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                  <text>...... 10-The Dlllly Sentinel

Monday, Nowmber 30, 1812

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Scenes from Pomeroy Christmas parade captured

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Seattle
upsets
Denver

127

Page4

Vol. 43, No. 154

ciatioo's open house. l'he llollt carried members
or the church as they caroled tor the crowd or
peo1ple that turned out tor the paralle ud shop·

chants Assoelatloil, wu featured In Sunday's
ChristDIU parade Ia Pom~..~~ the daughter or Mary H~ ol
The parade

Sunday's Cln'lstmu p8rade In Pomeroy. Tile
parade and open house, sponsored by the
Ponleroy Merchants Asaociadon, brought sever-·
al hundred people to the buslneas district for
sboppiDg with flmlrlte local merchants.

Your Social S~curity ''
By E~ PETER~ON
Sot1al Secunty ,
Mauger iD Atheos
"Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) bep·
eficiaries will receive a 3 percent
increaSe in the benefit chec;ks that
they ftlCcive oo Dec. 31, " said Ed
Pett.rson. Social Security m311ager
in Athens. "The raise is a result of
annual 'cost-of-living' increases
ICquired by Social Security law."
For inc!ividual Social Security
aelhces. the average monthly benefit will increase from $634 to $653.
Iii a family where bolh spouses are
lltadiciaries, the monthly benefit
'll(ill increase fro~ $1,029 to
~1,106. Average disability benefits
so up from $608 \O $627 per
inoolh...
~ "The maximum monthly SSI
benefit for one person wtil be
increased from $422 to $434 and
the rate for a COU{lle goes up from
$622to $652, " said Peterson.
The annual increase in both
Social Security and SSI benefits is
based on the rise in the Consumer
Price Index .. Other changes that
will become effective January 1.
1993 are based on "automatic
adjustment' provisions in the law
and are tied to the increase in average wages.
• Although lhe Social Security
and Medicare laX rate does not go
up in 1993, the "wage base," the
maximum amount of earnin~s
11xed for Social Security , w1ll
increase to $57,600 from $55,500.
The combined Social Security and
Medicare tax rate remains ·at 7.65
percent for employees and employers and 15.3 percent for lhe self·
employed. ·
• The Medicare "wage base"
will increase to $135,000 from
$130.200. People who make more
11Jan the Social Security wage base
of $57,600 will pay the Medicare
portion of the Soc1al Security tax
on earnings up to the new Medicare
wage base. (The Medicare portion
of the Social Security tax is 1.45

Miami University student with
!'leningitis in critical condition
: MAYFIELD HEIGHTS, Ohio in southwest Ohio about 30 miles
(AP') - · A Miami (Ohio) Universi- nonhcaat of Cincinnati.
ty freshman diagnosed with
Me~ingococcal meningitis is
meningocoa:al meningitis was .in i contqiOUS and can be deadly, but
critical condition at a hospital ' the cfiance of cootracting the distoday.
eMil tluouJh Close COIIIICt is tMc
. Kristin Emmons, of Chagrin i~ 1,000, said Dr.. William Browne,
Fa1iJ. became illlasl week and was .director of ~~ University's Btu·
botpitalized on Wednesday, ~d : dent~th s;erv~
university spokeswoman Claue I Menmglus, an inflammation of
w~. Ms. Emmons' age was not jthe three membranes thai envel~
ava1Jeble.
the brain and the spinal cord, 11
,. Ma. Emmons is a business and cauacd by a bacteria tllat does not
economics major' at the university, survive long outside the body.

they eDJoyed 011e ol Pomeroy's lar&amp;e&amp;t parades
and.shopped with their favorite h!cal merclluts.

'

At Peopies, we welcome loan requests of every
size. While other lenders encourage you to U5e
their high-rate credit catcls. we sdU make
person~ loans In amounts as small as $5001

Applying for a personal loan at Peoples Bank
couldn't be easier. Our staff loves to make loans.
And since they don•t have to make loan decisions
"by the book", they can give your application the
· Individual attention It deserves.

By ftnandng your purchases with a loan
Instead of a credit carcl. you'll have just
one affordable monthly payment to
make. Just think of the extra cash
you'll save by eliminating that
stack of post-holiday bills!

For your convenience, we make loans
at all three Peoples Bank locations.
Or If you prefer, simply
complete the application
below and mall It to:

Peoples Bank,

r.o. Box 518,

Point Pleasant. WV 15550

Most lenders want an upfront,
non-refundable "application ree·
before they'll .even consider your request.

We promise to get back 'to you
.within 24 ho'urs of receiving your request!
'

Not usl It doesn't cost anything to apply
for a loan at Peoples Bank.

lhlPeoplesBa*
~

..

-flliC

And In addition to waiving appllcaHon fees, our
Interest rates are substantially lower than those
•
charged by finance companies.

