

&amp; Whfto"Coakor lponlol Piijlpioo

Tolll

-

~

::.:.':io.

"""'·C..
i:ro."'::'P· .........
.._Nd,

oorft howe '" ....
· coN 1M !Ia INI.

DoW . go.,
1Mllt3 Rlody

-llod,.=m:
, WIN

To

4 II ,_,....2 . - .
l!lf, ·~til

Nice 3 tlld

Dockod,

1/2 :nl.

wv,

Hold Wllh
ltud lorvioo .114-~f/:111.

lUI
, v'

, .

~,

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1853, the Gadsden Purchase. - in
which the United States bought from
Mexico sou them parts of present-day
Arizona and New Mexico - was rat·
ified by the two countries.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS; Rudyard
Kipling 11865· 1936) , writer; AI Smith
(1873· 1944), U.S. politician; Be Diddley
(1928·1, musician , is 65; Jack Lord
(1930·), actor, is 63 ; Sandy Koufax
11935·), baseball player, is 58·

··,

No---·-··

ZAPPERS.

ilor 1-

,,n - .

~·

BUT 'vVE'\IE a:JNE: THR:ll..l6H
20 ReMOTE a?NmDL.

I

21,000
~ ,. .llllllon Av-. 1·
- . 114 441 13011.

WATER

r.te rc 11a nd rse
51

~,::- .w...

55
Building
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
WI'OIIIIhl Iron Tobit W/4 Cholra; =~~S:::up~p~ll~-~--,­
Aocldng Choir $11; ••--ArchWor't$121.00
-k. b&lt;lck, ·- , , wrn.
....-~.!Initio, ... CloUclt Win·
ltrt, - Orondo, OH Colt IJ4.
34I.ar21.

Thm your clutter into ctuh,
Sdl it the easy way... h phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clg,.itied qd today!
15 word&amp; or le,, dqp,
gapert,$6.00

.

~t 1!111 ~ U

Today is the 364th
day of 1993 and !he · - 10th day of winter. '" 1--.

'llcllolo 304-f1l,

Suur -

Safe New
rear!
'

I

fl

I:

I TER

"The weather sure makes

•nr1av. Die. 31 , lllt3
contacts, bolh old and new, could
very important roles In your effalni In
year ahead. You might even Involve

~~~~~ln~a~business arrangement

i

with

(Die. 22·Jan. 18) You're
to be easily deceived "In your
fn!"'ertlal dealings today, becauae you
take peOple 04' lhlnga' al (ace value.
do get warning signals , they
be
Get a jump on llle
the lnltuencea which

are governing you in the year ahead .
Send lor your Aslro·Graph predictions
Ieday by mailing $1.25 and a long, sell·
addressed, stamped envelope lo AstraGraph , c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
4465, New York, N. Y. 10163. Be sure lo
state your zodiac sign .
AQUARIUS (Jtn. 20·Ftb. 19)
Instinctively you're likely to know today
what is the real value ol lhlngs to others,
as well as yourself. This could be a big
asser il you should be doing a lillie old·
lashioned trading.
PISCES (Feb. 20·11arch 20) Don't be
bashful aboul accepling a helping hand
Ieday il It 's ollered. jl others glva you
lhlngs or do things 104' you, you can bal·
ance !he accounl al a later dale.
ARIES (Morch 21 ·Aprlt 111) There's a sit·
uallon in which you're Involved thai
requires a firmer hand In Ita management.
You can do what needs dOing without agi·
lallng other.
'
TAURUS (April 20-lliiy 20) Ea~y In the
day you mlghl be a M almleaa and drift·
lng. However, once l'Ru tllabllah your
objtctlv11, your p~lliti81 lor fullllllng
them are very good.
GEMINI (MI~ 21·June 20) Persona
Important 1Q your preoent plana wllo heve
been difficult ro reach lately should be
acce11lblo Ieday. Get out your llal and

begin at the lop.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) Profitable
resulls are indicated Ieday, bul not neces·
sarily from aany one large lhing in partie·
ular: The gains may be small, but they'll
be accumulative,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In order 10
advance your personal intereats today
you mu61 be sell-reliant and not count lao
heavily on others. II anything is going to
gel done, you 'll have 10 do il.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22) Your inlluence
over your peers tend to be aubelantlal
today, provided your intentions aren't too
obvious . Additionally, what you want for
yourself you must also be prepared to gel
lor othere.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Try to locus
your efforts today on your people inter·
esta Instead ol your material Interests.
You will rare much better making l~enda
than you will trying 10 make money.
BCORPIO (Qct. 24-Nov. 22) Unless you
ara aublectad to some lorm of challenge
today, you are not likely to push too hard.
However, II thtrt Ia IOillethlng you reaHy
want to achieve, ~·s another alo:y.
BAOmARIUS (Nov. 2J.Otc. 21) Try to
ueat people; life and developmenlt philoaophlcally today, without taking yourtelf
04' events too 15rioully. II you are calmly
poeltive, favorable resulhl are likely.

.

.

1
.

.

.

bright fellow mused. "During the

~~::.~~~~-,day we wear short sleeve shirts

Dec. 30, 1993

ulod ..,.., ·uo, 114-241.arsa

Slttplng roomo wfth - " ' ·
Aloo .troll• · All .......
Coli ollor 2:00 p.m., 304o'l71o

· - priOo,
Llrit
I'IOI'MIIgo41Uee. f14..

IorgeHow
lot Hovon.
-

-.rr,

NIIIQ dill d. CUJ*, '=~ lurnllhld. Clllle, ~
' ....
llopt, S31101ma. - • 1 1 .

114 .....1110.

3 or 4br., nlco 111111 •llllulldlng,

!!:.,
.-rv.-

orrc.,

ronl·-

Bo*""'n·TNIIor Fot lilt, How
Ctrpot l Pwnllllod ChoopiJ

•

.

Goti!Poflo, Cit!, Ph. 114-448-4311

Upolllro

...,

h5,...-,,...--,,r::-6--.-T,-1 ~ us dress funny ," one not too

0...

R - lor
or morth.
Storllftllll $1211/mo. Gllllo Holll.

1

IS._ _ _ __:,•-I

"no"

27 Klllln'o cry
21 lhowo pWnly
33 ClareLuce

_T_::;;.:~;;,:~~,;,:.;~'....:S:..@..;;~~~~~trs•

llydroullc oii,IO go1 $125. - . ,
Eilul-. lliilcltr..,., wv.
3114.f75-1U1 or 1~
.Jolin

bar

G.K. Chesterton wrote, 'What a gl~ 1b:rl-t--1
rloua garden of wooden the Ugbta of
Broadway would be to anyooe lucky I btr+~­
enoup to be unable to read.• In
brldae, though, we must watcb all tbe
Ugbts - the carda - and read the in·
formatloo tbey are broadcasting.
North's l'elponse of two no-trump
wu the Jacoby Fordoa Raiae. Hold·
ing such a powerful band, South
launched into BlackWOOd and bid the
CELEBRITY CIPHER
1111811 slam.
.,_,.., " ' - aaMfP'"""'-•.;;;,,,. .. cree1.a rrorn cwotetkft by t.mcw.. p.:,op~e, ~ Md ~1.
West led tbe beart jack. U the dum·
E.-:n ~ 1n ~ dpMr 111ne11 fOf ~- r~·· ~- w~ s.
my bad included a third heart, the con·
tract would bave beea laydown. With
'MFAEJS
0 F E
ZRYK
K Z G R E
the actual layout, it seemed that South
J A
needed to lind East with the club ace.
CD K
WKFCZKE .
ODFC
XJ
As you can see, that wuo't the posi·
lion, but South gave it the old college
L J 8
XJ
c J
AKUZFMK
CD K V
try. ,
After winning trick one with dum·
0 D K 8
CDKL' "GK
IJBK7 '
my's heart queen, declarer drew two
rounds of trumps. He cubed tbe dia·
IF A A l
EDFBXZRSI .
mead ace, played a diamond to dum·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "I haled Hollywood . Broadway is the only place
my's klng, ruffed the diamoad seven in
where the author 11 still nominally his own boss." - Har~d Rome.
band and played the heart king o- to
dummy's ace. His preparations com·
pleted, South led a club to his king.
WOlD
· West paused to lake stock. South
was known to bave started with six
spades, two hearts and two diamoads.
O Rearrange le"ers of the
Therefore, be beld three clubs. West
four x:rambled word1 be·
saw that if South bad tbe club queen
low to form f01.1r words.
and be, West, woo this ~ck, the ·COD·
tract irould inde. ;( club leact·away
from tbe jack would be won by dum·
my's 10; a heart return would concede
a ruff-and-dilcard. So West played his
club eipl Now South couldn't avoid
losing two club tricks and finished one
down.
CROPH
Wu that well defended? Here, yes
- but wait until you oee tomortow's

klil -

ole.
WhoofO,
DI , .
372-3n3l Dr ,

....,t

35 King37 lllflncecl
38 Nttdlt and

o:-rn

Now 1110 lll!lko. -

7 AolllftE.8lltllt
IISiolcl
10Eiinllllatl
12 Small
13 F-1'1111
18 Kftock
21 Wllllry
23 Trp.~wrltlr
25Auaelan'•

EoOI
P. .
Put
Put

Opening lead: • J

$271. 304-4SlS·2457.

Fotd IN ll'ioot'!'!.O:tglnol Co::d~
11on,lh4 Ul lnt~.

N2NT
5.
Put

By Pllllllp Alder

TrJnsportatron

61 Farm Equipment

Pua
Pau
Pau

Seeing is
believing