Mason

Polat Pleasant

773-5514

675-1121

New Haven ,
882-2135

---------------------·---------------------•

Appllc~nt ~please printl

· Co-Applicant Of joint accoun~

$·--~--~--~----loan Amount Reque&gt;led

Name

Address/CIIy!Siate/Zip Code
~ome 1P"'ho
__
ne_________
__)__}_
Date ol Birlh

Social Securily Number

Name

~

~if different from

~~~~~~~~~~

Social Seairily .Number

Employer's Name ·

FlnandallnstltullorJSavlnp Aa:ounl I

Employer's Address/City/SiaJe/Zip Code

AUio Mak6'Modei/Year
Check One: o· Own Home

Occupation/Years Emplo)"'d There

$

$

Morlpae Payment
EmplpYer'•~

Mortaase Ba'-:o

Years AI Present Address._ __

s

applicant)

OaVIIme Phone You May Be Reached At

Home Phone
__:}__:}_
Dale of Birlh

Flnandallnstltullon/Checking Account I

Cl Rent

Years At Present Addms

S

Annuallncome

S·=--,--Qther Income•

.

'Alimony, child MfPO'I:OI...,... fTIIIftlnlne• nMd not be cMidoied ~ ~.:ll..lflM for crwdlt

.

Esl
:-::lm-al-:-ed-:-:-:
Mark
-:-ec""'v""a-:-lue
--,
0""
1,.,-Home

~hank · 'You!
•

. .-

.... - An open house will be held
Thursday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
As a part of the open house, a
memorial tree for deceased members placed outside the center will
be lighted. .
Inside another memorial tree
will be dedicated. On it hangs
wooden ornaments, each one dedi-

ACCESS OHIO plan reviewed
by officials Monday in Marietta
Public offwials and private citizens from the nine counties comprising District 10 of the Ohio
Deparunent of 'Fransponation got
the fust look at the draft plan for
ACCESS OlllO • the Slltc's 30·
year multimodal statewide trans·
ponation plan. The unveiling of the
ACCESS omo draft plan came at
a Monday afternoon public meeting
at the Holiday Inn in Marietta.
Area citizens, including Kenner
Bush; Athens, and Carl Dahlberg,
Wellston, both associated with the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Plan·
ning Commission ' s ·Highway
Users' Committ~, were {!leased
·that four of their high prionty concetns 111e included in the plan. State
Route 32 (the Appalachian Highway), U.S. Route 35, U.S. Route
33 , and U.S . Route 23 are all
included in the first part of the plan

- called the "macro" level. The
macro-level designates the major
transportation corridors in the state.
Many of these macro-corridors,
especially in Southeastern Ohio,
are part four-lane and part tWO·
i!lne. The two-lane gaps on the
major routes· need to be upgraded
to four-lane, thereby completing
the corridors. Although specific
projects and timetables will not
result from ACCESS OHIO, the
goals statewide will be to complete
the corridors as funding becomes
a,vailable. ·
A series of public meetings at
this level are bemg held throughout
Ohio, staring with the one in Marlena.
"If we have consensus on: this
fmt phase, we' Ufinali2e the action
plan," stated John Platt, ODOT's
Assistant Director for Transporta-

--Local briefs----.
Patrol probes three-car wreck
A Rutland woman was injured Monday afternoon in a three-car
Dottie J. ~s. 47, RL 1 Beech Grove Road, Rutland, was
aansponcd by Meigs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where slle was treated and released. CremC'a!S was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Robert E. ciemeans,
49, RL I Beech Grove Road, Rutland.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Mr. Cremeans and Jason T. Hart, 16, Main Street,
Rutland, were westbound when Cremeans slowed for lnlffic and
was struck from behind by Hart.
Hart then bounced off Cremeans and struck a vehicle part:cd on
the right berm. The parked vehicle is owned by Shelv' J."Kennedy,
age WllqlOited, Union Street, Rutland.
No citations were issued. CremC'a!S' vehicle sustained moderate
damage and wu driven from the scene. Damage to Kennedy's vehicle wasllared as light and was driven from the scene. Hart's vehicle
sustained moCiente, disabling damage and remained at the scene. ·

Deer-vehicle wreck reported

,

A Middlepon wonli n's vehicle sustained moderate damage
Monday afternoon when it struck a deer on State Route 124 in Rutland Towosbip.
.
. I
According to a report from the Gallia-Meills Posl of lite State
Conllnued o~ . page 3
'

'

cated to someone special, either invited to either come to·the Center
living or deceased. Names of those to make the donation or mail it in
remembered are inscribed on the · with the name of the relative,
friend, neighbor or church member
colored ornaments.
A donation of $5 is requested 10 be remembered. After the holifor each ornament with all the days, the ornament will be given
money to be used toward providing either to the honoree or the person
meals and homemaker assistance to who make the donatiori. Donations may be maiiC!fto the
lhe homebound elderly.
Anyone interested in participat· Meigs Multipmpose Senior Center,
ing in the memorial tree program is P. 0 . Box 722 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

wreck on State Rou1e 124 in Rutland Township.

Address/Cky/Stale/Zip Code

~·~~~~~~---­
Daytime
Phone you May Be Reached AI

Senior Clti;r.ellll Center. The personalized orna·
meats, such as the one being put oa the tree here ·
by Eva Rohsoa, are $5 with the money goiDg to
help homebound seniors.

FOR SOMEONE SPECIAL • Many orna·
menta In appreciation or someone special or In
remembrance or a loved one already adorn a
memorial Christmas tree at the Meigs County

tree will be dedicated
· . during ·open house,Thursday ·--

A. HOLIDAY LOAN FROM PEOPLES BANK .
CAN PUT YOU IN THE CHRISTMAS SPIRIT!

1 Section, 10 Pa;ea 25 cenla

A Muldmedla Inc. Newspaper

Middleport's holiday shopping

~emorial

I

percent for employeeS, 2.9 percent
for self-employed)
• Currently, the amount of
wages needed to earn one Social
Security "credit" is $570. In 1993,
it will.be $590. Since the maximum
number of credits that may be
earned each year is 4, anyone earning more than $2,360 in 1993 will
receive 4·"credits" for the year.
cro be eligible for Social ~ecu- .
rity benefits, a worker needs a specific number of credits. The number depends on the worlrer s date of
birth and type of benefit involved.
Most people need 40 credits to be
eligible for retirement benefiis, but
some younger people qualify for
disability and survivors benefits
with as few as 6 credits.)
• The maximum amount of
money that beneficiaries between
the ages of 65 and 69 can earn in
1993 without reducing the amount
of their Social Security benefits is
$10,560. In 1992, the limit was
$10,200. For every $3 a person
earns over the new limit, $1 is
withbeld from his or her benefit.
• For individoals under age 65,
the corresponding limit will be
$7,680 in 1993, up from the current
level of $7,440. For every $2 a per·
son under·age 65 earns over this
limit, $1 will be withheld from
benefits. (The earnings limits do
not apply to people aged 70 or
older who contmue to earn wages.)
Social Security and SSI benefits
increase auto11Jatically each year
based on lhe rise in the Consumer
Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI·
W},:-formerly known as the cost·
of-living index." The CPI·W is a
measure or what wage and salary
workers pay for items such as
ho11$in~, food and beverages, transportauon, clothing, and medical
care. It affects more that 100 million Americans, including those on
Socil!) Sec~ty.
· Federal pensions, and workers
· whose labor contracts allow for
such raises.
·

Pamero7. The streets were fUied witll people u

EASTERN MARCHING
• The award
'-ninlnc Eastern Hiah School Man:bln&amp; Band,
. under the dlrecdoll or BW Hall, IIIJ1icbNited In
Sunday's Christmas parade ln downtown

·

season will be ushered in Thursday

1

HERE COMES SANTA CLAUS ·This
• dlte-bellrded red-suited fellow oa th.is slel&amp;h •
better 1u1cno • Santa Cla111 • certainly caucht
the attention of every child who turned out for

upperJOL

Middleport Christmas
parade this Thursday

wu held In conjucdca Wllll the unual opea
llouae olthe Pomeroy Men:llants Association.
Several huadred people turned out for the
pa.-.le and to shop with their favorite local mer·
cbants. .

1992 HERITAGE QUEEN· AprU Hadsa,
1!1!12 Herlta&amp;e Queen tor the Po•eroy Mer·

WtdDnday, doudy. HJab Ia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, December 1, 1992

CoPYrlslh'" 11ft

TRINITY CHURCH CAROLERS • Trinity
· Church or Pomeroy ttealed this attracdve float
ror Sunday's annual Christmas parade held in
. cooJunctiO!,_wl!!l_ the
Merchants Asso-

Low tuniaht .. 3011.

Pick 4:
4537

-

i

\

night at 6 p.m. with a Christmas
parade carrying out the theme
"Avenue of Trees".
.
The parade, which requires no
advance registration. will form on
Front Street, and from there move
ur Diamond to North Second, trav·
e down North Second to Mill, up
South Third to Main, over to South
Second, and dOwn to Diles Park.
Santa wiU then move to the T at
the intersection of North Second
and Mill to give treats to the children. At that site also will be a float
from which the community band
will perform as Santa greets the
children. In the event of rain, Santa
will go 10 the drive-through of Peoples Bank.
Entries in the parade will be
judged with trophies to go to the
winners in lite categories of best
walking unit, best marching unit,
best religious, best Christmas spirit,
best equestrian, and best theme,
The Middleport Community
Association is sponsoring the
event Traffic control and other
assistance.will be given by Middleport village police officers. .
Many of the stores will be open
until 8 p.m. that evening. Popcorn ·
UP GO THE DECORATIONS· Wayne and Debbie Davis or
and hot chocolate will be sold by
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, were amoaa many resldeats wbo look
the Middleport Arts Council outad~antage or Monday's moderate temperature to put up outside
side their headquarters on North
Christmas decoratloDli. Here Debbie bangs one or the 26 wreaths
Second. Inside will be a country
used by the Davis' on tbe windows of their two story home.
store with a variety of candies and
crafts for sale.
Shoppers are invited to sign up
Parking meters have already 75 s:io gift certificates will be
at
any of the IS participating
been "freed" for the holidays by given away. Some weeks there will
be
one
drawing,
others
two,
with
Evening and Sunday hours
stores.
Middleport Village COWicil, and a
merchant promotion is underway. lhe final one to take place on the from now until Christmas are
planned by several merchants.
During .lhe weeks before Christmas Monday before Chrisbnas.

Harman arraigned on murder
charge; hearing December 7

Linda Harman of Pomeroy was by Columbus Attorney William
arraigned on Monday rooming in Meeks.
Meigs County Court. She is
According 10 George McCarthy.
charged with the weekend murder assistant prosecuting attorney for
of her husband, Michael D. Har· Meigs County , Harman faces a
man, 50.
possible penalty of IS years to life
tion Modes, at tlie Monday Mariet·
Harman. 38, is charged with one in prison on the charge, and up to a
ta meeting.
count of murder, a firs t degree $15,000 fme.
Once the macro-level of felony. She is accused of killing
Harman is the fourth person to
ACCESS OlllO has been finalized, her husband at their Kingsbury be chllrged with murder in Meigs
work will begin on the '"micro" Road residence late Friday. Har·
level of tbe plan. the micro-level man's body was taken to the
wiH deJermine the importanl, Franklin County Coroner"s office
smaller corridors . In District 10. for an autopsy immediately after
State Route 78 through Monroe the incident Funeral arrangements
and Morgan Counties is a good are now pending at the Ewing
example of a. micro-corridor. Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
MARlETTA (AP) - AuthoriUpgrading of micro-corridors will
Meigs County Court Judge
ties
aie trying to determine whether
also be a goal of the overall access Patrick H. O'Brien set Harman's
the
deaths qf two young women
Ohio plan.
bond at $5 ,000 cash or property
and
the disappearance of a lhinl are
OOOT officials and consultants bond. She is incarcerated in the
related.
on ACCESS OlllO are about half· . Athens County Jail, since no
The slayings of Terri Roach, 18,
way through lhe two-year time to accommodations are available in
of
Belpre, in 1990, and Ronda
complete the overall plan. Platt the Meigs COWity Jail for women.
Manley,
18, of Marietta, on Aug.
hopes the macro-level of lhe plan A preliminary hearing has been set
not been solved. Patsy
24
have
can be presented to Ohio Governor for December 7. She is represented
Sparks,
19,
of Marietta, has been
George Voinovich and the Ohio
missing
since
she was seen in a
General Assembly by the end of
Parkersburg,
W.Va.,
bar on April
Januruy.
22.
Wben completed, the document
Washington County Sheriff Bob
will be a "vis1on for Ohio's ttansSchlicher
said his department and
pprtation future," said Platt .
police
in
Marietta
and Pan:ersburg
ACCESS OlllO will also ''take the
are sharing information.
mystery out of transportation for
"There is a poSSibility that one
economic development," be added.
or
more
of the cases could be relat·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
In other words, economic developbut
I
don' t think !here is any
ed,
ers will know exactly where to government's chief economic fore·
casting gauge turned hi~her in evidence that would link them at
expect transportation improveOctober after having fallen m three this time," Schlicher said.
ments.
Parkersburg Police Lt. T.A.
Short-term transportation of the previous four months, the Dent
said: "In my mind, I can't say
Commerce
Department
said
today.
improvements which might result
we're
dealing with the same perThe
Index
of
Leading
Economic
from ACCESS omo could take as
son.''
Indicators
jumped
0.4
percent,
the
little as five years to complete.
Ms. Roach and Ms. Manley
Long-term plans will take Ohio to Commerce Department said in its graduated from the Washington
,
first
post-election
report
on
th(}
the year 2020. ACCESS OIDO wiD
County Career Center, a joint vocaaddress all types (or modes) of index. It had edged down 0.1 per- tiona! school in Marlena in south·
cent
in
Seplember,
revised
from
transportation, including rail .
eastern Ohio. Ms. Spalts attended
water1 air, even bicycle routes. not minus 0.3 pert:enL It fell in August, the school bul dropped ouL
rose
in
July
and
feU
in
June.
just highways,
Ms. Roach' s body was found
The index is inlended to llrecast
ACCESS OHIO will include
just outside Marietta near Ohio 676
economic
activity
six
to
nine
many oth~ goals, including preon July 11, 1990. She died around
serving Ohio's current transporta· months in advance. In the past, June 5 of head injuries from a blunt
lion systems; devising alternative three consecutive declines have instrument, according to the death
methods of funding highway pro- sometimes but not always foretOld · certificate.
·
jects !hit could include the private a recession.
Ms.
Roach,
a
waiuess,
was last
The index's recent movement
sector and toll roads; and meeting
seen
June
28,
1990.
·
the needs of all citizens of the state, . fits with analysts' belief that the
Ms. Manley died Aug. 24. Two
including handicapped and disad- economy still faces a struggle to · boys walking through Oak Grove
vantaged, by providing more public mount a sustainable recovery. They Cemetery found her body about
ttansportatioll.
' . had expected the modest rise in five hours later, Marie!ta Police
October.

County this year. Donald Lindeman of Racine will go to trial later
this month for the June murder of
Long Bottom storekeeper and postmaster Howard Lawrence. Fred
Drennen and William LeMaster are
accused in the 1991 murders of Jeffrey S. Halley and Jeffrey L. Hili·
ley, a father and son from Gallipolis. Their trials are set for next year.

Marietta authorities
hunt link to '90 slayings
Capt. Roger Dutcher said. She was
naked from the waist down, but
Dutcher would not say whether she
was sexually assaulted.
.
The death certificate said she
died of head and chest wounds·
caused by a sbarp-instrwnent.
Marietta police have interviewed 300 people. Blood.samples
have been taken from 50 people
Dutcher said.
'
Mrs. Sparks' ~randmother
Juanita Sparks, sa1d her grand:
daughter was last seen tallting with
someone in a car outside the bar in
~crsburg, across the Ohio River
about ,15 miles south of Marietta
She said Ms. Sparks knew Ms:
Roach and Ms. Manley.

Figures show
U. S. economy
getting better.

·

days until'
Cliristmas

�TU ..dey, December 1,1182

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel .

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 1, 1992

WASHINGTON (NEA) Many at the State Department,
especially Foreign Servtce professionals, ~ InSpectur Ge,lenl
Shetma11
's report blaming the
Clinton passport file search on
overzealous middle-level offil::ials.
These longtime department insiders
say the report ignores critical quesROBERT L. WINGErT
tions, glosses over key points, and
Publlllber
subtly shifts blame.
Critics point to Funk's twQ central
conclusions: that investijlators
PAT WlllTEHEAD
_ CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"found
no evidence that tt had
A""Wtt Publisher/Controller
Genenl Manager
been orchestrated or directed by !he
White House"; and that the whole
LI!Tfi!RS Of OPINION ue welcome. They should be less than 300
'lhing
is "much ado about very litwoidl. All le!Ws ue subject to editing and must be signed with name,
tle
....
We found no major fraud, no
oddrua and telepb0110 nltlllber. No unsigned letters will be published. Leam
massive
coouption, no rogue opershould be iu good tute, addressing issues, not personalities.
'
ation subverting American foreign
policy."
As a lonJ!ime Foreign Service
officer puts oc "They weren't look·
ing for a subversion of foreign policy,
They were not lOQking for a
pn~posals
rogue operation. They were loot·
ing for an offi~ially sanctioned
By WALTER R. MEARS
political
dirty Irick in the making,
.
AP Special Correspondent
and
that
is
exactly wbal they found.
WASHINGTON - To earlier refonners who worked to curb congresIt
is
disingenuous
at best to downsional c;uus and political bosses, increasing the power of pany leaders in play its significance
because it
Congress would seem an unlikely way to reform the place. 1
wasn't
a
major
national
security
Still, that is one of the changes being proposed to help make the House
operate more effectively.
Congressional powers were purposely disperSed, for ye;~tS, in the name
of tefOJlll. ne lalest idea is to reverse the process and put more authority
in the hands of the people in charge, to set agendas for action and keep
things moving.
·
It comes from the think tanks and from some Democrats who want to
see the speaker empowered to ovenide balky committee chainnen and
given more control of the House schedule. Re~blican studies alSo lean
toward sttonger leadership but want it shared wtth the minority, since that
has been their lot for four decades.
NObody is suggesting a return to the long-ago days of the autocrats,
when powerful speakers and their aUies could rule unchallenged. But this
round of refonn proposals shares an unstated assumption: that with power
dispersed so broadly,leaders don't have the authority they need to lead.
While Congress is changing, witll 110 new members coming to the
House and at least 10 to the Senate, its way of doinJ! business is not - at
least not now. A new Joint Committee on the OrganlZlltion of Congress is
to SIUdy ihe whole system, and deliver its recommendations in a year.
lbat panel won'Hack for advice.
.
"Congress-is·in trouble," according to a joint study by analysts at the
Brookiilgs Institution and the American Enterprise Institute. "And the
time to do something about it is at hand.''
Acti,Jally, there would have bee!! more pressure for an overhaul if the
Republicans had held the White House. With President-elect Clinton tak·
ing over, the Democrats controUing Congre~ will be looking to him to set
the agenda.
·
. .
The study by congressional scholars Thomas Mann and Norman Om·
. stein says the diffusion of power and a ''risk averse leadership'' have left
both the House and the Senate slow and sometimes incapable of dealing
with national problems:
·
·
, .
They'd start by haV111g Hcuse.Democrats set up an agenila commottee,
16 members, with the speaker choosing a majority of them, to set priorities, schedule action, and keep dtin~s moving. They also would give the
speaker the power to oust a comnu~ chainnan at any time, forcing a
vote by aU House Democrats on.whether to change chairmen.
That would enable the speaker 10 deal head-on with committee bosses
who get in the way of the lll&amp;dership agenda for action.
: A Democratic study pa11el favors versions of both those ideas, so they
"'Politics," wrote Robert Louis
will be prQPOsed when House Democrats meet in about two weeks to
organize for the new Congress. But Speaker Thomas S. Foley isn't push· Stevenson, "is perhaps the only
ing them. He's said he is not bashful about adding to the powers of his profession for which no pn::pallltion
is thought necessary."
post. but doesn't feel a need for more control of the chairmen.
He was wrong. Punditry is
: Nor has there been a push so far by new House members to reshape the
rules. Only 14 of the 47 new Republicans, and none of the 63 Democrats, another. The Curmudgeon knows
went to a two-day conference in Omaha to tallc about reform last week. this because so marty of his critics
One reason. perhaps, was the Republican sponsorship, led by a House know how to do it. They advise me
candidate who wound up losing his election. Besides, Foley and Demo- all the time- especially when I
cratic leaders already had been on the road for a series of three confer- write about politics.
Oh, how they advise me. Lili:e
ences with newly elected Democmts.
·
··.Republican-aligned reformers also see a need for stronger leadetship, · the lady from Pennsylvania who
but they want it shared with their minority. A study by the conservative was pir' bY so.me of the stuff I
ut George Bush and sugHeritage Foundation suggests a system in which major bills would be wrote
debated, briefly, before they are sent to the committees that shape legisla- gested I sleep on my words before I
, print them. Or the man from Maryticin, so that the agenda would be set openly.
The outside stUdies and the Democratic panel agree that there ought to land who characterized my treatbe reductions in bloated Capitol HiU staffs, and that there are too many ment of Bush as arroganL Or the
congressional commiaees and subcommittees. According to the Heritage many writers who demanded to
study, there are now 295 standing; special and select committees and sub- know my military record after I
commiuees, bec&amp;US\1 they " serve as a vehicle fl)r the power and prestige listed the hypocrites in Republican
ranks who were hammering Clinof. career legislators."
:On those points, too, there are ironic vestiges of earlier changes that tun for dodging die draft 'but manwere supposed to make Congress work better, A genemtion ago, there aged to avoid it themselves.
Or Mr.
from Pennsyl·
were arguments that Congress needed more staff help in order to mateh vania,
whoRW,
wrotealso
these
words·.
and oversee the executive branch and what then was called the imperial
"Guys like Dan Rather, Martin
presidency.
··
Schram, Joseph Spear, Mike
Now that adjeCtive .is more often applied to Congress.
Royko, Robert Wagmllll, Ben WatEDITOR •s NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum· tenberg, Mike Kinsley, Anthony
nisi for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and Lewis, Chris Maithews, Hodding
Carter III, Jack Anderson, Juan
natioaal politics ror more than 30 years.
Williams, William Pfaff, and Oth·

, New Congress to be greeted by
new wave of reform

I

materials forwarded to longtime was underway, Tamposi phoned '
Passport lj:ead Francis Kellogg the White House to attempt to .,
from her close friend J. Edgar inform Jim Baker's top aide, ~­
Hoover on individuals Hoover sus· garet Tutwiler. Reportedly Tutwiler
peeled of committina "subversive told· investigators she would not
acts." An antiwar demonstration in ·take the call, But according to tele- ,
London would have qualified as phone logs, Tamposi spent seven '
such., act UJ Hoover.
minutes talking with someone in
Why
did
State
D!:partment
offiher ofroce. Investigaton say no one
searched diligently for those words.
~ials
let
.Spokesman
Richard
at
the White House will admit to
Anyone reading the repo1t can sec
Boucher
issue
an
official
"guidrecei•ing
the call, But they did not
that the ~hire House at the very
ance"
on
OcL
1S
saying
the
search
spend
any
time trying to find out
highest levels approved of, and
wu
initiated
br,
unidentified
"low,
with
whom
Tamposi spoke.
•
encourqcd what was going on to
Why does the report completely ·,:
·the point that you could easily level people ' and "mid-level
defend the cluqc thal it sanctioned clerks' who were not acting under gloss over the fact thM Tamposi's.:;:
political ~- ThAt very mom- roommate at the time of the search •