Hay · ·1200 tbt., round booltt,
mlo:od, $12!01. or ,,.... tor

11

1 Conaplreo
211ore

opUmlollc
3Realagent
4 Yellow ochor
5 Snick ande Gazura tnd
Kinglier

•:

Stonowobd Aportmonto, Mfcl. A&amp;B Furnlluro. Wt buy, IIIII and
. onllquo,
nowluood
dltporl, Ohio lo now ooa""'!ntl lrodt
opPMcotlono
ond
Nnllni hoo•ohold lumlohlnp. Will buy
oportnionlt ..... lho ·~ ona any antOUnt · III'Qeiemall. 50S
hondiooppod;
114-llio301S. Second 11., ii~wv. Owner·
EOH.
.
Rockor PtoNOO.
77W341•
ilh..,
Yo~
Fumlt..;
TWo .,
bod""'"'
.......
...11--.
~ In Solid ook tolilt a chon, clnod
gll• · ahlna Clblftllle, oak
Upoloiro Apl, 121 112 hcond ChiMa, • ..handii'Midl ~ •k
~":. 2 BR, Rolo,.._, 114-4411- H -. $8113 Cl: IJOI Croo11 Ad.

45

~-

CASH?H

··------

BENOIN' HIS
ELBOW II

1~1.

11112-2211.

to"1111'..-......
lmlllidon
on,.., oalaf, PllgDn,
_,............
.,........
II'IY .,_to

11 .
12•._ _ _ _--1
13.__ _ _--1
14..___ _ _--1

4NT
5+

0nt lltdroono oport-.to, 9frmpio 0112 - . , - II
$225/mo. lncl- ullllloo, 1100 ~ Yo.......... 402
-wftr rtop.ll, no polo; 114- ey,. Court, Pl. Proa-. -

lhlli&amp; ,. .......... to
lhi.F -FIIIr-.uflvl.

Read the ~st Seller
Read the

·-----

Sale

1, 1a,4. ,304.f1'1-3810.

Mlllcal

DOWN

p.trrot

~=21~,
~~konow,~,calll14-li;;;;;;~. . . . . . . .~~~,.. . . .~. . . . . .~:XM~o45~~;1~n.~. . . . . . . . .~.

Pomeroy,
Ohio 45781.
Bo•
721-P,
.. . .. - - -111
c -eoun
. , - -81-.
-,AVON ! All Arooo ! Shlr1oy Now occopllng opptlclllono lor
Spooro, 304-1175-1421.
port41mo caohlor. Muor bt
18yra. old, · no ~ne calli
AVON! All arua. NMd ntr1 ptoou Crowtord t GJOCO&lt;y,
..._nderaon, wv.

Help Wanted

1....___ _ __

HE'S WAITIN' IN

TH' EXERCISE
ROOM

000c1 · r Conteat

Spo;cl.tll 10% olt 111
hoy. Mu• bt rilcllod up bJ Jon.

For Sal• tliclrlc IJpowrllir, hoo
new 11,., allo new correction

=..

a piKe, 814-143-5255.

~moo

&amp; L rvL·',tock

Jaokaon, Ohio 1-aoD-537·i521.

"'1 :r.1c

\VInltd to bW: lunk motCIIa, $5

.,.

,. r 'a.~M87.
64 . Hay &amp; Grain

rdrm Suppi·P':,

$1,415; Ron Evan• Enllf'IK'illl,

·

·for

lnatrumems

r.!:S:

Lorry Llvtly. 614-311&amp;-11303 .

a

niet one,

P.M.
Flrewoocf.. na80Md, m0111y
Word Plfftc:l ond olhor bttlc
Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 lltd· oek, 314 ton pk:kup, full load.
ctoricot lklllo. Ltgol oHico
room oporlontnlo of
r.-r .cltllvory only, $40, 814·
111 ~
11115-3540.
R
bockground prollnWd. Yolld
=
From
1 111 11111 1
Ohio _.,.... rico- "" 21
BuSiness
For •te: Nlntenclo and 11 lapn
qt~INd. Appllconlt mull bt wll~
Ctlll14-1112
. EOH.
lot lo tronoport crime vlcllmo ro
OpportunHy
tor tho lloRcltn o1 Flrol IOf $100, Cllll14-143-8233.
coun hta~!'l'· n wtll oo to
!NOTICE!
1113 hcond Hortor
'-tlllor.
madlcal and mental halllh care OHIO y·• LEV
o.vo. Go . ., 011.
. 1'14-4t1·1100
.
prov-o. VOhlclt wilt bt
~L
PUIUIIIIICI CO. lonl ~- u- Ill .
• Kina! C!uHn - · U21.oo wMI
provfitecf.• A'ppflcatlt nil.iit lleo AD u ....... IMt ,.U • ..,.._ ~ ...,_
P~Cfti' = - P I,101 -nr1co $121.- Nw '""""
be willing tO urw in an "on-:.~:pia you=knDWMd Chrtltmii'Jn 1 H. 'Dr..= - - • pull OUI · f711.oo.
Clll" boOll tllor oHico ho..t. _,
-I
fho
ft~
~:r,:~
Cillto ohlf 10pm.IJ4.281.1222
THIS P~ITION WILL BE FUN moll uniH J011 hove • · - od W ~ ,......, 11!"1', IM
01Dr,
"'
lie
, ott••polidllfl.
monogor.fi!HAHud
1111 nonco
DED SOLE.LV
FROM FORFEI·· lho..........,
- ..- • .,.
l.tundry,
1no Hlall block ioolhor .,_ - · ·
wilorpnoof, olu 7, conTURE FUNDS AND SUFFICIENT Looot f1oro1 luolno• Fot Bolo, Rllllcl..r Equol houolng dillon
15 1-1$22.
FUNDING CURRENTLY EXISTS Strlouo lnqulrloo Only, 1~ l)ppor!unHy.
' '
FOR 1114 ONLY. CONTINUED 11111.
Klng.stze welerbed reDIIcement
FUNDING OF THE POSITION
lo'l' 2 Bod,_ 2 Both A!rl., 1 mollroo:i, 1rr. old, ooli 112 ,_
AFTER 1114 WILL BE OONTINColin St., Pork ond River Vliw. prlco, :104oe71'7511.
GENT UPON AVAILABILITY OF
Fumllhod· KKchln. B4'll/llon1h '
FUNDS. Salory commonouPluo UUI-. Rtlw- ond llon'o ltllhor locQII, bltclo,
wfth lkiHo ond oiCfllritnc•. Sand IJ-•••'!!Itlrli....... Dooollt AoquiNd,
Polo 114-' Goklon Umft!!!o, _".!!! 31, IIIIo
nooumo lo: Tho Dolly Stoll.., I
~-4tt:ll.
now, 171. 3114..,....,111.

Junlt Auto's To Bur WUI Plck·Up
AppllancH, An~ Other Metals
F,.., 614-446·10128 Btlono 9 P.M.
- .
.. Want.. To Buy: Junlt Autos
With Or Without Motora. Call

PIN

1

57

Ctlltr ID box, 14 momorr, brond
,_, S31.H, 114·11112o451Be.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
1,~ Golton, f325; Now JET Bll
(No Sond Flbr RoquiNd)

Time.&amp;. Fed. Aultlance AVIIIablll.
Call r-or lnformaUon Or Vfeh. In~
tant fToddltr t14-44W227. p,...

cotte

uo, 1114-281-1781.

Chy rod, $35, thi• Ia
114·112·2103.

Loving Cart For All ChlldrM

1+

-llioocltono, prlcod on
lor """
oo:vlco:
'lllroo
Btr .._,
-2r•udo,
It Top
llqon &amp; Throo lor Blood.
-lo

bl-

Boy Cfty roo! ond now Ocaon

Our ,, C.O.I. Par1-Time, FuN-

Loc•l government agency Ia accepllng appllcatlona tor 1 pari·
tim• crime vlctlm't advocale.
Mlntmum requlrtrnentt lncludl
a worltlng ltnowledge of the
eour1 and1aw entorcemltnt ~ya­
teme, e~~re provld.,. ·1nd Ohio
Court ol Ctolmo. Ap~'="
mu11 1110 uhlblt proflc
in

J &amp; D'a Auto Partt and Salvaga,
alao buying junk cars &amp; lrucka.
304-m-5343.

ea,.

Da~

Ro:i. Ouorttr H.....:
old, Throl lor

o::i:.2rr.

2e'lnch Glrlo , _ 3op. Hulfr
TWo tulr
Colilo pupo,
Blcycto. $100 614-367·7'123
one mill and one htiaale,
AM, S a - Flrowood, 171N.; ono nlo JoOII R,..ott
O.llvared And Sttcked P.U. '""" P"PIIJ, 1210; 114-1112·
2050, '

L&lt;&gt;od

M·F I A.M. -5:30 P.M. Quollly

Easy Worltt Excellant Pay! Assemble Products At Home. Call
Toll FrH, 1·800-467-5!56e, Ext.
313.

Decorated stoneware, wall lelephonn, old lamps 1 old tharmomtlers, otd clocu, anllqut
furniture. Rlv«lnl: Antiqutl.
Ruta Moore, owner. 614·t922526. We buy eatatea.

11

Ml81 Paula'a

"B'ARNEY

Old, c;tldtd, Pon T.,.
-4 '"'"'"Wolkor,
flOG .010 114-

t'CJ.."'"iao, 2 - . 114-

~-23511.

Georgn Por1ablt S.wmhl, don't
haul your ~ to lhl mill ju8t
c.oll 304-615·1ll57.

Homo. Avo- $8 ·$14 ~
Door-To-Door Optional. 1
1012-47311.
. .
--- - --·· ···-- - ·· ·--- -- -

Soe1l:

...,_.

A-.

_:.::.,..-===-====-::-....,,-

wanted to Buy

LIVestOCk

luy or ooH. Rl-lnt Antlquoo, ·-·· ,,..... 114-4. .ll132,
Floh Tonk, 241S Jackoon Avo.
PalM P-nl, 304-875-2013.
4.m. to 1:00 p.m., Suncloy 1:00 10gtl. lonk 111-upo, $1Ut.
Young
Poroklllt,
814.81.
lo 1:00 p.m. 114.ft2·212t.
Haomiltro, IUt l 11.11.
Wilt Buy 0nt Horn Df EOiolto. Evorydoy tow prlcoo,
·
Dovo'o Antlq- 3311
$tcond
GoltlpoliO, 114- IIIII Rolhoooltlt&lt;l Dobormon, I
.tMe-1771, Mon -8al., 1:30-5, old, roodv Chrlotmu
Fridoy 1:30-1.
Eve, 1111 cut, olkrnt $50, 114141·2413.
54 Miscellaneous
Puppr Potact ' • Shop.
r.-rod In G.C. llllrllhv Co. Oo~
Merchandise
Apollo. Now -.lf4..141o0404 .
2 Fo'tmal DNa.... 91zt 8, Worn
RogiOIINd
Chl-o Shor-Pol
Qnco 1200 Now, SIO; 614·

bird

75 Boata &amp; MOtora ·• :

~

Pets for Sale

1124 E. Main SlrMt, on Rl. 124,
llomoroy. Houro: M.T.W. 10:00

Ont
b ........
own
lrltMPOf'llt6on.
S4nd .m..-,
apl, no ~-. rto Mud,
P.O.
lor
!hi, $1M. por 1110, _ . , a oonbtlon
ALL Yard Sales Muat 8• Paid In 100 bod nurolnt conlor. A reaume:
bachelor'a degree In ,_,.. Rovonowood, WV 211M.
Adnnce . DEADLINE: 2 :00 p.m.
furnlilhed,
~
tha day belo~ the ad Ia to run . llonal therapy or two yurs
doytlnlt.
noconl
oxpo~onca
In
I
pollonl
18
Wanted
tO
DQ
Sunday ldillan - 2 :00 p.m
Friday. Monday edition · 2:00 ocllvillto progrom In o htanh
2bdrm. apia, 10111 .-atria, •
care Nlllng preterred. Excelltfll E.l R TREE SERVICE T~ pill-. ......-. ·~
p.m. Salurdlr.
wrlnen and oral communication
·
ng.
Trimming, Tr" Removal,
room toclllloo losltllla e ...ntlal. Thla poaltfon of- Trlfnmlna. Fr• Ettlmalea! 1 ·
In lawn. AriDir.ailono onllolllt
.8
Public Sale
ters a competitive Nlilry, Llll· 3e7-7151"Afler 4p.m.
01: VI- "Qrwn ADio. IMI or
quo btnoiH pnognm, ond opo
colll14.fG.m1. EOii.
&amp; Auction
portunlty far ClrHr growth. For General Malntenanca, Paln!lng
1
Rick FJ.arson Auction Companw, prompt, confidtntlll co,.ldera- Ytrd Work Wlndowo Woohoa
full time auctioneer, complete tlon, pl ..•• forw1rd rwuma to:
Gulloro Cltontd Llghl Houllng,
auction
aervice.
Ucensed Bill Blat, l'omoroy Nul'll!'l 6 Commtrlcal, Rlllclt .. lal, SIOVO:
Rthob.
Ct,.or,
3117511
ROck·
166,0tlio &amp; West Virginia, 304·
614...t..IS-11558.
111rlngo Rd., Pomeroy, OH
n:J-5785.
4!118!f. EOE.

56

...
=--ur~r::-,ru.,-te~Moro_h_Oid...;_A,.;JC_c_llo_r·

Amlques

Not 10 Ugh!

Vulnerable: Both

mlloo. tuno I _ . ,
ru•od. $1,000. 1
114-211&amp;-1114

52 Sporting Goods

31 Energr unit

50

52 DIIHrtlllona
53 Htreclltlry
5411ore
wlllttfed
55 TrOPical aea

Dealer: South

414 1171 Cl:ovy ...... ..:

clean condition, 111 electriC, one
child, no peta, above Ntw

Sales

Of

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Genhwtn'a
broll:er
48Lay

Abtt'l
brOihar
Smlll rug
Surfeit
Part ota
htrnlll
Skin eruption

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.

poloa """"'"•·· '
'•
Ford Bronco H XLT oo w
114-441-mt.
....,.,.,..

TWo bedroom !roller In R..lno,
call 114oll2•1151.

Aunt In Spoln
lltrltl
PH' m1t11

+AK71U

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IIIII

26
28 Hurrtccanttr
30 New Zealand

SOOTH

~

Inti it lllirno.,114.ft2-2117.

Ar.. Of Kerr-Harrisburg And
Rodney Pike. Reward!!! 614· 245·

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22
23
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18
17
18
20

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doe1 not. 304-882-3343.

9

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NORTH

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Spood• .,• • ~: 2 boddtp, At.
112 N. Locuol R on rlghl, no

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44 - A'-ol,
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45 Ptdormad
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Howl 1..()n.1 24 Houre A Day! 1a

:t04"o4575-li735.

38 Filii
40 Lulllp
42 Architect
llillvandtr

excited

3 Announcements

.,

(2 wda.)

3181rtd ltara

INot_.y

ALDER

BEATTIE BLVD.n&lt; by Bruce Beattie

a2 Otytlllllc ()(Q,
33 Get ro.u

A S fl E E R

If--r~
.

.

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and at night we · · • • •••• -."

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.

.

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.

L-.J.._.L_..J._.J-....l_.J
oft PRINT NUMBERED

'l;r lETTERS

I'

Compleoe ohe chuckle QuO:ed
by f1l ltng in the m•B~ng words
you develop lrom step No . 3 below

SCRAM.t.fTS ANSWERS
Soften · Gorge - World· Girder. GOING to DO
After starting her own business my neighbor hung this
sign in the office of her new business: "You can't build a
reputation on what you are GOING to 00."

�Page-1 2- The Dally Sentinel

.In Copper Bowl,

K~nsas

State beats Wyoming
52-17 for first bowl triumph
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
TUCSON, Ariz . (AP) - It ' s
about time.
Ninety-seven years after it
began playing football , Kansas
State finally won a post-season
game. Albeit, it was only the Wildcats ' second bowl game in its history.
Bu t the 52- 17 trounc ing o f
Wyoming in Wed nesda y nig ht 's
Copper Bowl capped an unparalleled turn aro und fo r the 20th ranked Wi ldcats.
" It was an exrremely important
win," coach Bill Snyder said.
From 1987 to 1989, including
Snyder's 1- 10 first year as head
coac h, Kansas State was 1-3 1-1.
Fi ve seasons later, Snyder's fifth year seniors capped the season with
th e Co pper Bowl cru shing of
Wyo mi ng a nd ra ised th e Big
Eight's third-place team' s record to
9-2- 1, K-State's best mark since
1910.
" They ' ve been through so me
tough times, but th ey've built a
foundation, and they did something
that has never been done in college
football ," Snyder said.
Wyoming, a tri-champion of the
Wester n Athletic Conferen ce,
ended the season 8-4, losing its
sixth consecutive postseason game,
dating 10 1968. The loss dropped
the Cowboys to 4-6 in bowl play.
Kan sas State lost 14-3 to Wisconsin in its onl y other postseason

co ntest, the l \IH2 Independence
Bow l, while Wyomi ng' s mo st
recent such loss was to California
in the 1990 Copper Bowl.
Keys to the lopsided win includ·
ed a 502-yard offensive performance led by quarterback Chad
May' s 275 passing yard s for two
touchdowns and his 2-yard scoring
run , a 227-yard rushing attack and
a defense that held Wyoming to 36
yard s on the ground and 302 in all.
But the most critical play may
have been Andre Coleman 's 68yard punt return for a touchdown
shortl y before halftime, which put
Kansas State ahead 24-10.
May said the runback, in which
Coleman broke to the right sideline
and picked up a four-player escort
to score untouched, was the turning
point. " It got the mom entum back