the activity."
Insiders point to a number of mg Acting Secretary of State was Alixe· R. Glen, deputy :
major unanswered questions and Lawrence Eagleburger and other spokesman for the Bush-Quayle :
lapses in the report. Among the top officials were briefed on the campaign and the poin! person in • -!
content of four telephone calls leveling charges again~t Clinton. :
most serious: ·
What exactly was · being moni!Ored by. the State Department The report sars nothong about ,
searched during 12 hours at the Operations Center between Steven Glen, only lisung her among the _;
National Records Center in Suit- K. Berry, acting assistllllt secretary 100 individuals interviewed. 11 ·~·
land, Md. Sources there say the for le&amp;i§la}ive affairs and Aasitant. ~laringly omits listing her job or _,;;
.
·,
.
search for Clintlill's file- and his Secretary for Consular Affairs Eliz. utle.
abeth
Tamposi.
On
three
of
these
.
On
the
mght
of
SepL
30,
Tam- .;.
mother's - should have lllken less
occasions
Berry
tuld
Tamposi
that
posi
ordered
the
Clinton
file ~
than an hour. The repo1t says that
he
had
spoken
UJ
higher-ups
in
the
brought
to
the
Alexandria
townfor eight hours on the secoDd day
the searchers went through "classi· "!hite House, including Jim Baker house she. s~ with Glen. She
fied and ot1a recmls." The suspi· aode Janet Mullins who were later told mvesugators no one else
was at home that nighl. Later, Glen
cion is that what was being extremely interested the result
On
Sept.
30,
while
the
search
told
a reporter t~at h_er records
searched were still-existing. files
of
.
··
showed she was m Lottie Rock,
Art.., negotiating the debates on the . ' :
night of Sept. 30. But it appears ~~
from newspaper stories that Glen : .
conducted news briefings in Wasb- ·: :
ington both late on the afternoon of ' .
- Of/.
Sept. 30 and again early in the ...
morning of OcL 1.
it\
It SlreiChes credulity that the one •
it\1$ .
person in the Bilsh;Quayle cam-·
paign who would be most direcdy ·, ".
SCENA~o .••
mvolved in what the search might ·· '
tum up (because it would likely fall
to her to leak it) would not be told ,;;
about it 9t shown the file by her '"
roommate, who had already been ....
told that the highest levels of the
White House were eagerly awaiting · ··
the results of the search. '
l
Finally, insiders familiar with -:·:
· inspector general investigations at ' ··'
this level question why Funk did ·· '
not order all interviews be oonduct- .
ed under oath. He sars he left it up .'
to individual invesugators. But It' ··.
appears tha~ no one in the White ·';
House or in the Bush .campaign
was questioned under the penalty ·: 1
of pc7jury.
"
Robert Wagman is a syndical· '
ed writet for Newspaper Enter. "
prise Association.
c.

Robert}. Wagman

u;

En'S

(

&lt;

r

World

'ose•nh
S•near
J
r
r
1

---"""T.;;;;..._...;::;_.....;_ _

from this and other ·evidence that
some of you dtink he is a partisan
critic, and so he has decided to
entertain a few inquiries about his
politics:
· Dear Cunmudgeon: When has a
Republican ever been complimented in your column? When has a
Democrat been bashed? - DB
from Blytheville, Art.
·
Dear DB: Let me say, for the
record, that I don't give a tiliter's
damn about any ~litical party's
agenda. I am a rruddle.of-the-road
populist imd a registered independent who has voted through the
yea rs for bo th Republ'ocans an d
Democmts, and once I think fol' a
Libertarian. My only interest is the
public interest, and that is ~hy I
came down so hard on George
Bush.
I do not believe that nasty politi~al campaigns are in the public
mterest It offends me when a can·

didate attempts to divert our auention from isSues that really ·matter
wilh vile auacks on the honilr and
c~aracter of a challenger. It especially offends me when the president of the United States, who
ought to be above it. does it and
then assumes that we will just stuff
it dow'\ the memory hole afterward.
My heated commentary had
much more to do with outtage at
George Bush's .!IDtiCS than with an
affinity for Bill Clinton.
As for your specific question, I
lauded George Bush until June
1989, when he bowed before the
tyrants who ran their tanks over the
Ti81Wlmel! Square demonsttators.
Republican senators I have ~
include John Danforth of Missouri,
Warren Rudman of New Hampshire and Arlen Spector of Pennsylvania. Representatives I have
extolled include Bob Michel of Illinois, Jim Leach of Iowa, Constance
Morella of Maryland. Others for
whom I have great respect include
HUD Secretary Jai:k Kemp, Gov.
William Weld of Massachusetts,
Senators Nancy Kassebaum of
Kansas, Richar!l Lugar of Indi:poa
and William Collen of Maine.

.

..'

'

Democrats who have felt the ;:
slash of the Curmudgeon's cutlass . :,
include Senators Joseph Biden of
Delaware, Robert Byrd of West .- ·
Virginia, Howell Heflin of Alaha- '·
ma, David Boren of Oklahoma,
Timothy Wirth of Colorado ..
(indeed, Wirth was selected as the
1991 Outtageous Personage of the
Year). Other irksome Dems: Gov.
Mario Cuomo of New York and ·
Shadow Sen. Jesse Jackson of the ·:·
District of Columbia.
·:&gt;.
Dear Curmudgeon: What was '" '
your military record? - RW of. '
Pennsylvania (again).
· ~
Dear RW: Six years (1963· ·· "
1969) of honorable service in the
United States Army - two active,
four reserve. And that's the last. 1
time I intend to ailswer this ques-. '
tion.
·
·':'
Dear Curmudgeon: Do you .&gt;
intend to criticize Clinton like you ' ·
did Bush? -Heather in Hartfool
Dear HNH: He's already in hot
water on about a half dozen issues
but he desc:rves the same honey: ~;
moo_n as. hu predecessor. Keep , ..
readmg the Curmudgeon and give
him a critique about June.
·:
!oseph Spear· is a syndicated · ·~
wroter ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.

Curbing fifth branch of government

.

'

,..
...

.
I

De~nding on the PAC money
One lobbyist even proposed
"The g~.llery in which the is the rtfth branch of govemmenL
to
which
they have access, nationfactory
in
Harlem
that
building
a
reporters sit ha~ beCome a fourth Not only is the rlfth branch of gov·
ally
powerful
lobbyists can easily :
estate of the realm." - Lord ernment - the lobbyist-political would em~loy 3,000 people if "the
advance
special-interest
legislation, .•: :
action commiuee (PAC) complex cbainnan' voted for a conservative
Macaulay (1828.)
t:Ven
though
defeat
of
that
legisla- ··,: :
version of a niinimum-wage bill.
President-elect Bill Clinton
uon
is
clearly
in
the
best
interests
:. · •
The liberal Powell scathingly
(doesn't that have a lovely cogof
the
American
people.
:' :
rejected the offer. Many elected
nomenal ring to i.t?) has sent a raft
Most
Americans
want
the
nfth
l
ofncials do the same. But others
of-almost-but-not-quite no-holdsb~h
of
gov~ment
curbed,
but
;,,:
i
barred ethical wake-up calls per• - the fountainhead of government succumb.
only
~the
curbo"*
does
not
impact
·
:.
l
caruption, it is the pasture and the · Nothing has changed since
~ning to his upcoming administra·
1966. If anything, our political sys- negaUvely on theor own communi- •· •
bon.
fertilizer.
The lobbyist-PAC complex bas tem has become more corrupt. ~es. It's an example of NIBY (Not ' :
Members of his transition team
1D my backyard). Or as Martin ··: '
are expected to defy human nature billions of dollars 10 pour into cam· Greed is in. As PACs have prolifer- ' Luther
wrote: "It all depends on ·;, :
and presidential history by not paign coffers and personal pockets ated, thousands of elected ofrocials
whose
ox
is gored."·
'' :
exploiting their positions for later only because the lines between are annuaDy bought and paid for by
Term
limitation
is
one
step
financial gain.
improper, unethical, wrongful, lobbyists aJid PACs. It won't happen.
Tbeir aides also must decide toward reform, but it won't succeed ~ I
unJuSt and unlawful conduct too
As Jus dee John Marshall Harlan often merge in bluned uncertainty, how far they're willing to let their because it is clearly unconstitution- ··&gt;
~·
wrote in overturning a young . instead of being demareated by an morality be compromised. Consid- al.
'
Americans could start. however
man's conviction for wearing in uncquiwcal morali~'t
er my case. Wheil my son was born
.
by
banning aU political advertising. ....
· public a jacket with a famed scatol·
When does I . or I donation in 1966, he received five sterlingjust
as Great Britain does, to mab . '" 1
ogy: ''One man's vulgarity is or a coruribution
silver engraved baby cups.
a bribe?
PAC
funds less tempting 10 candi- ' l
another's lyric."
Wealthy friends? No, greedy
It depends on (a) the intent of
E
when public servants · the giwr 11111 (b) the ~umstanceS lobbyists who were Slnlting me in dates, Until the nfth braoi:h of !JOY· ·~~ :
emment is curbed, it will conunue · ' :
believe they're acting to promote of the gift.
order 10 get Ul Powell.
td opemte like • fifth column in our ~ 1
and aerve the common good, their
At
the
present
time,
there
are
Back in 1966, I wfs sr.ecill
legislative and executive intenticns assistant to Rep. Adam C 1yton 1,12S law-required registered lob- midst, slowly erodiiog our •tionat · '· 1
, " i
can erupt into aWC80111e abu~es of PoweU Jr., chairman of the Houae byists, representing every con- inte 'ty.
~uck Stone is a sysdlcated :
public trust. The SelL scandal is a Education and Labor Commillee. stituency from ABC Home Health
case in ~nL Who is responsible OecasionaHy, I met with lobbyists Services Inc. to the Zuni Indian writer for Newspaper Eaterprise ' [ I
Auoclatlon,
•• I
for the billions of dollars ripped off seeking 10 inftuenoe specif'oc eduea· Tn'be.
• ' I
by SelLs as a result of d=gulation .lion llld labor tegistatim, e~pCCial·
and its aubsequent alluses: Carter, ly wbc:n my' pelqpin•tiDa bolls Wl!i - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;.' .1
·Reagan or Consress?
Thought for Today: "In dreams begins reswnsibility." -William :.:. ;
in Bimini, Bahlmas, pw:suing the
Buder Yeats, Irish Jl{obel Prize-winning poet (1865-1939).
·
I
None of ~ above. The culprit science of~ skills.

Chuck Stone

v-..

in Ohio die JICltt

As a Milk~ .. !, •e

•

- - Ollio dailb:aDOOD,
skies will become partly sunny
over the westem llld central sectialls of die stiiiC. CloDdy sties and
even a few flurries will cmlinK
over the easL Highs will ra111e
from the middle 30s lU1heast to
anDKI40 Ullb.
Abead of a tOld froat pushing
out of die Plains s&amp;aleS, sties will
again tum cloudy toni&amp;b' A liale
rain or SDOW may ew:a slip iato the
westem ICCii!JIIs of the Slai.Ciawlnl
daytnak. Lows will1'811JC from ~
upper 20s liOI1h to the lower 30s
south.
As the cold front pushes into
Ohio on Wednesday, snow will
S(Jiead across the nortbcm llld ceatral sectioas of Ohio. The snow

I

I Toledol36"

breach:
"As for saying it was not
orchestrated or directed by the
White House, they must have

ers, as real men, couldn't carry
George Bush's jogging shorts or
Dan Quayle's golf clubs!"
The Cunmudgeon has concluded

1
Wintery wwher will Nll!li.-oe

MICH.

•

A non-partisan through a-n d through

Berry'~

Accu-Weatber• forecast for

''

'

Temperatures will remain cold . next (ew days
ai
a neA-.'w,._
ewer
few.,.. rid&amp;e

OHIO Wodlher
WeclnMIIay, Dec. 2

''

J.G's report glosses over key questions

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3 .,

• ••

IND.

.

• • • ••

••

.....
••

• lColumbusl36"

I

••
W. VA.

may be mixed with rain times,
IIIJIICCitUy
the central Sections
of the - . 11lere will be a chance
for rain or soow over the south .
Higbs will~P~C from die middle
30s IIOIIh Ill - 40 IIDIIIh.
The cold front ~ng out of
the Cc:ullall'llins will wOO: its way

into the wel1em sections of the
Ohio Valley tonight and then
~ObioOII Wcdneaday.
The Columbus weather station
said tk recud high for today is 67
in 1970. The record low is 7 in
1964.
Sunset tooigbl will be S:IY7 p.m;
Suarise WednCJ((ay will be 7:36
a.m.
•
Anlall doe ution
Snow blanketed parts of the
Midwest aDd ~ Pennsylvania
today. Washington, D.C., got a
!OIIking.

Snow Ourries were forecast for

the Great Lakes region and por.
lions of the Midwest today as a
cold front moves eastwlld. Snow
also was expected in pans of New
England and the northern Plains.
Rain ami snow were forecast for
the Pacific Northwest as a cold
front moves in from the Gulf of
Alaska.
Monday evening, showers from
that front crossing the Northwest
were scattered from western Oregon to northwest Montana, while
snow blanke.ted the mountains of
Washington, Oregon and Idaho.
Wind gusts reached 100 mph in the
Rockies near Dupuyer, Moot.
Rain dampened southern Texas
and the Great Lakes region Monday, while snow showers were over
parts of Illinois, Indiana and Michigan.
Temper;ltures today were
expected to reach the 30s in the

., .
•

••

Northeast. the Midwest, the north· ._ ., .
em Plains and the northern Rock- ·,
ies; 40s along much of the Atlantic
Coast, the Appalachians, the central Plains and the·· Northwest; SOs
in much of the Southeast, the
southern Plains and southern Rockies; 60s in th~ Gulf Coast region,
Texas and cenbal California; and .
70s in southern Florida and the
Southwest.
. Glendale, Ca\if; was the hot SJl&lt;!l
m the nation Monday with a high
of79.

•

•

•

•

•

•

-----Weather-·- =---Extended rorecast:

Tonight, becomin' cloudy. A
slight chance of ratn or snow
toward daybreak. Low in the low .
· 30s. Chance of precipitation 30
percent. Wednesday, .cloudy with a
chance of rain or snow. Breezy. .
High in tlie upper 30s. Chance of

GEORGE NF.SSELROAD

precipitation 50 percenL
ExteadecUorec&amp;llt: .
Thunday tllrGq• Sahanlay:
Th~y. fair. Lows in the 20s.
Highs in the 30s..Friday, a chance
of rain or snow. Lows 25-30. Highs .
3S-40. Saturday, fair. Lows in the
'20s. Highs 35-40.

NesseJroad retires
from Ohio Power
with 36 years service
George W. Nesselroad of Enterprise Road in Pomeroy, on Tuesday

--Area deaths.-Robert Pullins

Michael Harman .
Michael D. Harman, SO, of
Kingsbury Road in Pomeroy, died
on Saturday, November 28, 1992 at
his residence.
He was born in Rutland on
March 21, 1942, son of the late
Lenville and Mabel Williams Harman. He was an engineer with
Northern Telecom and a vetemn of
the U.S. Navy.
Surviving are his wife, Linda
KiiChen Harmon, Pomeroy; three
sons: Jeffrey, Donald and Jame.s
Harman, all of ML Gilead, Ohio; a
daughter, Michelle Harman,
Phoenix, Ariz.; two brothers. Larry
Harman, Rutland, and Donald
Gene Harman, Parkersburg, W.Va.;
a sister, Shelia McDaniel; two stepchildren, Stuart Matthews of Ft.
Still, Okla., and Jeffrey Matthews
of Gmysqn, Ky.; th.ee JUandchil·
dren and one Sle!l"grandcruld.
Setvic~s · wlli he held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home in l'omeror. with
Rev. James Keesee officoating.
Burial will follow in Riverview
Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Robert M. Pullias, 54, of
Columbus, a former Meigs County
resident, died Suaday, Nov. 29,
1992 at Doctors Hospital West,
Columbus.
·
He was preceded in dealh by his
parents, Raymond and Mary
Pullins. He attended school at Rock
Springs and Pomeroy Junior High
School.
· Surviving are a aon and daugh·
ter-in-law, Randy and Lori ~
three daughters and IIOIIS·in-law,
Barbara and Randy Redden, Becky
and Dennis Nickell, and Debbie
and Paul Barby. llld 14 pllldchildren. all of the Columbus area.
Also surviving are four brolbels,
Je~ Pullins of Columbus. Bill
Pullins of Pomeroy, Karl Pullins of
Woodstock, and Paul Pullins of
Waverly.
Funeral services wiD be held at
the 0 . R. Woodard Fune181 Home,
1346 South High SL, Colnmbus
Wedna1day at 11 a.m. Friends
call at the funeral home today
(Tuesclay), 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Burial viill be at Reynoldsburg.

may

-Meigs announcements-Preachln&amp; aDd sinlilll
Faith Full Gospel Chtm:h, Long
Bottom, will have preaching and
singing Friday at 7·p:m. with David
Dailey and the Dailey Family and
other local singers. Pastor Steve
Reed invites the public. Fellowship
wiD follow.

from 8-11:30 p.m. Music wiD be by

the Happy Hollow Boys. Public
invited.

Christmas cllaaer
Tuppm Plains VFW Post 9tS3

and Ladies Auxiliary will have a
Christmas dinner Saturday at 6
p.m. for members and their families. Santa Claus will be there.
Christmas bazaar
Each
family bring a de 11: t.
The
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church will have its
Christmas bapar
annual bazaar and hake sale Friday
There will be a Christmas
from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Kenny
bazaar
at the Racine United
Utt's building in Pomeroy.
Methodist Church on Saturday
from 9 a.m. to s p.m. Oafts, quilts,
Dance planned
There will be a round and wreaths, angels, etc., wiD be sold.
square dance Friday at the Rutland Luach will be available and thCre
American Legion Hall lin Saturday will also be a
from 8 p.m. to midnight. Music
Boosters to Bled
will be by C.J. and the Country
Meigs Junior High Academic
Gendemen. Public invited.
Boosters will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the junior high school. PubDance
lic
invited.
.
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 Ladies Auxiliary will have a
Missiolllrles to speak
round and squ~e dance Frid1,1y
There wiD be no prayer meeting
Wednesday at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel on Route 143. Sam and
The Daily Seotioel
Nancy Davis, missionaries, will
(VBPIIII-._
speak Thursday at 7:30 p.m. On
Pa.hliahecl • .,...,. afteraoon, Moaday
Suilday 81 7:30 p.m. I quartet frocn
~Friday, Itt Coalt a._.~.
God's Bible School will sing. Rev.
!lbio by lbo Oblo Volley nDIIobl. .
1 ~/Kalil-• Joe., ...........,,
Victor Roush invites the poi&gt;lic.

bake._

ObiD

•• Fb. 11112-21156. OJ, Ollio.

, .. . . . . at p

....

•-=Now.,.,...-.w.. -·Nolloul
...s u.

Tho
Ollta
A..tollaol.
Ad..rllalal ~~a..- ll•e. .B """'am
Now~ llalu, 78J Thin! - .
Now
,Nawlln 10017'

I'QCmiABI'IR: - - . . . . _ .... r
Tho Dally~ 8oollool, 111 Caarl 8&amp;.,
P.
OJ, OHio 41188.
lli1BIICBIPI10N IIATU

a,.c.r~or
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...............................
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0.. Maolh.... ............................- ....... t&amp;.llli
Cllle Yur. ................................':;;......,,113.JO
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B I 11M o oDI dooiri.. to Pl'l' ti.o -.!·
.. .., .... . t l l a . t . - - l o DaliY Beatln.el • a th.ne, U • 12
CJredk will be ...... cantor

--·--u. ......

SmCJ11asbard dluer
Th ere wo'II be 1 'smorgasborcr
dinner at the Loaridle Community
Center on Sunday lrom noon to
1:30 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults and
$2.50 for chilciRn under 12. Pul!lic
invited.

Cllristmas dlnllet' pl1'""!d
The Thini Wednesday Syracuse
Homemakers Club will have its
Christmas dinner Dec:. 16 at l p.m.
at the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church. Bring a potluck disb,
Christmas gift. table service and
something for the ChristnW pro-

.

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carrier -

la

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$21.84
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151 w-..........................................$84.76
18

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O.tolda ..... V...Q'

11 w..u..........................................Quo
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NSJIO

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111w-..........................................seuo

Plan special meeting

CoatilloKd r..... page 1
Highway Pairol, Victoria L. Fendl, 38. 37'1fii S.R 124, Middleport, was • estboond whea sbc SlrUCk a cleet which stepped inUJ her
vehicle's 1*11·
Ferrell was rqxxtedly injlftd but refused treatment Her vehicle
was driven frocn the sceae. The decl' continued on after the accident

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
Larry Spencer, Racine; Edward
Wood, Long Bottom; and Allyene
Reese, Racine.
MONDAY DISCHARGES ·
Norma Terrell.

Licenses granted

Man cited in one-car wreck
A Mt. Gilead !11311 was ciiCd for failtae to rontrol early SUnday
m~ following a ooe-c:ar accident 011 U.S. 33 in Salisbury
Township. Acconlmg 10 a tq101t frocn the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
S~ Highway Pllrol, RocRy J. Brewer, 23, rn Cedlw. Street, ML
Gilead, was aoth•mcl when he - o f f the ri~ side of the road
and suuck I dildl and utiliay pole 1UY wire.
B~- injured in the .a:ident, lmd ,_ !mlled at the scene
by Meigs Counly Emergency Medical Service. The vehicle sustained heavy. disabling clamagl: llld was towed from the scene. The
CODIJil••ing ~ waslisled as driver inanention

Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Clifton James Jones, 28,
Pompano Beach, 'Fla., •~d Sarah
Jane Goebel, 28, Reedsv. .;; Bryan
Keith Holley, 25, Middleport, and
Karell Denise Sharp, 21,
ReedsviHe; and Edward Lee
Daniels, 29, ·Middleport, and
Melanie Sue Arnold, 23, GaUipolis.

A THEATER
WITH A CHOICE!

-

Crow dismisses jurors
Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W. Crow ill
reminded diOIC who weK snmmooed as juroos for WMnesday and
Thursday the the def_, iu the ~. Donald L. Lindeman, has
waived bis rigbt 10 a trial by jury and asked that the case be beard
by a threc-jnd&amp;e panel. J..urs need not appear either day.
Those individuals - "" ' d from funher service. acrording to
Judge Crow, wbo c::qn:ssed his appiCciation for the aqJCflllion and
.
shown hu .
~
• u/~
. . .d
•
.
•
ury se1 wsce os 1111 mportant avtC uty. as IDlponanl as VOilng,
bnt we .U eralize thal it does oftm creale a hardship, especially at
this ~-of the year, on tbo!le who :ue caiJcd 10 serve," Crow said.
"We ..,..-ecialc the cooperation we always get from those whose
111111e5 are pulled for jury duty."
·
The case will he hcad on llec:anber 21 by a three judge panel,
made up of Jucf&amp;e Crow, Judge Dan W. Favreau of Mo-gan County,
and Judie Robat Tague o Pary County.
Although juroos need not appear, Crow said that those called as
witnesses by either the posccuting attomey or defense counsel
must report 011 Wednesday or ThUJSday, unless they have been
specirocally relea....t from their subpoena by the lawyers.

EMS units answer calls
Units of Meigs Emclgency Services answt=1 the following calls
for assislance: Monday. 2:40p.m., MiddlepM unit to Holzer Oinic,
William Stewart til Holzer Mct'ical Center; S:36 p.m., Rudand units
to State Route 124 for s auto .a:idenl. Dottie Cremeam to Veterans Memorial Hospital: 6:26p.m., Pomeroy unit 10 Baum Addition,
Rod Fapson b ctcl; 8:34 p.m., Rutland squad to Salem Street,
Ray Wolfe to PleasEt Valley Hospital; ll:S8 p.m., Middleport
squad to Bradbury Road. Patricia Cleland to Vetemns; Tuesday,
8:40 a.m., Pomeroy and Middleport units to an auto accident at
Stale Roures 7 1Dd143, Lisa Willinghiii'SI to Veterans, Kevin Lambert to Veterans.

Hospital news

Name contest winner

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
·Discharges, Nov. 30 • Holly
James, Thomas Denney, MIS. Scott
Hendershot and daughter, Odey
'Wyant. Williul Welker, Michael
Rose, Mary Allie, Lesla- Jontan,
Mrs. Jeff Golden and son, Mrs.
Dean Schrock and son, Helen
Royster, Philip Malone. Larry
Brooks.
Births, Nov. 30 •
llld Mrs.
David. Mershon. a daughter. PatriOL Mr. and MIS. Randy l'akins, a
daughter, Olillicothe Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Taylor. a danghter, Millwood, W.Va.

Andy White of 41015 Hills
Road. Pomeroy, correctly identified ~he mystery farm which
appeared in the Nov. 23 issue of
the Sunday Tunes-Sentinel as that
of Arthur Crabtree, Temple Road,
Albany. He was one of three to
identify the farm in lhe contest ·
sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District and
the Obio Valley Publishing Co. His
name was selected by lottery .
White will recei~ $S.

Mt:

......,..•
---·
,_

Divorce filed

IISIU_ICE·

An action for di¥OCtC has been
filed in Meigs County Common
A special meeting of Middleport Pleas Court by Anna F. Umley,
Village Council will be held 011 Gallipolis, 11g11111st Kevin L. Lem·
Wednesday • 7 p.m. in the council · ley, Pomeroy.
chambers. Purpoae of the JI'Mting - - - - - - - - - - '
is to review pCJp"BBs receiWld 011
Marpret A. Ill ewes bel:lme the
the Betsy Ross, Sixth A.ve., side- lint Marine Corpl £I!IIERl CJII
walk llld to IWifd the CODIJICL
May ll, 11'11.

'•

easier access to the public, including •the hand!·
apped, IJid easier access to the courthouse ror
emplo,.ees. Pictured as movin1: progressed yesterday are Courthouse Custodian Homer Smith, .
Board Chairman Henry Hunter and Director
Rita Smith.

---Local briefs... - - -

gram.

Na .-!plio.. ..,. mall .,....._ ••

- 'gNe
......
••

MOVING IN • EaJIOJtfl at t•e Mei&amp;s
CoaaiJ Board or Electloss s,eat t•e day oa
MC?•t!-J . .rial iato aew lleadqurters. Ue
bwldan&amp;, loeated at 112 MalbeiTJ Ana.e ia
POII!troy, is doe l'oc.w r ate iq_. stllft bolild·
ing. The aewiJ·reiiOVIIIed off"Kes will proYide

concluded more than 36 years of
service with Ohio Power ,Co.,
Pomeroy, retiring as a line mechanic-A.