on our side," he said.
"When I caught the ball, there
was one guy to beat," Coleman
said. ' ' When I got outside, I turned
the comer and I had a wall.''
"We haven't had anything like
that happen against us this year,"
Wyoming coach Joe Tiller said.
Wyoming fullback Ryan
Christopherson, who rushed for
1,014 yards this year, gained only
28 yards on 15 carries, including a
three-yard touchdown that pulled
Wyoming within 16-10 in the second quaner.
May completed both his scoring
passes in the third quarter, a 61-

yard play to Coleman and a 30·
yarder to Kevin Lockett.
J .J. Smith ran for a Copper
Bowl-record 133 yards on 20 carries, scoring Kansas State' s first
touchdown from the two-yard line
after Wyom ing had taken a 3-0
lead on Taylor Sorenson's 35-yard
field goal.
Coleman caught eight passes for
144 yards. And Wildcats comerback Kenny McEntyre, who had 11 .
tackles, finished the scorin$ when
he returned an interception 37
yards for a touchdown with 6:09
left in the game.
Penalties nullified a first-posses·
sion 52-yard Cowboys'touchdown
pass play from Joe Hughes to Ryan
Yarborough; another mistake cancelled a fumble recovery that
would have ended a Kansas State
touchdown drive.
The Wildcats also picked off a
Wyoming pass in the end zone.
Yarborough, the NCAA's career
receiving yardage leader with
4,357, was held to eight catches for
72 yards, about hair his 137.5-yard
season average, and failed to score
for only the second game this season.
In the fourth · quarter,
Wyoming's Eddie Pratt scored on a
14-yard pass from backup quarterback John Gustin, but Kansas
State's Leon Edwards responded
with a 13-yard touchdown run
before McEntyre's interception
run back.

OSU's pass defense to get test
in Holiday Bowl against BYU
By RUSTY MILLER
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Bill
Young is no relation to Brigham
Young, but the Ohio State defensi ve coordinator has a good id ea
what to expect from the Cougars in
tonight's Holiday Bowl.
" Most of the team s we' ve
played have been run teams that
throw the ball. Some throw it pretty
good. But I'm not sure any throw it
as well as Brigham Young," Ohio
State's Young said .
Brigham Young, only 6-5 after a
four-game losing streak in midseason, will prese nt physical and
philosophical differences for the
Buckeyes.
"We haven't fa ced anybody
that l can think of that throws the
football as consisrendy as they
do,'' Ohio State coach John Cooper
said . " I mean, they get off the bus
throwing the ball."
The Cougars. from the wild,
wild Western Athletic Conference,
called pass plays 59 percent of the
tim e thi s season. Around the Big
Ten , Ohio State is considered pass·
happy in going to the air 46 percent
o f the tim e. BYU didn ' t throw
twice as many passes as the Buck·
eyes (458 to 266}, but the margin is
large enough to have a lot of OSU
coac hes and players concerned.
' ' I hate games Iike this,' ' said

Ohi o State defensive back Walter
Taylor.

The game plans for each team
are relatively simple: BYU is
expected to throw the ball at least
40 times while Ohio State hopes to
stay on the ground and eat up as
much time as possible.
Things gel complex when the
talk turns to stopping the other
tcam from what it wants to do.
"The whole secret is keeping
the ball away from them and how
much pressure can you generate on
their quarterback without committing seven or eight guys to the
blitz," Cooper said. "Because if
you do that, you're locked into man
coverage. And if th ey pick it up,
which they're prcuy good at doing,
you've got some real problems. "
" There' s going to be big pressure on our defense ,'' said OS U

defen sive end Jason Simmons .
"Obviously, our defensive front is
going to have to get great pressure
on their quarterback and give our
secondary a liulc bit of an opportunity to gel some turnovers."
BYU avera ges 36 points, 369
passing yards and 106 rushing
yards per game. In one game, quarterback John Walsh passed for 619
yards and five touchdowns.
"When you have a team like
that, if you're not ready to play,
they can spread the defense and
wear you down and blow you out,"
said Ohio State cornerback Tim
Walton. " But if you come mentally

and physically ready to plav. you
can tum a game like that into seven
or eight interceptions.''
Keep in mind, also, that Ohio
State (9-1-1) is comin~ off a 28-0
blowout loss to rival Michigan. The
Buckeyes gained just 58 yards
rushing in that game and allowed
two touchdown passes. Any lingering doubts about the Buckeyes '
pass coverage will be amplified
against the Cougars.
"Any time you give up 28
points in your previous game, it's a
challenge to overcome that, ' '
Young said. "And here we are
playing one of the most explosive
offensive teams you'll ever see."
On the other hand, BYU's
defense hasn't stopped anyone all
year. During that four-game losing
skid, the Cougars gave up 68, 45,
48 and 58 points. The next week,
only a failed two-point conversion
allowed BYU to beat San Diego
Stnte-45-44.
OSU tailback Raymont Harris,
who rushed for 1,109 yards this
season, said he was "licking his
chops" to get at the Cougar
defense.
"There are weaknesses and it's
just up to us to exploit them," said
starting quanerback Bob Hoying.
The game kicks off at 8 p.m.
EST at Jack Murphy Stadium .
ESPN will carry the contest.

· ·vot. 44, NO. 175
: •~pyrlght 1193 •

Jobless rates
hold steady

MAKES GETAWAY- With Wyoming's
Richard Peace (2) giving chase, Kansas State
defensive back Kenny McEntyre (7) runs an

The unemployment rate held
steady in both Gallia and Meigs
counties between October and
November, reports the Oh io
Bureau of Employment Services.
According to the OBES, the jobless rate in Gallia Olunty remained
at 8.7 pencen~ while the unemployment rate in Meigs County held at
10.S percent. Figures in both counties remained above both state and
national averages. The rates in both
counties, however, were below jobless figures for November a year
ago.
OBES figures show 1,000 members of Gallia County's 11,900
labor force were without work in
November. In Meigs, 800 of the
county's 7,800 estimated labor
force were jobless during the
month.
Regionally, Athens County - at
5.7 percent - reported the lowest
jobless rate in southeastern Ohio.
Other area unemployment rates for
November were: Jackson, 8.8 percent; Lawrence, 7.3 percent;
Scioto, 9.4 percent; and, Vinton ,
13.1 percent.

interception back for a touchdown in the nnal
moments of Wednesday night's Copper Bowl in
Tucson , Ariz., where the Wildcats won 52-17.
(AP}

In NFL's lone game Friday,

Minnesota Vikings virtual lock
to beat Washington Redskins By MATT YANCEY
the last two games has helped bring
WASHINGTON (AP) - All the Vikings back into contention
the Minnesota Vikings have to do after four consecutive losses at
to lock up a playoff berth is beat a home.
The Redskins, completing their
4 - 1 I Wa shington Redskins team
already demoralized by their worst worst season in three decades, are
season in three decajjes and now playing only for pride. And some
tom asunder by a figlu with their of them might not be doin~ even
union.
that if their union succeeds m getA win in Friday' s nationally ting non-payers of its $5,000 annu·
televised game by the Vikings (8· al dues suspended.
7) will put them in the first round
"They definitely have the edge;
of the NFC playoffs with the loser there ' s no doubt about that,"
of Sunday's game between the Dal- Washington coach Richie Petitbon
las Cowboys and New York said of the Vikings. "They're defiGiants.
niUlly playing for something. A lot
If they lose and finish 8-8, the will depend on how quickly we
scenario becomes much more com- Start.''
plicated. Minnesota still has an
Petitbon claims the refusal by
edge based on its scores with con- 35 players on his team to pay their
ference opponents if both Philadel- union dues because they dislike
phia and New Orleans also win this provisions of the contract signed
weekend and also finish 8-8.
last spring with the league has not
But it's not a lock. And either been a distraction this week.
the Eagles or the Saints could dis" It's just something that' s
place the Vikings outright in the there,'' he said. "We're going to
playoffs if one of them wins and play a game."
the other loses.
But defensiv e ends Charles
" We 're treating it like a playoff Mann and AI Noga, receiver Art
game,'' receiver Cris Carter, whose Monk and linebacker Carl Banks
two touchdown catches in each of said they will take the suspensions

and not suit up if the players union
prevails. An arbitrator on Wednesday sided with the union, but a:
court hearing in the dispute was :
scheduled today before a Virginia judge.
"Regardless of what goes on;
the Washington Redskins and Minnesota Vikings are going to play ·
football," said Vikings coach Dennis Green. "I don ' t think there' s
any way the game wouldn't be
played. We're not that foolish."
Even without the labor squab- ·
ble, the Redskins were showing the
s1gns of dtsarray after their nosedive from the Super Bowl championship two years ~go to the bottom
of their division ,this season.
After last week's 38-3 shellacking by the Dallas Cowboys, quarterback Mark Rypien complained
that the franchise was hanging him
out to dry and questioned why veterans like Earnest Byner, who aver- ·
aged more than 1,000 yards rushing
each of the past three years, had
spent most of the season on the
bench.

WALK YOUR COW - Bob Graham or G&amp;H Limouslns recently
exercised his prize heifer alona County Road 10. Graham said he
walks his yearlin,, Oo·l3·1a, 15 mlnut~' each day to prepa" for
statewide competitiOns in Augi!St. This heller, ,~:n·IN'.~ ~w, is one~
or H -anlmals'bol'll'hvnl lln:-.-mn~liW- by·lha
e!"bry01, Gl'dliil'
said. The far~r from outside Kingsbury said lie raised 45 calves this
year. He has raised Llmousln cows since 1984 because of its higher
quantity or red meat. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Heard on .the street

Residents share hope
for the New Year

Orange Bowl to feature two teams
coming in with different streaks
By RICK WARNER
MIAMI (AP) - The last time
Florida State lost a bowl game,
Charlie Ward was 10 years old.
The last time Nebraska won a bowl
game, Tommie Frazier was 12.
Although neither quarterback
can take mu ch of the credit or
blame, both have been reminded of
th e conrrasting bowl streaks during
the buildup for Saturday night' s
showdown in the Orange Bowl.
Top-ranked Florida State has
won eight straight bowls and is
unbeaten in its last II postseason
games, with the onl r blemish a 1717 tic with Georgia m the 1984 Citrus Bowl. No. 2 Nebraska has lost
six consec utive bowls, including
three to Florida State.
Nebraska players insist that past
problems won't have any affect on
this year' s game.
" This is a new team and a new
year," said Nebraska linebacker
Mike Anderson . "We expec t to
. "
wm.
"I 've only lost two bowl games
since I've been here, and I don't

rcaII y care what happened before
that," junior Ed Stewart said .
"We ' ve got a chance to win the
national championship, and that 's
all we're thinking about."
Florida State linebacker Derrick
Brooks said former Seminole stars
Marvin Jones and Terrell Buckley
have reminded him of the winning
bowl tradition.
" They tell us we better win,"
Brooks said. "They say, ' You bet·
tcr be ready to do what it takes."
One of the reasons for the Seminoles' success may also be a factor
in the Comhuskers' failure. Bowl
games are played in warm weather
cities, where conditions favor passing teams like Florida State more
than running teams like Nebraska.
In addition , Nebras ka some times must play a Florida team in
its own backyard. The Cornhuskers' bowl streak includes two
losses to Miami and one to Florida
State at the Orange Bowl. The
other three defeats al so were to
Southern teams in warm places two to Florida State at the Fiesta

Bowl in Tempe, Ariz .. and one to
Georgia Tech at the Citrus Bowl in
Orlando.
"Naturally, someday we'd like
to play a game in Omaha on January I,'' Nebraska coach Tom
Osborne said. "We may try to
organize one of those, invite you
all up and have a heck of a time.' •
Bowden, who has the best bowl
winning percentage (. 781) in
NCAA history, agrees that Florida
State has the homcficld advantage
against Nebraska in the Orange
Bowl.
" Thank God they don 't have a
bowl in Grand Rapids and Omaha
and Seattle,'' he said. "They'd cat
us up there in January."
Another explanation for Nebraska' s bowl woes is the strength of
the opposition. The last six losses
were to teams that finished No. I or
No. 2 in at least one of the polls.
"We've played some preuy
good teams," nose tackle Terry
Connealy said. " There's no shame
in losing to Florida State and