He joined Ohio Power as a
groundman in 1956, advancing to
lineman-C in 1962 and line
mechanic-A in 1969.
Nesselroad said he hopes "the
crew at Pomeroy continues their safety record." The Pomeroy area .
of the company's Portsmouth Divi- ,·
sion is approaching 50 consecutive
years without a disabling injury,
the longest unbroken safety recool . -·
in company history.
In retirement, Nesselroad said
he looks forward to enjoying golf, •
fishing, furniture refinishing, and
some trips to Florida for a change
of scenery.
He served in the U.S. Navy · ·
rrom 1952 to 1955. Nesselroad's .
affiliations include the American ,
Legion, Fraternal Order of Eagles ·
and the Masonic Lodge.
He and his wife, Lena, have a ,
son. ·.Michael, or Delaware, and a ._
granddaughter.

11151

I

f St., ,....,

MElTS SEIVIIG
. . . COim
.IICIIHI
'·

Am Ele Power..............:.... .31 1/4
Ashland Oil........................24 3/4
AT&amp;T.................................46 7/8
Bank One............................47 3/4
Bob Evans ........................ .19 5/8
Charming Shop..................36
City Holding ...................... 18
Federal MoRUI ................... .16 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................72 S/8
Key Centurion ...................20 5/8
Lands End ..........................24 7/8
Umited Inc....................... 26 3/4
Multimedia Inc.................. 27 l{l
Rax RestauranL .................I/4
Reliance Eleclric...... :........ .l8 3/8
Robbins&amp;:Myers ............... .IS
Shoney's Inc...................... 24 3/8
Slat Bank ........................... 34 1/4
Wendy Int'l........................ I3 3/8
Worthington Ind................ 21 3/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi ol GaUipolis.

Slate Auto's already
low premiums can be

reduced even more by
insUring bolh your car
·and home with the St~te
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�ru.cs.y, December 1, 1992

Sports

The Qaily Sentinel
TUesday, December1,1992
Page 4

·

Seattle comes from behind to _beat Denver 16-t3·in
overtime
Aftez

.
By.JJMCOUR
SEATILE (AP)- If the' Denver Broncos wind up missing the
playoffs, they'll remember the
game that got away.
The Seattle Seahawks, a team
that is going nowhere, came bact
io score an impro)lable 16-13 overtime victory over the Broncos
Monday nighL
• "This game was an example
that if you give any team, even a 1and-10 team, too many OflPO!'IUlli·
.ties, they're going to hurt you," the
.~roncos' Simon Aetcher said.
"We have a shol at the playoffs,
but we have a tough road ahead of
-~s with two tough road games,"
Denver's John Elway said. "And
we haven ' t played well on the
road."

" I didn't realize it would take regulation. Kasay's extra ~point
my shoulder so long 10 come Ieick sent the game into overtime.
Kasay missed his first attempt in
around," Elway said. "Gettin'- my
overtime by hooking the ball wide
flexibility back is the real tey. '
Kasay was able to redeem him- to the right, but got a second
self after missing a 33-yard field · chance after Gelbaugh drove the
Seahawks from the Denver 38 to
goal try 4:47 into overtime.
"When you miss one like I did the 14, helped by a pair of penalties
the fust time, you just put it out of against the Broncos. including an
your mind," Kasay said after Seat· illegal .contact call that negated an
Ue (2·1 0) broke an eight-game lCl'l- interception.
ing streak. ·'When I went out there
the second time, I said a quick
prayer and asked the Lord for some
help. I got some help from .my
teammates, too.''
The fact that Kasay got the
chance to kick with the game on
the line was remarkable enough.
Seattle lrailed 10.0 afrer the f1rst
quarter and 13-3 well into the final
quarte.r. but tied it after Kas!ly
kicked a 33-yard field goal wtth
5:20 left and Stan Gelbaugh liit
Brian Blades on the final play Clf

3:56 left in overtime for just the
second Seanle victory of the season.
"I'm not concerned about the
playoffs," Denver coach Dan
Reeves said. "But we have three
losses in our division and we've
got a tough road ahead of us."
B.y losing for the second sJraight
game with rookie Tommy Maddox
at quarterback in place or the ailing
Elway, the Broncos (7 ·S) lost a
chance to remain tied with KanSas
City (8-4) for the AFC West lead.
Denver is at home next Sunday
against Dallas (10-2), and the
Broncos hope to have Elway back
by theq. But they thought they'd
have him back for the Seattle
game.
Reeves decided to sit Elway out
during the pregame warm\lp
because Elway s right shoulder was
still too sore. Elway was injured
against the New York Giants on
Nov. IS.

"

Elway, his team's spiritual and
offensive leader, watched helplessly from the sideline as John Kasay
kicked a 32-yard field goal with

a timeout, Kasay left-foot-

ed the baH through .the uprights.
"I was loose and ready for that
last one," Kasay said. ·
Seattle got a last chance In regu4tion when Chris Warren returned
a punt to the Denver 45 and Victor
Jones drew a 15-yard penalty for
grabbing his facemasl&lt;, puttin(! the
baH at the 30 with 1:02 remaimng.
With second~and-goal at the 10,
'

the Seahawks were c&amp;ned1:or holding, but Gelbaugh hit tight end
James Jones for 17 yards on third
down, then found Blades for only
the eighth touchdown the Seahawks have scored all season.
Before Seattle's late surge, it
appeared Denver would coast to
VICtory behind Maddox. s rust NFL
touchdown pass and two field goals
by David Tread wen.

~~
,. .

- ~

~

Football helmet not a battering
ram, as Byrd's neck injury shows

·

By HAL BOCK
. NEW YORK (AP) - The
warning label on every football
helmet manufactured in the United
States is straight forward and omi·
nous
'
"Do not strike an opponent
-with any part of this helmet or
face mask. This is a violation or
footbaU rules and maJ caiiSe you
to suffer brain or .neck injury
including paralysis or death."
Players see the warning, proba·
bly think about it for a moment or
two, and then go about the business
of pl~ying the game.
· And every so often, one of them
gets hurt, carried off with a spinal
injury the way Dennis Byrd of the
New York Jets was on Sunday,
injured because, perhaps, in the
'
f th
he ~
~"!,.~~g~ e game,
orgot
The helmet J?rovides protection.
Football techmque provides prevention.
· "He led with his head," sai(l
ex-New England Patriot Darryl
Stingley, who has been in a
:wheelchair since 1978 when he
"was injured in a violent collision
·after catching a pass.
:.- When Stingley was learni}tg
·rootball, that was the accepted
technique· for bloctinl! and 1ack-

· ... •
•
·
hng. Were taught ~! froin Pop
;-yar~er footba~l on, he s~ld .
We re told that, s good techruque
and form - · Put your head
betw~ the n 1!1!'!~ and wrap the
guy up 18 a ro ·
''That was true 40 years ago
when! was playing both ways at
Haverford College," said Dr.
Joseph Torg, professor of orthope·
die surgery at the University of
Pennsylvania and an expert in
~rts inJ'uries. "Years ago, with
e advent of birdcage masks and
hard helmets, players were taught
10 block and taclde with the top of
the head, to use it like a battering
ram."
.
The result were an epidemic of
neck and spine inJ'uries, some leading to paralysis. The solution, Torg
said is technique
'~If you take· the headoutofthe
game, that removes the cervical
spine from the game," he said.
.
Byrd's injury came one year
after Mike Utley of the Detroit
Lions suffered a spine injury when
he fell on his head while passblocking. Whenever something like
this happens, it brings back bad
memories to Stingley.
"Each time 1 see it happen or I
get a letter from 1011\e fmlily dull
has had a son or daughter injured, it

takes me bact to Aug. 12, 1978,"
Stin ley said. "I relive the pain,
the
everything, my own feelings and then my feelings for the
· ti "
1
a~ed~c:.· science is working
dail
th roblem of spinal cord
, . Y ~ e.~ ,
·
IDJUnes.. We . ve made more
progress m the llist 12 m,~nth;i than
the 3,000 years_~fore,, sa1d Dr.
Barth Green, chrucal. dir~tor . and
co-.rounder of~ Miami Project,
~h1ch was organtzed afrer C~tadel
1 b 11: M Buomconu suf
me ac ~r ,ar,c
•
fered a spmalmJury:CkL 26, 1985.
Green thought H ":a~ cunous
that the 1 t t
ina1
had
·" as wo 81!
IRJunes
been suf!'ered by l~emen, who '!fC
usuall_y mvolved m lo~ veloc1ty
colhs10ns ra!her the h1gh-speed
ash that 1 b k
cr es . me ac ers, receivers
and defenstve backs expenence.
"We'!~ mu~h ,close! to
an~wers. he sa~d. I can t say
· ~e II have them m three Y~ or ·
f1v~ rears. or 10 &gt;'?f!l• but 11 san
exc1ung ume. Pauents have a lot
mo.re to look forward to than
pau~~ts m that s1tuauon a decade
ago.
.
: The helmet wammg label ends

fear.

8

BRONCO GETAW~Y- Denver's 'Gaston
Green (18) makes his getaway from Seattle's
James Jones (30) on a kickoff return during the

..

second quarter of Monday night's AFC West'
· showdown under Seattle's Kingdome, where the
... Seahawks won 16·13 in overtime. (AP)

East~rn

girls ~pen season with 52-34 victory over Southern

seams. Otto ended the frame with
87 SCOTT WOLFE
A 16-point fourth quaner lifted nine poinls, while Wilson and Karr
the Bulan Eq1ea to a convincing acomltwollld~reapectively.
One of Eastern's preseason
52-34 girls' basketball triumph
wea\:Desse~
was rebounding, how·
over the Southern Tornadoes Mon·
ever,
Otto
and
Aeiker boxed out
dlly night In Southern's Charles W.
wen, allowing EHS to score several
Hayman Gymnasium.
.
The win left Eastern at 1·0, goals on second and third aacmpts.
Both clubs were involved in
marking the f111t vanity COIIChlng
win for mentor Scou Wolfe. South· mild fouliiOUblc before the half as
em drops to 0.1. ·
the result of aggressive defensive
. Bulan was led by aenior ccnrer play. Efstern guards Wilson;
. .Stephanie Ono, who grabbed 16 · Redoviu, Karr and sometimes
rebounds and led all scorers with Aeiker would.take turns doubling
21 points. Otto anchored the inside up on Southern's talented· point
for the Eagles, while also openin; guard Ohlinger.
up the outside for junior point . The result was that Southern
guard Jaime Wilson, who netted 10 scored no field goals in the second
points and tallied eijht assists. Wil· canto. Iu only scores came on-free
son did an outslanding job nmning throws by Ohlinger and Heather
Hill. ·
the EHS offense.
.
The half ended 25-13 Eastern.
Freshman Jessica Karr collected
In the third frame Eastern went
~ steals and notched nine points,
junior Penny Aeiter added four up by as much as 36-21, but falpoints and seven rebounds, SOilho· tered In the last four minutes of the '
more Amy Rcdovian addCd four, frame, Southern went to its multiand Jessica Radford and Nicole talcllled Moore, who hit'from both
theoutsideiiJd.offthedrive.
Nelson had two each.
AlliS Eagles on the EHS roster
• S~?.:ores Jessica Radford
and
· Guess did a good job
saw action.
$outhern sophomore Andrea defensively for the Eajlles.
Moore tosSed In eight points in
Moore led the lenni Couch's Tornadoes with 11 points, including the frame, while gaining two point
one thtee-polnrer and six rebounds. support from both Ohlinger and
Moore hit S-9 from the field.
Sisson. The Tornadoes outscored
Point guard Amber Ohlinser Eastern 12-11, DUShing the score to
netted nine, while doing a good lob 36-25 at the end of the franie. ·
Easlml blasted off in the final
running the SHS offense. Jennifer
Cross had six, freshman Sammi round. Wilson and Otto compteSisson five, Heather Hill two and mentcd one another with a grand
Sherrie Stover one.
encore jo the .finale, going back
· Eastern took a 2'0 lead when door time and time again .for the
I amie Wilson penetrated the Jane score. Amy Redovian also moved
and scored on a driving lay-up. into the offensive scheme, where
Southern took its only lead or the . she notched four markers.
game, 3-2, moments later when
Wolfe said, "We mac!e some
Jennifer Cross launched a three mistakes tonight and missed some
pointer from the right Wing.
easy shots, but I'm really pleased
Aeiker and Otto put Eastern up with the overaH effort. Tonlj!ht we
6-3, before Eastern roBed to an 11- played our most aggressive game
4 advantage. Some missed assign· (or scrimmlj!e) of the year. We've
.ments by Eastern and good shoot· been a bit bmid, but we've really
ing by Southern allowed the hosts grown as a team the past three
to puH back to 11-9 at the end of weeks. I praise the effort of our
the f1rst quarter.
srarters and the people who did' the
Eastern really picked up the job coming off the bench. We realpace in the second canto, when ly played hard."
Wilson and Karr drove the lane
"We stiH need some more floor
hard, then pitched off to Otto in the time, but we're coming around. It's
alwayil tough to win the O!JCDer on

the road, especially at Soothem. I
hope this gives us some confidenc:e."
.
"Southern has nothing to be
ashamed of. lboy have great outside shooling and they'll win IIQIIIe
ball games. I'm impressed with
their hustle.n
. ~lml hit 23-64 for 36 pen:ent
from the floor, but hit a meager 616 from the line. The Eagles had 35
rebounds, led by OttO's 16 and
Aeiker's seven, 14 turnovers, nine·
steala and 11 assists, led by Wil·
son's eight.
• ·
Southern hit 11-52 for 21 pereent, including three thtee-polnters,
was 9-17 at the line and had 21
rebounds. Moore led In rebounding
with six, ,while Stover had four.
Southern had 16 turnovers and four
steals.
Southern won the reserve game
24-22. Four young Whirlwinds had
four points each: Bea Lisle, Sammi
Sisson, Becky Moore and Jessika
Codner. lonna Manuel had three
and Amy Weaver. three, whle
Andrea Moore added tWo.
Sisson led with six rebounds ..
Eastern waS led by Nicole Netson's 11 points, I essie a Radford
added eight, Rebecca Evans tw,o
and Beth Bay one.
.
Nelson le.d Eastern with nine
rebounds and Radford had four.
In the junior high match, Paul
Brannon's Eagles claimed a 33-31
win over Soutliem.
Patsy Aeiker had 14 points,
Amanda Milhoan seven, Crystal
Holsinger six, Tracy White two,
Marty Holter two and Laura Eastman one. Although Eastman had
just one marker she held Turley
scoreless the second half. Erin Sexton was credited with fine defense.
Collins led Southern. with 14,
Turley 13, CaldweH two and Roush
two.
Eastern hosts the Fairland Lady
Dragons Thursday at Eastern.
Quarter totals
Easlml-11-14-11-16;52
Southern- 9-4-12-9=34
Eastern (51) - Stephanie Otto
8-0-5=21, Jaime Wilson S.0-0=10,
Amy Redovian 2-0..0=4, Penny
Aeiker 2-0-0=4, Jessica Karr 4-0-

1•9, Jessica Radford 1-0·0=2,
Southern (34) - Amber
Nicole Nelson l-O-Oo:2. Totals - · Ohlinger 2.0-5=9, JeMifer Cross
2346=52 .
0.2-0=6. Andrea Moore 4-1-0o:ll ,

~orts Probe

.'

·'

'-•'

•

B HOWARDSINER '
remaining. But don't cry for LS'(,T
'! quesuons
.
. the world Olympics in Los Angeles.
Today's
·m
Looking back, she says athletic coach Da!e B,l'(!)ll'n .. Hc:'s already
of sports:
teens are just following their got commummts fot 1993-94 frolil
no young girls who become dreams.
what could be the best two high·
world-clasa gymnasts pay too high
Bruce lauds the value of "disci· school guards in the country,
,
pline, determination and goal-seta price?
Tliose backcourt stars arc
Of course not, say coaches tin ,"
seniors Randy Livingston, a 6-foolKevin and Rita Brown of the U.S .
~hirteen-year-old Lanna 4 point guard from New Orleans
national team. They operate Apisukh, the top-rated junior gym- (Isadore Newman), and Ronnie
Brown's.GYmnastics in Allllmonte nast in the United States. is also a Henderson, a 6-foot-5 shooting
Springs, Aa. Which means they siudent at Brown's. She was the guard from Jackson, Miss. (Mur.·
have a big state in what has youngest athlete to compete at the rah).
.
become something of a controver- 1992 U.S. Olympic FeSilval and its
" This very likely ~auld be the
youngest gold medalist ever.
·
sy.
best backcourt in college basketball
Another
Brown's
star
is
Kerri
"It angers us to read so much
history," predicts Bob Jacoby of
negative publicity on women's Strug, 14, who was the youngest the Bluechip IHustrated newsletter,
~cs," Kevin Brown admits. member of the U.S. Olympic team.
which ranks the duo as this seaSince the Barcelona Olympics, She previously trained at Karolyi's son's top high-school guards.
stories have been printed claiming Gymnastics in Houston.
IDdy bold stretches
The .Browns claim Olympic
gyt!lnastics coaches Over-bain their
itselr for visitinK athletes
athletes and rob them of their child- gymnasts aren't as vulnerabhi as
Where can visiting athletes realhood"
ly make themselves at home?
the~ look.
'The person who watches the
Shannon Miller, who was the
On the 17th floor of the Hyatt
top U.S. gymnast at .the 1992 Sum- NFL or the NBA isn't used to see- Regency Indianapolis. A private
mer Games, is only. IS' years old. ing world-clasa athletes who wei$h 35-room section of the hotel has
But she won five Olympte medals, under 100 pounds," says Kevm been renovated to cater to spans
including a silver in the an-around Brown. "But at this level of gym- figures - especially basketball
category. Of course, her success nastics, the smaller athlete is more players. It features eight-foot beds,
foHowed years of training.
·
apt to succeed."
raised shower heads, oversized
It's a good way of life for a
To l)e built for success is a lounge chairs and TVs with built-in
teep-ager, claims Wendy Bruce, mixed blessing, however. Not VCRs.
· wli6 was also a membeJ' of the U.S. many parents dream -of havin$ a
It's an effort by the hotel to lure
women's squad · that won the youngster who leaves home, trams the various teams who come to
constantly and aavels to pressure- town to play the NBA Indiana PacOlymfic bronze medal.
"I a gymnast isn't happy, the packed arenas. So don't expect the ers, the NFL Indianapolis Colts or
local college rivals. The Hyatt
door is always open," says Bruce. controversy to disappear.
Regency is located across the street
who studies at Brown's. "I've
Sbaq-lesa future
from the Hoosier Dome and four
OKforLSU
never been forced to do anything I
Without Shaquille O'Neal, does blocks from Market Square Arena.
don't want to do. Gymnastics is a
Among its NBA guests this seagreat sport for young people.''
Louisiana State have anything to
Mary Lou Retton a$1'ees. Now look forward to on the basketball son are the Utah Jazz, Charlotte
Hornets, Los Angeles Lakers, Den·
24 years old, she remams perhaps court?
the No. 1 fan of women's gymnasNtxt year, perhaps . . Shaq's ver NuggCIS and Dallas Mavericks.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
tics. Retton became America's rookie attack on the NBA began
sweet little 16 when she won the with a season of ~allege eligibility ENTERPRISE ASSN.
all-around gold medal at the 1984

Purdue's Keady harbors no illusions
about Boilermakers' making Top 25

' .

:'

s~ply:

'f'!o. h~lmet .can prevent all
such 1nJuroes. !!se 1~18 helmet at
your own risk.

Scoreboard
'
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eaten Plvllklft

Teaan
Butfilo ... -..........
Miami ... ,............
lrwtilnapolil .......
N.Y. leu ............
New Enpmd .....

·

W L T Pd. PFPA
9 3 0 .7.50 314199
8 .. 0 .667 212217

5 7 0 .4J1163266
3 9 0 .~ 1732A9

2 10 0 .167 162294

Central DlvWon

Piusburah .......... · 9 3 0 .7SO 2A7162
"""'""' .... ......... 7
o .m 710211

s
6 0 .soo 194190

ct...tand ........... 6
CindMIU .......... 4 I 0 .313 206269
W~~&amp;en~DI•W.

1Unou CUy ....... I 4 0 ,667 2!11179
Denvw ............... 7 S 0 .513 ll8223
san~ ..........

L.A. Rai...........

Scalllc,_.............

o .m 214112
S 7 0 Al7 179191
2 10 0 .167 89231

7 5

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eukm Dtwlllon
Tum
W L T Pd. PFPA
Dallu ................. 10 2 0 .133 '19316S
w....._ ........ 7 s o ..m 219190
PIWidolpl1ia ....... 7 l 0 .!113 269118
N.Y. Oian~ ... ..... l 7 0 ,417 2!11279
Plo...U.............. 3 9 0 t2SO IB7212

C•lra1Dh1•n
9 3 0 .7SO
a.- Boy.......... 6 6 0 .!1110
ChiCIIO.............. 4 I 0 .333
T.,.pa Bay ........ 4 I 0 .333
D«roit
"""' 3 9 0 .2.50
~... ..........

307191

playc:if bCiro.h

"'"""''

SundoJ,Doc.~

p.m.
lndianapolia al New~. 1 p.m.
MlMeaotatt~.l p.m.
N.Y. Jct~atlluft'llo. f p.m.

Setal. 11 J'WbwJ.h, I p.m.

Dlllalat ~-. 4 p.m.
Kl.nl&amp;l City ac L.A. 1\aid... 4 p.m.
MWni Its.. Franciaco, .. p.m.
Stn [Mao at fboenia. 4 p.m.
Wuhinpn 11 N.Y. Giaatl, • p.m.
LA. :RitM It Tampa 8ay,l p.m.

Moftda'J1Dec. 7
a.aeaao at H~ 9 p.m.

PllrldtDiotoloo

TWLTPto.GFOA
Plu•buriJt .......... 17 6 3 37 114 94
N.Y. R....... ..... II 10. 3 2!1 94 92

.••.

'
'
'

'

'•

.•

•.

• •
• •

SanJ&lt;* ............. 5 18 1

ll 66U3

\v;,m;pc,........... I 13 2

20 711111
II II 94

New JCWM)' ........ 12 10 0

W.....,... ....... II 13 1
~ ....... 9 10 4
N.Y. bliodon.... 9 II 3

A-Dhltloo
M-.1 .... -...... 17 6 3
~ ............... 13 I S
.,..................... 14 7 2
Buf!olo ............... 10 H 4
Hattfwtf .. ,.......... 6 16 I
()a.lwa ............... 2 22 1

24 71 74

:14· 93 19
2l 91 91
21 19 91

37 114 17
31 liS 96
JO 96 11

112 91
11 62101

:14

5 52121

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NarriiDI•.._

Va11.39

Mmtnlll 3, Buffalo 0
MinnCIOU.4,N.Y. Rugen2

Wuhinpon 4, Dc:wLt f

Toatcbt's eames

MimtiiCKa at Ottawa, 7 :40p.m.

Piasbwah atN.Y. ldmdm,7!40p.m.
TCIOIII.OatNew Ieney, 7:40p.m.
Hartford at Sl ~. 8:40p.m.
Loa Anaelca v1. Chicaao at Milwaukco.l:o40p.m.
EdmonlM 1t San JOIC, 10:40 p.m.

Cortland-Lakeview $8, Pymatunine
Vall 34

Elida 64, Lima Calh. S3

Flilfidd Unicml7, ShcDcl111 S6 (O'f)
Focuxia St. Waw:lciin 49, Arcadia 36

Gnndview 51, New Albany 49
llollmd Spriooaficld Sl, ToL Rop 30
Jackson 59, Pihtoo 34
Llbclty·BenlOOI 63, C...y 29
Louiaville Aquinas 46, Beloit W.
Branch 42
Marietta 59, ~River Vall 47
McDooaiC 34, Lordllown 17
Mead-S9, B"""ci"Tni1SB
Me;p li, Fedenl H..W.g '29
MaUer Lake Calk. 47, Clc. BcaumCill

39

Ranp, 7:40p.m.

AP college
basketball poll

W·L
I'U. Week
I. Mid!ipn(l9) ........ ,0.0 1.526
I
:z_ Indiana (14) .......... ,..4-0 l.l2A
4
1 "-" (19) .............0.0 . 1,523
2
4-lltltc(13) ................0.0 1.504
3

Oa.awa-Gt.nd6rf 61 , Holt:de 19
Pan6on·Gilbol41 , H1rdin Nor\hem

1,36S

S

1.233
1,216
1,193
1,074

10

161

II

6
8

9

II. fJorida St. ...... - ..... .2·2
12. Louin'ille ...............O-O
ll. Gocqia Tooh ........ .Ool&gt;
14, Ooomtown........... .Ool)
IS . illttalioma ...............Ool&gt;

7.52
111

1
12

703

693
656

14
13
II

16. UCLA ............ ........ 3-1

600

21

4SI

17

331

20

20. Tulane .................... l -1

417

II

299

19

21 . NewMaiooSL. .....3-0
:zl. CINCINNATI ........D-0
:!3. UNLV ...................0-0

291
276
264

2l

24. Purdue ........ _..........l-0
2S. Ccri:nocUcut ............O-l

2S7
211

16

23

Floridt 57, Utah 53, N.C. CbldotiCI 41,

Oeoflia 36, Bvantville 34, Aubum 32.
Boatwt CoUcao 31, OIDO STATB 29,
WU:e Pore11 21, Or•aon Stat&amp; :u,

Parma S4, Bay Villqe 39
•
Rcedlvi&amp; Eaamn 52, Racine South.cm34
'
Ripley 63. W. Ulli&lt;11 S2
Rock Hill SS, Alca.1t1dcr SO

W"db wreaths of lloDy and mistlaloa,_stocldags llung 11y
lhe fire and scanas lll•nkalad willa IDDW, Cllrlstm8s
ancompasas wanalh and ..... ell. . IS wa charlsll lha ;
bl88slags we've slmnd lhll pall year. For u It maa•s ·
11yiag "thanks" to ,., oar many lrlallds, old and.new, :
whose lciDd npport we'D llwlfl treasure. Dolag
::
business wlb you Is . , greatest pleanref
·.·.

Oamc 32

Shenuldoah SO, Skyvuo 36
s. Point !59,
27
'
S. Wcbl&amp;cr 42. hkDcanott Nonhwe~l

Pull"""""

34
Sylvania Northview SO, Tol St.UnuJ.a

39

Tallm-52. FW440
Ttmpk br. 42, Wayside OU'. 42
Wa.r:ren Local St, Pror!ti«49.

ss

WdlJt.on 42, Trimble 33
W, Jeff....., S7, Col. Hatni11011 Twp.
WhDdc:ratMI, 95, f'aru. W011.o46
Zancl T nee .() , Bane UnioD 31

Transactions
CINCINNATl REDS - A1reed to
temu with John Smlley, ·pitcher, Oil. a
fou.r--yeu oontnct. Aaread 10 1e1m1 wi&amp;b
Dwayne Kenry,f.' k:liu, c. a oae-yeir
canhCl. AaODd cmllobaa, pitdw:r, on
WlCoaditioul reluM waiven. Named
.....,_,_~-.to...

_ . , .... Soolheot
FLORIDA ltiAIIUNS - S p ao
~

•illippi Sta"' 6, Miuottri 6,

llt....tlouiLeap

MIYW•

~

,....._ ,;t.:hor. _.,.. 10 Ottlwt ol lho

SW l..ouiaiml S, ltice 3, Old.ahcna St.~e

BliSketbllll "

2. Peppcrdine 2, WEST VIROJNIA 2,
Pdn-1. XAVIEit, OIUO I.
·

Ohio men's college
basketball scores
. ~~oooa~t~oai04,Dyb70

Rio0...do96, W.Va. Woali73
Utbl.na128, WUbcrfOIDilO

Ohio high school .
girls basketball scores ·

Wish all your customers and ·
friends .a very Merry Christmas
·in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th.

BostbaU
11-I!Ma..

Arha111 17, Georae Wt•hin&amp;IOill4,

1•. T-Jt1oot14,.Mio5,

Flntleam

,

Rc.d'ord 59, lmacrt Stzil.ch 46
Sudinia Eancm I$, Pon1 . Notre

.......... lhe Hip nr...t
...
"'the Calif..... Lea- s.. Dotoa
MONI'IIEAL·RXPOI

s....- lllinoio

~rs and broadcasrers:

40

Team

19.ltlaoa- ........O-O

, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Associated Press ·1992 Division I sH-Ohio high school football
team, selected on the recommendations of a stale panel of sports writ·

·,.

~O.y62, Tol.s-SI

IAII

17. ~~~ ., ...............0.0
II. MiA:hipn St............Ool&gt;

.

N. Bal&amp;imoze 54, McComb 31

plac:c
.. -~
· .......
Nov. ,...,
29, total
pointa
m 25tluooah
~~~