Miami."

Advertisers to shell out almost $900,000
for every 30 seconds during Super Bowl
By STEFAN FATSIS
NEW YORK (AP) - It's worth
il

That's not a marketing slogan,
but it may be the refrain of advertisers paying a record $900,000 for
each 30 seconds of commercial
time during next month's Super
Bowl on NBC.
The price of a spot during the
Super Bowl is up 5.9 pencent from
$850,000 for last year 's game, a
lopsided Dallas Cowboys' win that
disappointed·advertisers hoping for
a close game to retain viewers.
A month before the Jan. 30 contest, NBC has less than eight of 56

half-minute spots available. If they
all sell at around the $900,000
price, the network would bring in
$50.4 million in revenue, exceed·
ing the approximately $41 million
it paid for broadcast nghts.
While the Super Bowl - which
drew 133.4 million American
viewers last year - always attracts
innovative ads showcasing new
products, new celebrity sponsors or
technological gimmicks, the buying
this year comes during an ad
rebound in an improving economy.
"This has been a season which
has seen some recovery in the pricing doldrums of the past few

years," said Arnold Chase, director
of national broadcast media for Vitt
Media International Inc ., whi ch
buys commercJal time. "Demand
this year has picked up."
Despite the rising price - up
from $500,000 for 30 seconds in
1985 - most spots sold far in
advance of the game, indicating
that advcniscrs aren't waiting for
last-minute markdowns.
Regular· Super Bowl advertisers
will return, including AnheuserBusch Cos. and its Bud Bowl with
competing grid iron beer bottles;
sneaker makers Nike Inc. and
Recbok International Ltd .
·

1 Section, 12 P -• 35 cen tt
A Multimedia Inc. N-apoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 31, 1993

Mike Klein of Pomeroy
"Just to have a good year.
One good think would be to
pass the ninth grade. I'd like
for them to make a better
park on Mechanic Street . I
hope to find a job.''
.

Sale Priced

Ford LTD II 4 Dr.
Chevrolet Citation
Ford LTD 4 l)r.
Buick LeSabre
Chevrolet Chevette

$975.00
$695.00
$795.00
$895.00
$595.00

'E nos Singer, owner. of PDK
Constru~tion in Pomeroy
· "I'm a family person. My
bopes Is we all keep great
)lealth and are able to prosper.
-Also more jobs, especially
:With the employment situation
1n Southeast Ohio. I'd like to
brln&amp; more peace - not only
ln Mei111 County - but In the
nation. People have no value
or life. Now It seems like it's
:Open i eason on human
:beings.''
: J'

Thomas Swan or Racine
· "My hope Is to get my
divorce over and start out
fresh. I'd love to have a job.
That ' s one thing Ohio can
improve on. WelFare Is not 11
way or life, at least not for me.
I hope to 1et my children
back. I hope the President
helps the people."

Jeannette Duffy of Sytac:use
''I hope there Is peace In the
world and happiness amone
families. I'd wish people
would act as they do before
Christmas - taring and giving - as after Christmas. In
Meigs County I'd like ta see
more jobs so people don't
have to rely on unemployment
and welFare."

MEIGS JOBLESS RATE· Tlie unemployment rate In Meigs County
held steady at10.5 perceot between October and November, reports the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services. Ohio's November rate was 5.9 and
the U.S. rate was 6.1 percent.
·
unadjusted, meaning th ey do not
take into account seasonal changes
in employment.
The statewide unadjusted rate

for November was 5.9 percent. The
U.S. unadjusted rate was 6.1 percent.

Olive Township to vote on zoning
By GEORGE ABATE
.... - SU~ti.el~e~All registered Olive Township
residents will be able to vote on
township zoning during the May
primary election as a result of
action taken at a special meeting of
the Olive Township trustees Thursday night.
The trustees unanimously decided to end an eight-month zoning
debate and stop questions of
whether only pan of the township
would vote on the issue, trustee
David Weber said . Also Thursday's vote ended the possibility
that a special election would be
used, which will save township residents about $1,000 in extra costs,
Weber said.
The zoning issue arose earlier
this year when Letart Corp. proposed a gravel operation near the
Reedsville city limits and the township was not zoned.
A half-dozen local residents at
Thursday's meeting said they misunderstood during the previous scs-

sions what areas would be zoned.
~£.wo~.

acira

' It r we- i,n~

zone the whole thing," said Dorscl
Larkins of Lon~ Bottom.
Larkins satd to be fair to all
township residents the entire township should be zoned in the same
way.
Under the resolution to be voted
on in May, the township would be
zoned in three separate ways:
- non-industrial, in the area
below Reedsville along the Ohio
River,
industrial,
along an area east of Forked Run
Lake which surrounds the Letart
Corp. property and
-unrestricted, in the rest of the
township.
After the trustees vote, Larkins
and the others left the meeting
yelling they would vote out the current trustees.
But the trustees told the group
they had "bent over backwards" to
be fair to all sides.
"I've done my best. We've tri ed
to be fair and please you guys,"
trustee Randall Boston said.

Government rebuts
Demjanjuk ruling

V6 Motor, Auto, Power
AM/FM Stereo

85
80
83
,7 8
83

Statewide, unemployment rates
ranged from a low of 3.6 percent to
a high of I 7.2 percent. Overall, the
number of counties with rate
decreases slightly outnumbered
those with rate increases.
Adams County's November
unemployment rate of 17.2 percent
was the highest in the state for the
month. Holmes County had the
lowest jobless rate for the month at
3.6 percent
Nine counties had unemployment rates at or above 10 percent
during November. The counties
with the highest rates, other th an
Adams, were: Pike, 14.2 percent;
Vinton, 13.1 percent: Monroe. 11.2
percent; Gu ernsey, Perry and
Meigs, 10.5 percent; Hocking, 10.3
percent; and, Champaign, 10 percent.
Six counties had unemployment
rates below 4.5 percent. Those
counties, other than Holmes, were:
Union, 3.9 percent; Greene, 4 percent; Geaugrr, 4.1 percent; Han cock, 4.3 percent; and , Delaware,
4.4 percent.
The county and city rates arc

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Jus·
tice Department wants a federal
judge to reaffirm a ruling that
stripped John Demjanjuk of hi~ ~it­