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR P. J. OR DAVE
992-2156

~~---·­

OOLDBII STATE WAitltiORS Placed hlf OraJfl', pard. .. tho 11\jwN
liat. Activated Latrell SpN..U, auard,

-

__

tho injurood lilt.

•

PHOENIX SUMS - Plaood Kevin
pu4. .. tho injuod lio1.

'"

,_

Hotkey

SAN JOSI SIIAIKI- Ylaiwd Pdd
Slailto, 1• .....
lhud-v
and Ray WbiUtt)', forw1td1. from tht

-lido

Kanou Chy B!Hoo.

,

against the host Southern Tornadoes, which the
Eagles won5l-34. Karr had nine points in the
game.
·

KARR SHOOTS - Eastern's Jessica Karr
(33)_ puts up a Jutt,~p shot at the edge ot the paint
durmg Monday n~gbt's bllllketball season opener

:Logan, Marietta put five players
·on Division I all-Ohio football team

Miolonl64. Wnaly 50
Moraan 70, F'"' F.yc44
, Nehonville-Yod: ~2. Hemlock. Miller
36
New 801101171, Pona. 0.y4l
Ncwllury 46, O&gt;yoll"'o Hll, 44

WI.Mipea at Calpry, 9:40p.m.

9. Arilonh ................Ool&gt;

Deeem•eru

Middlefield Cardin1l SS, Aahlabula

~·3

Wedoesdoy's eames

7. Jiblh,Cuolina ........O-O
I. Momphi&amp;St ............D-0

Christmas
Greeting
Edition
Thursda,,

Col. Hartley 57, Col. BriiP 37
Colwnbia lO, LaGna&amp;c Kc)'IIOnC 40
Ccnnau~49, Ocneva46

20

....... 4.~3

Dc:uoita~.N.Y .

Caldwdl60, Waterford 46
Chardon 53, Paineawillc Rj.veraidc 26
ChiDiccMhc HunUni'Ofl 57, Lucuvillc

Frmklin Fumacc cmcn 49, Port... E11t

MOildayts scores

Ollter r«ehtna ,..., Ncbnab 201 ,
Iowa Stato 169, Toau 120, Bripam
Youn1 14, lllinoia 61, California 63,

In the NHL ...
. WALESCONFERENCE

.

30 lJ2 82

IO.lowa ' """""'."""""Ool)

Cincian.ti •t O.Vdand,/1 p.m.
Dwoil ,.., Gftlen Bay at Milw•uk~ l

•

Vmcw•er ......... 14 9 2
Ecbnon""' .......... I 12 4

-Hall .-..,.........

Allant.l i.t NOw Orleant, 8 p.m..

•

20 84102

SmytheDIYialoo
L&lt;IIAnJolca ....... 16 7 2 34 112 II
Cal&amp;ory ............ - 14 9 2 JO 101 16

5, K•uxky ... - ............Ool&gt;
6.
3-1

Futurepmet

•
•

8 12 4

fot I rllll place vcM thro.IJh one point for
a 2Sih place vcu and~ rw*Jn&amp;:

Scaltlci6,Doot,..l3 (0'1')

'

SLLoui&amp; ............

BuMn Bmklhinl42, Gamaavillc n

25 . 1l 67
2l 93 97

Wesln'n Dtvlllon
a-SanFI'II\ciloo . 10 l 0 .!33 339196
New Odunt ...... 9 3 0 .750 mtS4

Mooday's sl:ore

.

T......, ..,........... II .9 3
T""'poBay ........ 10 IS 2

The Top 25 team&amp; in the A11oeia1ed
Pial' oollcp bu.kc:tb.ll poll, wllh f~ttt•

Adanta ............... 5 7 0 .417 234306
L.A. Rams ......... 4 B 0 .333 ll7 264

•'

WLT,.;GFGA
l)oon;l....... ... .., .. , 14 II I
29 114 97
.. - ...... 13 9 3 29 81 II
Chi.................. 12 I0 3 71 16 7S

IB723l
241218
21271l
2172!1!

~-clinched

Ada 46, Arliopa 39
~c.......,. 61, - -\38
B...UVW. JS, ladq&gt;redOnce 3'1

T-

In the NFL ...

,

\

..·

OFFI!NSE: l!ado-Rob 'Miil!lol4. "'-fiood

Maditon, S-foot-11, 11S ~da, Sca.i.or; Dee
··Miller, Sprioafield South, 6-3, 190, Jr.; John
Mil*, c:mcu.ali Elder, 6-1, 160, St. I br 11
. 11.yan Dtrtiola, Toledo S• JolUI'~ 6-l, ~.Sr.;
, 'Derrick stt..,.m. DayiAin ltloatlowdalo, 1\.3 Ill.
· '212. Sr.;·E&lt;I ~o-ar,, 6-2, ~.
jlay
Hanlt,ltlaaillm hay, 6-4, liO,Sr.; a.w.a...
.Cievclaad IL lp1titu, , .., 2150, Sr. ()i~Nr·
·. "'act-Scot Loel'flet, Barbertoa, 6-4, 200, Sr.
Bacb-Oto a.,..., Caatal Hell I J, 6-3, t71,
Jr.: Juon DNao. Ciadanad. Aad
, 6--1, 113,
•)r.; Seoll SallmuD, CiDcimalti Sl. Xavier; len
a•. Tolotlo St. -·~ s.1o, 111, s..; Dimltd·
0111 Sllltloy, Tloaeao W~ 6-0, liS, Sr.;
' .Jtlan:uo ltla-. Aloaa Ella,l-9, 17l,Jr.liolt·
.-Pat SanMt, Pi :Ired •
5-10,190, Sr:
DBPENSE: U...M-Mib Vnbel, Scow
• Walolt 6-l, :Ml, Sr.: ltlau- ~· 6~. 2A7, St.; John Dar. a ....... sc. -.;•• 6-4,
2401 Sr.; O.ril a...m.a, Nacw, 6-l, 215, Sr.;
Cbrio ~·
Auotiatowtt·Fitdt. 6-1,
210, Sr.
b krt P'Wvh• Dan.111. ToWo
Wtilla, 5·11, 205, Jr.;lalllowa. Md=n wa, 6;z. 21)5, Sr.; ,._Y ""',...... Caatal Mcllnll)',

!'r·;

v...,......

6-t, 2C11, Sr.; Dave Victor, Ben.a, 6-3, 230, Sr.
B&amp;cb SleW ro.oo,l....artcdar, 6-0, 110, Sr.; Jasort Triv&lt;a, Yotiopowo-..., 6-0, 1110, Sr.;
Dan Hackenlrrllcht., MauiUOD Wubia~. 6-3,
m, S..; Chda - · ~ 6-2. 175,
Sr.; T J. N.utio,
Meodowdalo, 6-0, 17S, Sr.
~Malfea.. OubUn,6-3,19S, Sr.
a.dulllfiMJ'tM'I Scoa.SoDmana. CinciMiti
St. X.vier, Juoo 1&gt;ru1.o. Cincinnati Alldcllm.

o.,....

,_.r

Ll
• flllht
Jtpn o..aiell, Tolodo
11. Jolm'L
·
C•~ rt1 Lhe 7.u: St.wo Ruao, Cindnn&amp;U
Sa. X.vi«.