izenship and led to hts extr8!bUon
to Israel on Nazi war crimes
charRes.
·
The Justice Department filed
motions Thursday with a federal
judge in Cleveland and th~ 611! U:S.
Circuit Court of Appeals m Cmcm·
nati as part of its attempt to get the
retired autoworker deported.
"We want there to be no doubt
in any reasonable person·~ mind
that Mr. Demjanjuk served m Naz1
death camps and concealed that
fact when he applied to become a
U.S. citizen ," Attorney Ge neral
Janet Reno said.
Demjanjuk's son -in -law , Ed
Nishnic , was not surprised by the
moves.
"As always, the government is
as tough on us as it possibly can
be," he said. " The never-ending
David and Goliath hattie continues.
But we are hopeful, and I believe
1994 is going to bring justice to
this family."
The government asked U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Ffl111k Bauisti of Cleveland to reaff!l'lll his 1981 rulinll that
Demjanjuk lied about his past
when he applied for citizenship.
Battisti concluded that Demjanjuk,
who lives in suburban Cleveland,
served the Nazis at the Trawniki
and Treblinka death camps in
Poland duri~g World War 1.1.
.
Demjanjuk was convtcted m
1988 and sentenced to death in
Israel for being a sadistic Nazi

guard known as "Ivan the Terri·
blc." The Israeli Supreme Court
overturned that conviction in July
after new evidence was uncovered,
allowing Demjanjuk, 73, to return
to the United States in September.
In its other filing, the Justice
Department challenged a ruling by
three 6th Circuit judges that the
department' s lawyers withheld
information which could have
helped Demjanjulc light his extradition to Israel. The judges last
month threw out the appellate
court' s 1985 order author izing
Dcmjanjuk's extradition.
The department wants the full
15-ju,dge court to rcconside~ the
dectston. The ~ovcrnment sa1d 1ts
lawyers acted m good faith in the
extradition case.
The department also said the
appeals judges may have violated
federal rules of civil procedure by
disregarding the conclusions of
U.S. District Judge Thomas Wiseman, who the court appointed to
investigate the government's handling of the case. Wiseman ruled
that federal prosecutors withheld
evidence, but did not do so inten·
tionai.Jy.
Neither Battisti nor the 6th Cir·
cuit responded Thursday to the fil.
ings.
In Los Angeles, the Simon
Wiesenthal Center praised the government' s effort to fight the Demjanjuk issue in both courts. Rabbi
Marvin Hier, founder of the center
which monitors Nazi cases, said
Demjanjuk is " a Nazi war criminal
who violated American law by hid·
ing his criminal past." _ _

The tru stees worked with the
60Wnthf~~t aar 'Jt6 ca•m~tlle

county prosecutor and held pub! ic
meeting s during the past ei ght
months, said Weber, an out-going
trustee.
"You can sit there and hash it
forever and never get anywhere,''
Weber said . "But there comes a
point when you have to just take a
voUl and see how it goes."
Zoning became an issue because
of th e potential gravel operation
and a Marietta-company's proposal
to build an incinerator in the southeast Ath ens County village of
Coolville, said Dirk Kreiss, vi ce
president of the Olive Township
Zoning Commission.
"We got together becau se we

have no control over an ar-ea "·

Kmirs-RfiJi"ifilnilf"'l'lluRaay :;
mcc~ng.

"A lot of the people were real
worried when the in ci nerator
(debate) started up," Kre iss said,
during a previous interview with
The Daily Sentin el. "People felt
th at we lived so far away that it
didn't matUlr."
The separate zoning was set up
because the area along the Ohio
River is most expected to be zoned,
Kreiss said. Kreiss added that the
resolution does not illegally spot
zone.
In other bu siness, the trustees
dec ided to spend about $1,000 in
emergency funds to res tock the
township 's supply of cinders.

MADD: Don't

drink and drive
By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Staff
Sue Rou sh will never forge t
Aug. 9, 1990.
On that day , her 29-year-old
son , Robert Brian Seelig, was
killed in a head -on crash with a
drunk driver in Texas . Seelig was
actin g as a designated dri ver for a
friend at th e time, Roush said.
"There 's nothing like it for devastation ," the Rutland resident said
recently. "It's something my famil y
will never ever recuperate fro m.
When that da te rolls around there's
a spot that never goes away."
Her wi sh for th e New Year 's
holiday and the new year is for no
accidents due to drunk drivers.
" To me it 's not an acc ident
wh en you deliberately drin k and
drive - it's a crash," Roush said.
Her advice is to take a friend as
a designated driver, when planning
to drink , or make arrangements to
take a cab before partying, she said.
But she wi ll follo w up on her
advice with action. Roush said she
will give a ride to an yone who has
drunk too much.

The Pomero y Police Department will also give a lift to peopl e
wh o drin k too much during the
Ne w Yea r's fe stivit ie s, Ro us h
added .
Th e Meig s Co unt y Moth ers
Against Drunk Dri vin g c hapter
off1 ciall y started in I 99 1 because
of the work of Ro ush and others,
she said .
" I think there ' s a lot more
a wareness th an there was three
years ago," Rous h said, adding the
number of drunk-driving acc idents
has dec lin ed while arrests have
ri sen,

But many county residents need
to still change thei r attitudes about
driving after drinking, MADD secretary Cathy Stacy said.
"It's just accepted that you drive
after going to !lie bars," Stacy said.
"It's the way people arc raised."
The new DUI laws, which took
effec t in September, have scared
many wo uld -be dru nk dri ve rs
because they arc more strict, Stacy
said.

'

Under the laws, if an individual
Conllnued on Page 3

---Local briefs-Pomeroy Christmas tree pick-up

Pomeroy village residents may place their Christmas trees on
their curbs Jan. 3, 4 and 5 to be disposed of, according to a village
official.
A local rabbit farmer will reuse the trees as bedding for his ani mals, the offtcial said.

Pomeroy Council changes meeting
The regular meeting of Pomeroy Vill age Coun cil has been
changed from Monday night to Jan. 10 at 7 p.m.

Organizational meeting set
The Scipio Township Trustees will have their organizational
meeting Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at the Pagevillc town hall.
.

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