SeCOIId team

220. Sr.; 0101.C1 Hanly, Cincinn1t.i

PrinCIIGrl, ~3, 185, Sr.: Timill.o Paf'GIIo AW..anl:e.
6-3, 26S, Sr.; Toby BNG1in&amp;o
Co-2. :105,
Sr. l...inoblck......Sbawn V"&amp;neaat, Grow City, S·
10, 200, Sr.; Cbad Dillow, 1\vy,l·IO, 110, Sr.;
Joo Oienio&amp;o Woatcnillo S&lt;HOb, 6-0, 200, Sr.;
Nata Bofd, "Ea1t Livezpool, 6-3, 210, Sr.; Tcm
Smith, Loaan, 6·3, 220, Sr. Back•-X.eo
Maao~eau, Piqua, 6·1, 11!, Sr.; Dwayne
Hairlton, Oahanna-Lincoln, 6-l, 115, 'Sr.; Klaya
Blod, Nowul, 6-2, 172, Sr.; Mike Sclimonti,
Lakewood, 5-1. 150, Sr. Puntcn--Jtton Cohill,
CiDcimati SL Xavier, 6-2, 194, Sr.; Qld Smilb-

Lat......._

........ Y-wnBoudmm,S.IO,IIS,Jr.

Special menlloa
Devan Seocl. MuliUca r..y. Kevin Robcrb,
inp)a, 5·9, tSO, Sr.; Eric RIIC.kcr, Akron KcaWarren Htrdina; Bill Ooldeer, Younanowa
~ 5·11, 116. St.; ........... Jft,pn, EMdUl,
Auatilltowa·Filcll; Brandon Jtck10R, Maulllon
5·9, 110. Sr.; Mike ZioL Pumt J:WI,bta VaUey Wa1h.inaton; Mau Coanelly. Akroo Ellot; Jeff
~ 6-2. 190, Sr.; MIA HiWard. Lin HAT , 6-1, · Honaa, Woottcr: Tremaine Mcilroy, Canton
170, Sr. ~...._&amp;.-.)', 6-7,
McXinlcy; Ahmad Alb, Wamn Haritirl&amp;; D1111aa
~.Jr.; Miko l.a:Ua. Toledo Waite. 6-7, 255, Sr.;
William•, Stow WalJh JOiuil', Malt Black, AI·
Zlc:llMry s....,., Oecierad Pri c .. 6-3,llS',
liancc.. .
Sr.; TJ. - . 0....... SL lpolitla, 6-2, :W,
D=1t Onndotaff, ZaltOIVillo; Neil Bam,.,
Sr.; Shan 'lhompaon, Euclid, 6-l, 26S, So. Quat- Eut Livcpool; T111t M&lt;:Geo~Pa. East Li""'!""'';
-cb-loo Sdua, Maotoficld Maotioan, 6-0,
Sid Hall, Zuavillc; T...,.. Pmoa, J!aR Liver·
IJO,Ir• --,...c...u.~ s.l......,,6-4,
pool; John Lanat""'.z...-.;n.; SltonoCan,l!asl
200, Jr. BlOb--Chad o-, Matt«,l-9, 16S,
U....-•· Otad Smith, Zanr.,illo; Troy-.,.,
OFFENSE: Eado-ltobb ltodcnnuycr,
Re) 'd+wa. 6-1, 210. Sr.: Jllllin Rcbm. Plcbr-

Sr.;looNiot,~-Fallo,S·II,IIS,Jt.; Pepo

-.luclid, ·5-IG; 170, h.; Donidt - ·
B-. 6-0, 19!, Sr.; !1110 Wldtoamb, Mandlet.l
Madl.a-., 6-0, 200. Sr. Kickora- O.n Fricke,
Cinri•"' Si. llaoier, S-11, 160, lr.; Baan Wild,
c-01ooo0at.HO,I1l,Sr.
DEFENSE: • I
~ Supe. Qacinaati

Z.:,~

R,J. McCort, Lopn; Joolo Grfall, Laocut·
•--•t 11urn, , •
... G
~~ Lo-

trl oxw
~...
r~

C:=\.~-~
111 oro!:., Mo-

--

f:;!~=-

;

_JDih t....nmon, 'f!u:m11 Worth~F,; Chad

Mu•, Newalk; Qaril Ttb.oca, Hilliud; Shane
Warner, Oahtnu-Lincoln: Miio Hombctaer.
Pickeriaaton; Doua B~ar, OahaMa-Uncoln;

-N.Y. Jets' Byrd has chance
to walk again, doctors claim
By TOM HAYS
. NEW YORK (AP) - The hit
that paralyzed Dennis Byrd's body
did not crush his spiriL
Byrd. the New York Jets defensive lineman who waa carried off
tho field Sunday with a broken
neck, on Monday was given a
fighting chance by his doctors to
walk again - partly because he
beHevea he can.
"He has a woildeduf spirit,"
said Dr. Patrick O'Leary, an orthopedic sur11eon who is beading the
team of pii,YSlcilnl tre11ina Bynlat
Manhattan I lenox Hill HOspital.
Tho 6-foot·S, 266-pound Byrd
fractured his C-5 vCrlebra in a vio-

La SaUe. H

Pauict Brvwn, Wt.laville NW; Shawn Uate,

lent head-first coHision with teammate Scotl Meraereau. His I • and
lower arms remain paralyzed, and

Grove G&amp;7: Adlai. R~ Newad!.; Mau Waner,
Pickerin&amp;'OGO Mike McDanalll, ~ South;
Tom Wooldift&amp;ollublin; Matt Bui&gt;loy, Mouol v,..
oon;OtadiMbr,W....W.Nonb. '
' TIIrill XinL ToWo Jlotln; B• Ellil, Tot.
do St. &amp;onda;
ManiiWd Jtlodl.
10n; Mike G.&amp;ziapr, Toledo
TUn Sedw,
Adloftd; AI Kirlloor. Saod"*r. Bryan tt.a.-.
Toledo Woodwahl; Da\'1 Xiduaarik, OrQ.oa
Cloy; Joe T--., Tolotlo 'N&gt;llo; ~ bfl)',
•Tolodo SL J... Billy, Tolotlo Slid; Du·
aoe Bradla]r, Mlnlllet.l Soniar: Cltloko lndloy,
M1111field Seaior; Chart. WoodiOil, PnmOill
loa; AliWb. TCIIedo Slatt; S... 01 t pi•
Tolodo c.ml Catbollc.

'lo4att......,....,.\II\;

officially his ·prognosis is
unknown.
· "There's no way at this point to' ·
predict his degree of recovery,"
team physician Elliot Henhman
... a..&amp;. ) ' d ' 4 a; OdllAwll. a. .
said during a hospiral news confer- too Northmoat; Tom ~c;A!;t;rbtaall if..
llavlor; Jaah Ia..... ,
F~ Bni
ence. "Itean change day to day."
EiHo.
llw I m" CJ,
.W. lodal·
But Hershman and a tealn of floW N - Jabbar Tltnall, Sorlrtaflolol Nooili;
Muk Abol, CinciMod Moo11c !:oooiir lkn' •
neurosurgeons and other spinal Xoala;
~All..,, Cincinnati Si.lla¥1&amp;
expcns at the hospital did pomt to
Bob Holkrl, Montor; John l!llaoo, a- !!rio
C!Amlutd SL lanatiao; Ta CJowe.IAUsome developments that suggest lladda,
wood; eam. a....,Eut Clawlaool•r. 'NIIIio
the 26-~-ald may recover.
Jtaool, lloclld; ·lolta tt-bown Mattar: aw
"We're looking at this with ltlaoltoJ, PalMo¥1Uo ltloonWo; MUt Hllpt,
1Akaw0o4 St. JWwa,.; Olmar luew•; lul
guard~d optimlam," Dr. Martin Cl ..llead Shaw; Chril Wn.o., W...or; Matt
Clmnuns, a nellfOIUI(!con..
Onapa.- OlotooooL

a.,.,.

••

J'

•

.

0

. . .-':g

('

Sherri Stover041=1 , Heather Hill
0-0-2-2, Sammi Sisson 2-0-1 =5.
Tocats - 8-3-9-34

:smaller .is better, especially am on~
gymnasts, but is it worth the pric;? \

~r~"..,.,¥(4 ~~"~~,1$~~!$..,.,~ ,~~~..,.~
. ·.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

WEST LAFAYETIE, Ind. (AP)
- Purdue coach Gene Keady has
no illusions about his Boilermakers
breaking into The Associated Press
Top 25 poH for the rust time since
1989-90.
"It means your program gets
notoriety, but it's a Situation where
now you've got to protect it," he
said of his team's No. 23 ranking
Monday. "It's easier getting there
than staying there.''
The ranking is Purdue's first
since the Boilermakers closed the
1989-90 season With a nine-week
run during which they reached No.
8. Purdue beat Connecticut 73-69
In the Tipoff Classic on Saturday as
heralded ~homore Glenn Robin•
son made his debut with 30 points
and nine rebounds.
Keady said he would not discuss
the poll with his players.
"I don't ten them anything. I
just ten them to play their best the
next game," he said.
Meanwhile, it can't get m11ch
closer at the.top of the poH.
Michigan remained No. 1, as it
had been in the preseasoo and rust
regular-season poll. But the
Wolverines' lead is a mere two
points over Big Ten rival Indiana,
which jumped from fourth to second after winning the preseason
NIT.
The Hoosiers have just a onepoint lead over Kansas, which is 19
points ahead of Dulce. Kansas and
Duke each dropped one place as
Indiana vaulted over them with the
four wins, three over railked teams.
Michigan, which ICl'lt 122-121 in
ovettime last week in an exhibition
game against a loeal team featuring
former NBA players, received 19
first-place vores and 1,526 points
from the nationwide panel of writ·
ers and broadcasters. Indiana had
14 No. I votes. Kansas 19 and
Dulce 13.
Michigan's lead river Kansas in
the preseason poH was 23 points,
and it increased to 25 the next
week. MichJsan was No. I. on 23
ballots in the preseason voting and
picked up another when Kansas
dropped to 18 the next week.
two of those top four teams will
lose this weekend as Michigan
plays at two-time defending champion Dulce on Saturday night in a
rematch of last season's NCAA
'title game, just hours after Indiana
and Kansas will have played in
Indianapolis.
Kentucky and Seton Hall, the
NIT runner-up, held fifth and sixth
place, while North Carolina, Mem. phis State, Arizona and Iowa each
moved up one spot to round out the
Top Ten.
Aorida State, which lost to Indi·
ana and UCLA In the NIT, tlroPilcd
from seventh to 11th llld wai totlowed in the Second Ten by
Louisville. Georgia Tech, Georgetown, Otlahoma, UCLA, Syracuse,
Michipn Stale, Massachusetts and
Tulane.
New Mexico State, the other
newcomer to the ranldnll. Cincin·
nati, UNLV, Purdue ancfConnecti· ·
cut rounded out the balloting.
There are three !)ther games
involving two ranked teams this

,,

week as Massachusetts is at Aorida
State on Wednesday. and Geor~
Tech is at Kentucky and Louisvtlle
meets Michigan State in Detroit,
both on Sawrday.
New Mexico State, which
hadn't been ranked since the last 12
weeks of the 1990-91 season when
the Aggies reached as high as 11th.
won the Great Alaska Shootout last

weekend, beating TenneSsee-Chattanooga, Oregon and IHinois in the
eight-team tournament.
. Iowa Slat.: and Nebraska, both
members of the Big Eight, dropped
from the poH. Iowa State, 24th last
week, lost to Aorida State 109·86
in the NIT, while lhe Cornhuskers
fen from 25th despite not·playing a
game.

Hunter shot in southeastern Ohio
CAMBRIOOE, Ohio (AP) - A
deer hunter was in good condition
at an Akron hospital today after he
was shot in a hand in soutllemlml
Ohio.
Deputy Ken Knight of the
Noble County Sheriff's Department said John Lucas, 41, or Copley, was hunting with his son and
fnends when a deer slug went
through his right hand and into a
hip at about 12:52 p.m. Monday.
The group was hunting near
SarahsviUe in Noble County, about
I5 miles southeast of Cambridge.
Lucas was transferred to Aleron
General Hospital from Guernsey
Memorial Hospital. Copley is
about 10 miles west of Akron in
Summit County.
The six-day deer ruearms season opened Monday.
The shot that hit Lucas was
believed to have been fired by
another hunter, said Jerry Wade,
east central Ohio field supervisor

for the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources' Division or Wildlife.
He said authorities have a
description of a suspect In the case.
Wade said he does oot believe
the shooting was related to ap
investigation of a serial IeiBer who
is believed to have shot five out·
doorsmen in eastern Ohio between
April 1989 and April 1992.

�i

By The Bend

i

The Daily

Sentin~l
TueSday, December 1, 1992

Friendly Circle ·
members meet

Consider this ...

J oanmi Wildman presented a
program based on the book "Cre·
ative American Quillin&amp; Inspired
by the Bible" by Suzzy Payne and
Susan Murwin at the recent meet·
ing of Friendly Cin:le of Trinity
Church.
Patter!lS inspired by the old tes·
tament were Joseph's Coat (many
colors), Jacob's Ladder and
Solomon. He was noted for his
wisdom. New testament quilt patterns were "Hosanna" with the
quilt being green and brown repre·
sent!ng the leaves of the trees;
"Crown of Thorns" or "Memory
Wreath," a reminder of the day
Jesus gave his life and was risen
again. An offering was tak:en and
prayer was given by Mrs. Wild·
m81!.
Gay Perrin presided at lbe meet·
ing. She thanked everyone who
helped with the ).'OIIth dinner.
Christmas gifts for shut-ins were
distributed to the members to be
delivered. "Sock money" was
turned 'in and wiU be used for the
Christmas Gift Fund. Tray favors
will be made for the local hospitals.
' Mrs. Perrin reminded members
that soap and paper products are
needed for the Meigs Cooperative
lcitchea.
.
The church will be serving the
canle!ln at the Bloodmobile on Dec.
23. Donations would be appreciat·

By Brlaa J, Reed

New

SIIDS...The new "Scenic as·a heallb hazard.
· Route" ·SIJTIS that are popping up
Kent Swigard of the Puget
on SIIIIC routes across Meigs Coun- Sound Air PoUution Conuol Agen·
ty are indeed new, according to cy says that wood smoke has
Nancy Yoacham of the Ohio "overtaken
the
industrial
DtpartJiiMI of Transporuuion.
smokestack as the leading cause of
The sips were a fvtliii'C in the air pollutiOI! in many parts of the ·
area many years ago, but one by country."
onC!, disappeared. Now they are
"Wood burnin$. which seemed
being seen again. ·
to be a great idea m the 1970's has
According til Nancy, the signs turned out to be a nightmarish
are primarily installed on roads health hazard," Swigard said. "Peowhich bear a three-digit name (i.e., pie who want to help improve local
·State Route 124}. Many of these . air quality should stop heating wilb
roads were, at one time, county wood and improve their conserva·
roads which were later taken over tion of energy at home."
by C,OOT. .
.
I just thought you should lcnow.
· A designated Scenic Route is
no(necessarily an alternate route,
Christmas trees;..The number
onl}' a road thai has been so de'sig· of environmentally-conscious connated, and a drive ·on any of the sumers continues to grow, and so
designated Scenic Routes in Meigs . with it do the Sales of real Christ·
• County will surely attest to their mas trees.
aesthetic beauty.
TOday, consumers are especially
'
concerned with environmental
tv subject...Aithough he won't issues. They understand that a real
office until January, Meigs Christmas uee is naturally a recyColinty's newly-eb;ted U.S. Con- clable, renewable. resource. Artifi·
gressman, Ted Strickland (D· cia! trees are made of non·
Lucasvi)le} has already received a biodegradable pl;lstics and metals.
modicum of national fame.
There is a widespread miscon'
'
.
AMERICAN EDUCATION · WEEK Among the Students workiD&amp; oa the project were
is the subject of an ongoing ception that natural resources are
OBSERVED • Students in Meigs Local S~bool from tbe left, Betb Call, Joab Distelborst, Adam
sen~s of reportS on NBC Nightly
destroyed when real trees are cut,
~•
District observed American Education Week, TIUis, Josb Ray, Amy Tbompsoa, aDd Amaada
News about his "transition from according to the Ohio Christmas
Maye Mora thanked everyone
Smith.
Nov. 15·21, witb various activities. At tbe Salem
' civilian to congressman". NBC Tree Association. The trees used
for cards and· a book sent to her
Center School a wall display was featured.
~ Odetta Rogers has visited for Christmas uees are raised to be
during her recuperation from an
Stricldand, and his wife. Frances, at cut as Christmas trees, making
accldenL
bon)e in Scioto County, as well as them no different than any other
The Christmas dinner will be
followed him around Washington agricultural crop.
held at the church on Dec. 15 at 6
in liis search for an apartment, his
It is estimated that over a 1.2
p.m. There will also be a gift
visit with officlals at the National million ·real trees will be purchased
The October meeting of the Big ria from 5•9· p.m. Troops are
exchange.
annual Christmas part{ will
RiDe Association and his sean:h for in Ohio Ibis season, with the most Bend Girl Scout Service unit lead· r~uested to, inform Shirley Cogar be The
Thursday
There wil be a
. ~sigfiificant committee assignments. popular types being Scotch and- ers was held recently l!l the Trinity at 992· 2668 of the country their gift exchangealso.
I
of
ornaments
or a
whi~ pine. Other popular species
Church social room,
troop · will represent. Program
Refreshments will be
Beware ... "Your Health Mat· are Blue spruce, Norway spruce, . Calends! dates of yearly activi· arrangements will be discussed decoration.
provided
by
leaders of each troop
tersr, a publication from the Hope Douglas fit, Fraser fit and Austrian ues were discussed as follows:
later form chairpersons, Terrie in t1ie county.
H~ Institute, urges folks who pine.
Thinking Day will be held Feb. Houser and Denise Holman.
"Save Your PeMies" project is
bum wood as fuel to stop, citing it
20 at Meigs High School's cafete·
Girl Scout ~eek will be Match unc!erway in each uoap to fund the.
•
7-13 with a skating party at the molber-daugbter banquet. This will
A little acorn, up high in a
Chester Skate·A·Way on Route 7 provide reti:eshments and decora· .
Waiting
for fall, 'to. become a
on March 13 from 2-4:30 p.m. tions. Tbe • · place and time will tree
Those attending are to. llring skate be discussed later. Pam Johilsen is
His.heart filled, with much gladrental fee and pocket change for lbe chairman of this project
ness
·
Commaalty Caleadar items will have a Christmas dinner meet· an open house Thursday from 3·5 refreshments. '
Day Camp plans were also dis·
. Thinkin1 of things, he was
aJII!Pr two daJI bel'on aa .eveat · ing at lbe home of Emma Clatwor- p.m. Music will be provided by
Plans were finalized for. the .cussed including the location and going
to see
· · ~tile day Ill tllat evenL Items Illy on Tuesday at 6:30p.m. No gift The Cl;lssics and refreshments will leader investiture and rededication lengt!J of the carnp.&lt;J3renda Neut·
· As his mother is dying, and she
be rm:lved weD Ia advance exchange. Members bring Angel be served. The memorial tree hon· ceremony to be he&lt;ld Thursday zling is'the chairman of this event.
boldly told
'
Jlllb'katlo• t. tile ~- Tree gifts.
oring deceased members of the from 7·9 p.m. at Trinity Church:
Outstandilli
l!llder
and
volun·
, . , _0~ ihingds. she ~n, ~. •!i!!..MS.
•
~'
'
,~"'" ·":" centetwiUI!e lit at darlc. The inside Middleport will be in' charge of the
teer
appliciiiQ{ts
must
~ subniitied
growmg o1
· ·
·• 1!- ~~ ·
' .
SYRACUSE • Sutton Township trees featuring ornaments to honor ceremony.
'
by Thursday to Shirley Cogar.
_
Bright eyes and happiness, his
TUESDAY
Trustees wil,l meet Tuesday at 7:30 relatives and friends will be
heart
beat so fast
r POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal trimmed and lit for lhe holiday sea·
Excitement his mother tells, of
Olapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Building.
son. The public is invited.
things
in her past
,
wjl! bave a pizza party Tuesday at
WEDNESDAY
6j3"0 p.m. at the Meigs County
POMEROY • There will be a .
I
here at last, and with a gen- ••
Iritlimary. Betsy Jones and Kathy
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· bake, craft and ceramics bazaar at
LOS OLIVOS, Calif. (AP} - ·makinf. it ABC's first new show tle Fall
breeze
!
, H'a16y are tioslesses. Bring a bottle. port Literary Club will '"eet at I :30 the Mei~s County Senior Citizens Michael Jackson provided lunch, since • Rosearme" to score as a hit,
As
·he
tumbled
to
the
ground,
'i
o~pop or a bag of chips.
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Center m Pomeroy on Thursday · fun and games for 21 ill youngsters Brochu saicl.
among
t1\e
colored
leaves
·
J
_.)__
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs. Eldred from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
on ,a Make-a-Wish ouung at the
He
could
hardly
wait,
to
start
to
•
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) ; POMEROY • FOE Ladies' Parsons will review "The Girls in
entertainer's Neverlahd Ranch.
Former
tennis star Arthur Ashe, take,rooL
~ 2171 meeting and Christ· the Balconr." by Nan Robertson.
RUTLAND • The Rutland
Among the activities Monday,
His w!lole life shattered, under a ,
mlls dinner, 7 p.m. on Tuesday. Roll call w1ll be to clip a column Township Trustees will meet the children boarded Jackson's who disclosed this year be has the hunter's
boot.
l
by a woman journalist.
,
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut~ miniature train, which carries 36 AIDS virus, was honored by Har·
BtJng items for needy baskets.
•
/
.
land Fcre Station. Public invited.
passengers, .and rode around the vard University, for his efforts to
,
Frank
Drehel
•
! MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
POMEROY · Dr. J. Wilmer
sprawling estate 110 miles north· educate people about the disease.
37496 Leading Creek Road
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- west of Los Angeles, said'Jaclcson
But Ashe said education alone
Cbmmunity Association will meet Lambert, former district superin·
Middlepon, 45760 . j
won't stop the spread of AIDS.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Peoples tendent of the Central Ohio District port Arts Council country store will publicist Lee Softers.
·
j
•'I've tried to go to great lenglbs
Bink coruerence room to discuss Church of llle Nazarene, will speak be open Thursday from noon to 8
They also roamed the grounds
I
aod rode Jackson's carousel, roller· to point out just knowing what to
'1:00~ parade on Thursday. at the Pomeroy Church of the p.m.
Nazarene Wednesday through Sun·
coaster and ferris wheel. The after· do is not enough," Ashe said Mon·
Attend funeral here
CHESTER • Chester United noon concluded with a trip to the day.
. IPOMEROY • Salvation Army day at 7 p.m. nightly and Sunday at
•'
~'The most vulnerable groups
w{u be talring applications for food 10:30 a.m. and (j p.m. Scott and Methodist Women, annual Christ· huge NeverlaDd movie theater and
. baiillets and toys on Tuesday and Patty Anderson with Lenny the mas meeting Thursday. Potluck a special screening of the Walt Dis· also need to be reminded that when
dinner noon. There will be a $3 gift ney animated film "Aladdin," said it comes to a decision for Slife sex · Marvin Boyles, Janice Miller,
W'~nesclay from I0 a.m. to noon Puppet will speak and sing. Other
exchange.
Program and short meet· Sollers.
or abstinence or whatever it may be . George Veith, Jr., and Mildred Mil811114 p.m. each day.
special singing also. Pastor Glen
·ing
will
follow.
All
church
women
McClung invites the public.
The nonprofit Make·a· Wish to prevent the spread of AIDS, that liron, all of Columbus, were here
. , ,; . b i(&gt;MBROY - Post 1942, Meigs
are invited.
Foundation grants special requests mere lcnowledge is not ·enough, .. for the funeral services of Robert
MIDDLEPORT • Revival ser·
from children with terminal or life· he said. "We need' to be creative L. Lewis, Sr., held on Nov. 17 at
· C~n. ty AmVets and YVA will
RACINE • Southern Junior threatening illnesses. Two children about addressing the specifiC needs the Fisher Funeral Home.
m t Tuelclay a! 7 p.m. at Smiuy's. vices, Wednesday through Sunday,
·
iRVited.
,
Middleport Church of the High Boosters will meet Thursday, at the Jackson ranch were from ·of specifically vulnerable groups.''
The Rev. James Seddon and the
,,VeteranS
'
Ashe received the first annual Rev.James Keesee offiCiated a1 the .
Nazarene, 1 p.m. nightly. David'], . instead of Tuesday, at the junior Holland, two from Great Britain
· _fOMEROY • Meigs United Myers, Logan, evan$elist. Public high school. Public invited.
AIDS Leadership Award from the funeral services and pallbearers •
and 17 from the United States:·
~thodist C~rative Parish will invited, Lloyd D. Gnmm Jr., pasJackson returned from his world Harvard AIDS Institute; an organi· were Midwest Steel co-workers.
RACINE • Racine American concert tour early November. He zation· created in 1988 to promote Military services were conducted
bo taking applications for Christ· lOr.
Legion
Post 602 will meet Thurs- leaves Dec. 12 on the Japanese leg re~earch, education and policies by Feeney-Bennett Post 128, ,
,.
food baskets Tuesday throu~h
American Legion at Gravel Hill
F day from 9 a.m. to noon at us
HARRISONVILLE. The Rev . . day at 7:30p.m. at the post iiomc.
of the tour.
regarding AIDS.
o ice at 311 Condor Street in and Mrs. Philip Knisley of the
Cern~ .
ROCK SPRINGS • Salisbury
erpy.
Society of Indian Missions, Norris,
LOS ANGELES (AP) ;_ ABC
•. ,
•·S. D., will be speakers at the mis· Township Trustees will meet has given comedian Tim Allen an
c&gt; ~~="*'· C, .. . . .; . .
;POMEROY • The American sionary service to be held Wednes- Thursday at 7 p.m. at ·the township unprecedented show of support,
Ution: Drew Webster Post No. 39 ·day at 7:30 p.m . at the Har- haU.
renel!'ing his top-rated sucom
.wiTI meet Tuesday at the post -rison ville Holiness Chapel, State
' 1Home Improvement" for three
1
TUPPERS Pl AINS • Tuppers seasons.
bdme. Dlmer will be at 1 p.m. and Route 684. The Rev. John Neville
Plains YFW Post 9053 Ladies
meeting at 8 ·p.m.
invites the public to attend
The .series is the first to win
Au)(iliary will meet Thursday at such a· renewal agreement from
I
.
!MIDDLEPORT· Past Mauons
6:30 p.m. Bring candy for treats ABC, network spokesman Jim
THURSDAY
of Evangeline Chapter .172, OES,
POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· and help decorate for Christmas Brochu said Monday.
.r.
ty Seniqr Citizens Center will hold before the regular meeting.
Allen stars as the host of a cable
television home-improvement
Choosing to have babies
show called "Tool Time." The
role !J based partly on his Sland·up
. A'l'l.J\NTA (AP)- Pregnant
rouune
as a swaggenng, macho
sirll )'OIDJII"' than 15 increasingly
h!lnie
meehanic
who brags about
are c:J!oosi• lb have a baby rather
An "Anything Goes Pany" was g'!"'e of mtisical chairs was played h1s vast array of power
tools.
than an abortion, federal health held recently for any girls interest· w1th Andrea Neutzling and Mandy
The
show
has
consistently
land·
officials 11y. .
,
ed in joining Pomeroy Junior Miller the winners. "Shuffle Your
ed
in
the
top
10
in
Nielsen
ra~.
The' Cenrm for Disease ConlrOI Troop 1309. Girls came dressed in Buns" was also played by the
group.
and Prevenlipn reported Friday the costumes and games were played.
Receiving awards on creations
rllio of IIIJOitiOIIS to live births for ' They also did an activity toward
that were made from odds and ends
UDder 1S Wll the lowest it had the Art in the Round badge.
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Girls modeled their outfits and furnished to each girl were: most
.,... from just Wider
Is uw opea for 1M
ab~trtic&gt;ns per 1,000 live certificates were awarded for 0111· useful, Sarah Houser; prettiest,
CIJrlstmas SeasDL
to
900 in 1989. fits and hairstyles. Awards were: Julia Kc!'nnedy; funniest, Andrea
9 to Moi.·Sat.'
be
to say that an wildest outfit, Melissa Houier, Neutzling; and most original,
of diem are Opt· punk fashion; wackiest outfit, Mandy Miller. This activity' was
lta Ss.da¥
·
the child or to Ancltea Neutzlii!J, revene/uplide do~c: as part of the badgework
FeatlriiJ
111
7
mate it avail· down fashion; most outrageous activity.
calon. PallseHJa.H.tlll
outfit, Sarah Houaei, hobo fashion;
Refreshments of chips and dip,
·t~:;:~~~~~~·"
said
CDC
Basbt1, J:l!llly ~~, F~
l
wackiell hairdo, Chrissy Hirth; Soda and donuts were ·served and
Ill
Howard. .
....,., J.lye .d C.t his.
wildest hairdo, Mandy Mlller; and girls also lhared Halloween treats.
most outrageous hairdor Julia
Any girl in grades 4-:6 interested
For eli~ Joy..
pe
Kennedy.
I
in joining the troop may call the
bla1kets,
wnatbs,
sprays
•d
A game of wrap the m,ummy leader, Brenda Neutzling at 992YIIIL
was played with the winnina 1e1m 5770 for funher information.
HUIIAID'I,
.,,....., 011.
consistinB of Mandy miller, Julia
Adults allending were Brenda
Kennedy and Meliua Houser. The Neutzling and Terrie Houser.
992·5 76
•

tate

ae

.

Days

To place an ad

CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES
..W. ftllicle the couaty yow ad nu •111t he prepaid
• lleeei" diKo•t for ad. paid ia adnoee.
• FNO Ado: Ci-way aad F.....t ado aDder 15 wonla will he
... 3 dayt .... eharp.
• Price of ad for aD capital ~u.n i1 double price of ad ~OIIl
• 1 poiDI 11M type ooly uoecl
• Seatiael il aol ntpollll),le for eft'OI'I after rltlt day (ciMeJt
lorerron llntday ad rwula peper). C.U belon 2:110 p.m.
dar af'lar ,.b&amp;cauoa to make e~orrection
• Ad. &amp;bat-t b. paid ia .J.,aace an:
Cardo!Thub
HappyAdo
.Ia M-rlaa
Yard Salet
• A •lyoillod ad•..-ebt placed Ia tOe Callipolio Daily
T...._ (acept Cluoillocl Dloplay, B111laeu Card or Lepl
No-) will aloo .,..... iD the Polal Plouaat Reptor and
... Dally S..llael, ...hi...... 18,000 ho....
II;

tree ·

••• .

HARRISONVILLE PTO

·~

~

AtJCI'ION .

•••

DAN ·SMITH,.AUCTIONEER ·

.
l

PRiCE REDUC
-

•s:

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

I:OOp.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
IOOp.m. Thwaday
I :00 p.m. Friday

,-------1

Gallla Coun1y

M~

446-G.Wpolio
367..a-hlre
S88-VIa10D
245-Rio Gronde
256-GU)'OO Dill.
Ms-Arabla Dlot,

992-Middleporll
; Pome~y

379-Walnut

985-CI..ler

843-Pardond
247-LotaJ&lt; F.Uo
949-Raeine
7 42-Rallaad

32- Mobile Hom• for. Sale
~ Fan~~• for Sa~
34-- BUiillfll• Buildinp
35-LoblltAerup
36- Real Eolale Waated

qupon
6Z- Waated 1o Buy
~Li-k

64- Hay &amp; Creio
6S- Sood &amp; Fartiliaer

lil\1\1"

Coi!Dty Ma10n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
675-1'1. Ptea....
4&amp;11-Leon
576-Apple
773-MMOn
882-N~ H•vea
895-Let.rt

4-Givuway
S-Heppy Ado
6- Lo.t aad Found
7- Loot ..d Found
8- Plololic Sale &amp;
Auclion
!1- Waolod 10 BPy

c..,••

937-Bulfalo

667-CooiYille

11- Help Won ted
12- SitualioDI Wanted
1~ lnauranee
14- Bwineaa TraiaiDS
Is- School• &amp; IDitruelion
16- Radio, TY &amp; CB Repair
17- Milc:ellaneoua
18.- Wanl&lt;liiTa Do

71- Au.,. lor S.le
· Truck. for !~le
4l..o.. Ho-. for Real
Vau44 WD'1
42- Mobile Honte~ for Real
Motoftrclea
43- Fara• for Reet.
BoaLI &amp; Molon for Sale
44- Apartmenl for Reel
Au"' Par~a &amp; A...,...
45- Fumilhed Roonu
Auto Rep.ir
~ Space lor Rent
47- Wanted to Real
C...pioc
!
48-- Equipm.eatlor Rent
"II\\ I! h
49-Forl..eaM
• ,... ..poneMeatll
8
\II H!.ll \\lll:--1

Lpi-··

,;ufo

82-PI"""'IaJ&amp;Beatlat

51- H........ld Coodo
SZ- Sportiat Coodo
53-Anliq...
'
54- Miac. Merchaadi.e
55- BwldiDf! SuppUeo

I

-

~-

HAULING

bldg.

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL &amp; COAL
Reasonable rates
JOE N.SAYRE
SAYRE TRUCKING

Coll814-8112·71041or

the Best Seller

i

992-6215
''-or, Oltlo .

614·742·2138

11117

IEIIIIEu
SAIIITAIIOII

EVERY THURSDAY

*X

EAGLES CLUB

~

NOnCE OF APPOINT1IENT Hlate of Bertha Baylor,
OF RDUCIARY

c...

On Nov......,1S,

•-e~~,

Court,
No. 17147,
Robert C. Baylor, 7771
North River Road,

ott.

41701 •••

.,olntecl Executor

11

or 420 a....t

1112. In litH!, Middleport, Ohio ·

... . , . Coilntr Proliete 41710.

Zaneevllle,

lete

or ...
~lp

Roto.t E. lluolr,
Prabllt Judgo

"····Clark'
.

(11)24;
IAn8 It (1211,....

.

,_

99

5
litem! . 9•

J

I

I

I

j.

143·5U6

1112 fl2l mo.

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
12:00 Noon

WEBERS
CHRISTMAS TREES
Holnegrown •
carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up with I grul
selection larger
trees.
Call742·2143 or

Putteta, Beginner Seta,
Youth Cuetom Drlvera.
Le111on• lnclud.cl with
purchaae• .
l.ocltld on Seoul Camp

Factory choke 12

or

742·29711

11127

gauge only
STARTS

11127

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
NMCI a Gift?
Ruga, Plllcelllllta,
QUIIta, 6 Types
Pillows, Animals,
Iota of small artlcllla.
&amp;o;and up
OPAL HOLlAN
CHESTER

~

:;;,

31904LH••I

.c........

Ml••lo~,OIIIo
614-9 2·7i44

E.O.E.
I I'

915-4252
or Stan lettnen

, DAYIDSON'S
PLUMBING

·Overbrook Canter h.as part
time shift openings (7:0D-3:00
and 3Y. hr. shifts) for state
tasted nurses aides. Salary
based o" experience.
For mora Information contact
Karla Hunter at 992-8472.

Rutland, Qh .
742-3051
SR124
Ready Nov. 26 ·
11·17-82·1 mo pel.

Tho••• Whitt

TEAFORD'S G~LF
&amp;_AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE
10%·20% Off

R!f., Chelllr, OH.

Wlntld

Residence

call

11124/'allfn

Public Notice

Public Notice

Bob Snowden's

up or more Information

load

Clf\SSIFIED f\DS

.OPEN 9-7

Senior CHlzerta $8.00
II you need traah pick·

6:45 ....
S~lal E~rlr llrd
Sl ooo Pwroff
lltl1 ad
for I
. FRI card,
Uc.llo. 005CH2

Read the

5'- 8' Tall

December Special
$8.00

IN POMEROY

e

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Fresh Cut Daily

STARTING DEC.,11tt2

BINGO

TODAY ·.
992·2124 I
i
2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS
I

With

$.05/day

Clouified pages cover the
following telephone exchonges•.•

.on10 buy
ntco ........
homO on 3~ oaw In
" wry
" poo
- . 4 BR, 3b-, 2 - o . ronled 1
BR opt P~ lnc*ldoo 4,100oq. ft. IMn

CALL·

r•semu

I' \1\\1 "I 1'1'111 .-.
,\ I I \ I.:-- I Ill . 1,

.. 188,800-'*Ill of up 10 10% 01 porn:~-.

Thepitco .... _

•:·-··--~··=--~---=---':.·

s

Mt~~aclll lmltwneaLI
Fruil&amp; &amp; V• ..a. a..
For S.lo or Trod, ,

$ .20
$.30
$ .42
$ .60

Skin, Cut, Wrap, Freeze
for $35.00

. ~ . Ha~rlsonvllle Elementary School ~

.

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

OILER'S DEER SHOP
St. Rt. 325 Lang5VIIIe, Ohio
614·742·2076

~ .FRIDAY, DEC. 4, '7:00-P.M. ~ ·

Pomeroy Junior Troop news

Over 15 Words

'

'

l

i)... •:.-.:

15
15
IS
15
15

Rate

BULUnN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
. PUBLICATION

i

l

'

Bl I.LLTIN BO .\RD

t

.

Words

1
3
6 .
10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday

Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. lhru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12

No tomorrow?

.

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156

Poet's comer

'

'

RATES

Scouts discuss yearly activities .

·Names in the .news

parade held S110day aneraooa. Several burtdn~ci"
people turaed alit for the parade and olJ!eD
~Y the merchants In Pomeroy.

Rock Sprlap Graage are pictured on tlte noat
they created for Pomeroy's annual Christmas

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

I

.Community·calendar,

·~~~~~· THE' TREE • Members of the

Cbrlcltmal parade Ia P0111eroy had the
holiday spirit u they were decked mCilrlltmu
!tall. Membera of Melas Couaty's 4-H Hone
SUJidi,i's

'

~~~~':'!~.t c!:.::l
FrHhlllllll•

RREWOOD FOR SALE

&amp;-:it-'U~fli

.

. '•

'

you can't.
(614)378-6153
eam ·12 pm and

Cheshire, OH.

6

1

·10

CHRISTMAS

R&amp;C EXCAYAnNG

TREES

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
· LINES

BULLDOZING

5' • 7' TALL
HAllEY IIAIIIH
RESIDIIICI
15975 Flatwoed• Rd.
,...,.,,ohio

ICHIIty laid 26)
IEASOUILI
1112t11 mo. pel

Mowl.!:i .
Fertlllzlng, W lng,
· and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree

worry about
Chrlatma•·money
, agalnllncome that
kMpa going When

St. Rt. 7

For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
white pine.

I
~

FOR SAlE
Call614-992·
6637

GRAVE
BLANKETS

Lllwn

1140-1 mo. pd.

SIZED LIMESTONE

.. lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

949·2391or
1·100·137·1460

tell 43118

IO/I/92tfa

a.JAYMAR ·
Quality
Stone Co.

MOTHERS AT
Chrlatmaa Income!
Easy work from
home. No calh start
up. Start Cil once and
you'llnever hive to

$20.00

BASEMENTS&amp;

HOME SITES

' HAUl-ING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
LICENSED ond BONDED

992-2156~

PH. 614·992·5591

12·5-tfn

I 1,\

CELLU!8&amp;_
TOTALLY AIITOimtr4 PEAFO-.AIICii
t

t

t

t

t

t

t

t

t

t

8e811 wdling frN
ICountr

t

t

t

t I t t 4

I t

I t t

t

t

t

t

t

t

I I t

10 wrrJrose DCeJiilll d!One• 71lz

.....,...-......,...

LIMmD

loclil Hrvloo

TIME

56995

llroni 111..

(614) 949-2058

(

11117

''

�.

~

Hot••• for Rent

41

=
.........
-.-- ........
""...............
VlollleN wiJ lie pn 1 rr W

s ....

..........

Q

II

4

~

a.1111 &lt;2l D Cll D Ill D IIIID
IDD Ill Howl
(!) - - by tho loll
ljQ lquaN 0no TV Stereo.

Cl!ltL Clllft.

kilt- -r

....

... :II 001111

~.

......

Woocland Or. 114 411 121'1 afltr

4:30p.m.

houle

114-112·1118

In
aftor

13

~ MIIIIIAiming Hour
lloulll Q

....... c.l. .... ~- 114~

NORWAV ~ TOL5TO'f!

SIXTEEN ! niE MOON!

,.,.

WOflcl
8 Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop Q
1:05 Cll·Tlno'l Company

SOMESOD,V..

SOMETIIIN6 ..

f-..,.,,6- "'17..:...,.:._:;,..::,,--l o·Complele

lo

8

i.a R-nno
G21•CBSNewoQ
Stereo. Q

e

II])

OUpCiou

Help Wanted

Ste

0

out=:s•ur.·••-a
... en-.wv
NOTICI

I bed,.._. MObile home, 2 112
Soulh hom llcll!lnaldo,"
S0447HZ!Iaftor 1:00 Pll.
Trw """""' • trtm..... ... SliM Avolllbio: I ·11ec1n&gt;om
Tl'llltrH.S:.h l 112, S lllnut11
From
r Hoopl1ol. 114-44tTIIO.
'
Wll ........ ....., 1n
•
- . bod patltnl ,.._ 3 -....., I 112 llith, Totll
NCI, 114-14..zna. '
EJ- A - Alto, No POlo,
1144'1-11131.

::=:---.mr-.. 'WIIICIIWior-""ln-........,.
114
112 'M', ..,
~ .•, ,__,

on Rt. a

'.ldvonct. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
'tho . , b t - t.. od Ia 10 '""·
'&amp;undor edhlon • 2:00
;Fotdn. llondll' odltlon •

$.a mo.

Star

(!])

•
/

wttAT l&gt;O YOIJ CAL.£. TH~St .PEtl&gt;S
T~AT ICEtP COMING BACJC 7

w_

Stereo. ~;~

p1Uo

· (J) D You

Ill Your Life
1111• Wheel ol Fortune Q

G21D Flmlly FIUCI
e Collage lelketboll
· Georgia at Kansas (L)

,P.m. 8oourdor. .

I8J e-n,.

Antique~

53

Business

7:35 Cll S.nlol'!l &amp; Son

Opportunity

0 Quantum Laap

8:00 (2) •

Middleport

Sam leaps Into 1he IHa of a
ho1 hunk on daytime

•

television. (RI Stereo. 1;1

1GO PIOplt To .._
Welaht Now. No Wll Noliod. . llrond Now -

...........-~
Nolu::l. -

I!JCollagollllkotiNII

Coli

Chicago State at DePaul (L)
CIJ II Collage leaketbell
Ohio University at Ohio State

Apartment
for Rent

(l)

CZl Nova Earlh:s greatest
natural wondor Is explorod.

iwants8 Fullner ears
Houu Stephanie
pierced and
the twln~et haircuts.
Stereo.
Cll Nova breakthrough in
understanding Parkinson's
and otner brain diseases.
Stereo. C
-I
1111• C"•llllly G...,_:
When Ood a.ta Ynt:r
·
Aaentiori Singer Johnny
Cash, basketball playor Bucl&lt;
Wiliams. (1 :00) Stereo. Q
(!]) • MOYIE: Pink Ughtiling
(2:00) Stereo. Q
"
i1J Murder, SIMI WIOie .., ,
131CIIICIItanciC-

Almond Ao-"' l 11-

a. ....

Etch. 1141412144.
CLII:bsw Trela. .., ... ...._
Rt. :t.· 7 111111 N. · ol 1300 ........

PI
._104-t71-1771.
Calanlll n allag. 0111 I .....

-·
--..................

Real Estate

-···I
w£1211.-..
_ ... VlnWI -.... -

. .·•'

B4

';'

MEEK

rr SAY") ~ 1HAT

ISOOIOO 10

..

'

Poollont Iii
~x
.. - . - . 111t ttl '"" .....

~

,.

t.lW FOST

(A6/f.,IT...

PrlmeNowl Q
Qll Kenny l Dollj: A

8

=·•=.••oilll,
aul

---.

WIJ,

Irian

I

~

dOilv.Nd, """ .. - . 173-M&amp;
EIOOioto Nil choir, hOO, e - .
.

F - . - .......,lllof

Comll..:::--......~.
.., ._ ...... -G-14.

BOrnE OF LOTION
'32.00
Milly .... spedal1.

.......

'

ilooneedlllondod-o

• CHRIITIAI UECIA
• . 24 SESSIONS &amp; FRH

-

- Com-·
w'" .._ =.;i a

CIIIM I I I I I - - - ,

Ohio • Wilt Vltvlnll,
2211• mat21.

-.Clortnot -

"-~EK AND

f

11m :;tm!

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

Col 104-171ot1114 lor . . ...

' llmllla.

..

I'

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

Want to:
PIN do~nEXTRA

CA8H?I!

ffi
Cll Fron- C
IIJ8 Rouanne Ffoseanne is

'•·

tested by Jackie 's broakup
with her boyfriend, Fi.sher.
Stereo. C
11118
MOVIE: 'Hanl to
Kill' CBS Tues*y Night

'

Fi.r-.. .
•

comedy and personal
vignettes. (1 :DO)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Goldfinger (2:25)
8:30 (I) 1J Hangln' Wltl1 Mr.
Cooper Mark stands in lor
Vanessa's boss at a dinner
wltl1 a PQtenlial client
Stereo. Q .
1:00(2)8 1IJ Reaaonable
Doubll Toss urgos an armed
robbery suspect to turn
p!~alnst nis brothor. Stereo.

-~~~-

'.L1•. :.~~~
--·-- - - - - - - -

.......
I

memories with music, dance,

_ _ , .. Upholll....... -~·
!nlllrl~-,~ ... ....

:.~·-~

F&amp;A DIIIEIVICE
Tr'

. Upholstery

Ch-I toR--r
Kenny Rogers and Dolly
Parton recall fond Christmas

...

=·

.,....., · - " '

wlllltiU ...
742·2160

Movie (R) (2:00)

i1J TUIIdaY Night Flghll

11-11-'12·1 ....

NEED TO BUY A

PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR

GIFT CERnFICATES

FOREVER
IRONZE
hlhl•ld.,ladne

. 939·2126
ALL SESSIONS GOOD

. FOR I MONTHS

11 'ZS-'12-IMO. •

....... 0111 I'll!!. . . Elich, 4
y., 0111 Alplnli· llllr - ·

.,..,....

CHRISTlW TREES
&amp;CWTS

Cot •

Fres• CutT,..s

Heads .................... 190
1

00

Fumlahed
Rooms
32 Mobile HomH

_tor Sail

A001111lor 1W11 · -_. _.....
114 t MID
· · -· Halll.

ltortl~

11111:3.ftNIIIII with lUlling.
Allo
.-.All haal19t
Coli . . . :1!00 ..... -

1111,-wv.

Ill Wanted to Rent
l'cor

To 11w11: 11o1or 11orno
Ttfp To -

w.-..

~

~Nov1S-11. CIIIPII114-

Houeehold

Cali (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

Goods

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sdl it the eau .~y... by phone,
no need to ~ave your home,
Plqce xour clqujfled qd today!
15 word. or leu, 3 da.p,
3jlqpeu, $5.40 paid in advance.

1171~1/J~r·
•·nrC'.or ·

-OIIor.....1 '==· ....
I

lwll 410 II.

~

In

1111 Clwu:illll 111111u. N.
..... 11M71'1714.
1171 ... bll CUt-.
OMillttttl alii.

-

1---------------------

BERNICE
·BEDEOSOL

6~----------

,: ~~

~-

8._
· -_
--_
-_
--_
-_
-9. _
_
..,......
_-

BISSELL BUILDERS, IIIC.
New Horilel e VInyl Siding

I New G81'8011 e ReDIICIIMnt wrndowa
Room Adcltlona e Roofing

.

COMMERCW. 111141 RESIDENTIAl.
FREE ES'J1MATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160

ortii·HI9

llelatldiJ Cilia)

'

.

'

10~~---'----------11~----------------

12--------------~
13~---------~
'1 4

---------------------

15~------~------~

446-2342
.. .
992-2156
675-1333

AISINIC
BIIRIIS?

1

I

ASTRO-GRAPH

2 . _ _ _ _.......;_ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
4. _ _ _ _--,___ _..:.,_
5. ______........._____________

7.~----------~-----

WHArS IN IT--

Pernell WMaker (30-1 , 14
KOs) vs. Edwin Curol
(28-13-2, II KOsi from
Virginia Beach, Va. (L)
121N-IIIeNow
8 Larry Klng Livel ~
Fa- Dowling MYateriea

.,
.
·'

Doo.1,1tll2

In the year llhaed you can expect stellar
eupport from persona you helped In lhe.
pat y.er. Your outatandlng markers
l'l)lght be repaid -~~ tllnee
IAQITTAIIIUS (110¥. 21 Ilea 21) New
Monda could IIIII to play Important
rolwl in your efflirl over tho corning
wMke. Fortunllely, you're in a favor·
able cYCIO lor astablllhlng tree1t rela·
tlqnlhlps. Know wh«e to lool&lt;. for romance and you'll ftnd lt. The AatroGraph Matchmaker Instantly l reveall
· which signs are roman.tlcally_pertect lor
'

o-.

you. Mall $2 plus a long, self-ad· ship with someone you already know
dressed, stamped envelope io Malch· might begin to taka on new significance
maker, c/o this nawspilper, P.O. Box as of today, This association could be
91428, CIIMIIand, OH 44101·3428.
dastlnacllo grow In proml-.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 2W8n. II) Some- CANCI!R (Juno 21..Julr 22) II there is
one Ia wortclng on your bellalf behind an Important arrangement you would
the ocenas today regarding something like to solidify, you could be lucky In
that Is extromaly significant. His or her shaping It to your satisfaction today.
etrorts could produce ._Ita better Make It your top priority mattw.
than those for which you had hoped.
LEO (JuiJ 23-AIItl• 22) An Idea you've
AQUARIUS (~ ..-.... 11) Try to been nurturing c:an now be turned Into
spend time today with lrlends sometl\lng much larger than you orlgl·
who Inspire you and arou111,your lmagi· nally envisioned. Don'tlet size or scope
nation. You r.-1 to be clooe to people sc.e you .
who are up and poeltMI.
· YIIIGO (Alii· 23-hpt. 221 You could be
PISCI!I (Folt. :ID " ,. :Ill). Penona luckier than ueual today where your
you know socially coutd be of help to 1bualnea or flnanclel Interests are con-you today in either bull,_ or ca.- earned. II ypu think you're on lo somomettora. Thay 11111 eppro.chable, 10 . thing that could make dr save you mandon't be afraid to '*IUOII 1 f1vor.
ay, mekelt la muat do.
·
·
ARIII (....... 21-Afloll II) Y-lucJa· LI8RA (..,._ lloOct. D) An ..-vor
ment could be k.., today It that_you're ~tly I n - In Ia gocomas lo evalultlng 1 - or llgnlfl·: lng well, but if could go bett•. You 11111
cance. Pay llltentlon to your_, coun-' needed at tho helm to offer an Infusion
ael, lnatllld of Nlylng on others.
: Of bOld. , _ 1-.
TAUIIUI (Ajllll »Mer :ID) Today' I cJe. ICOIIPIO (Oct. :M-IIcMr. 211 Don't de""'"""""'' COUld be comprllled of epalr If things haven't been going too .
oome Lirprlalng twlatl. You'll be dellr• .. amOOihly lor you nnanclally. Changes .
oue of helping others, bul. lronledy; 1re1n lftl oiling and, II they wortc out u
they mtght end up doing more lor yOU. antlclpalecl, you might need a thiCker
-~~ (MIJ' 21 ........ :Ill) A releiiQn· wallet.
.
- .. ': .
. '

s

I I

\ANI

I I I I

;•

NORTH

BRIDGE

11-I·U

. J 7 54
.AQ 3
.QJ4 3

. K9

•a

EAST
2
.10 7
• AK 8 6
+A 76 53

WEST

PHILLIP

.10863
.954

ALDER

t7

+QI0812

SOUTH
.AKQ
.KJ8 6 2
.1095 2

memory fades
in time
j

+J

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North

By Phillip Alder

Soulb

I am writing this column on the

mo1rni•1g of the first Presidential Canldiilati!S' O.ebat:e. I wonder if any of the
three debaters will be tempted to use
Richard Sheridan's reply to a question:
"The
Honourable gentleman is
his memory lor his jests,
and to his imagination for his facts."
It is easy enough, when giving pa r tner a ruff, to make a suit-preference
!. You lead a high card to ask
signa_
loartnt!r to return the higher-ranking
ln&lt;&gt;n-t:runlp suit, or a low card lor the
~~0.::~~::~~~~:- ~·~ However, if partner
all the cards, he might
wh•eth•" the card led is high
And sometimes he will be
IWIIIcb.ing, yet stoll not know;
.
. answer to his partners lead-do~!~~~~~double •. West opened w1th the
seven. three, king, two. East
two diath~n~~~:~n~ '!,ce~;:'j~c~:
. • m. .
·
.
d1amond SIK. 10, heart five, doamond
J&amp;Ck._ Note that declarer has been cle~With hiS doamond Spots. West basn t
the five and eight of diamonds.

lI;

0

1.

West

Pass

Nortb

Easl

1 NT

Pass
Pass

JY

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Obi

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: I 7

He doesn't know whether East's diamond six is high or low. Should West
switch to a spade or a club?
~"From thediagram, you can see that
a club is right _ but why is it rightf
The answer lies in East's plays to
the first two tricks. He should antici·
pate that West might have trouble de-ciphering the diamond six. S&lt;l. if he
,wants a spade switch, he wins the first
ltrick with the diamond ace, oot ~e
king. All he won tnck ooe wilh lhe king
and then played lhe ace, East is re-questing a club switch.
:
.
© - - - UILUIUU·

. .

ACROSS
I Tiny parasite

5 Allow to

8 Pay penalty
lor
11 Foretold
12 Supervise
14 Ovortum
15 Variety ol
apple
16Mlaerablea
17 Feeblemlndednell
18 Computer
lenn
21 Sea mammal
22 Ruallan veto
word
25 Waahed In
aoapy waler
28 Actreu
Luplno
29 Cowboy's
lh081
32 Actreao
Blythe34 Arrival

Antwertol'rti•-Puult

36- Carta
37 Aclreu
Sandra38 Actor Polar
41 Sllpa up
43 Rage
44 Snake'&amp;
aound
48 Hill
51 Voodoo cult
deity
52 Strongamelllng
54 Fixed
quantities
56 Begplpe
57 Reluctant
58 Relrtlhlng
beverage
59 Even (poet.)
60 Looaen

Norae mytha
5 Letl down
6 Showed
plainly
7 Camper's
shelter
8 Analyzing
(ore)

DOWN
1 Melancholy
I.e ., in lull
3 Number
4 Book ol
2

9 Actreaa -~
Arthur
•
10 Sllngy
affirmative ,
11 Ught aource
13 Harneup~
18 ChiC, In t ....
801
20 Ancient Ito!'
11n 11m11Y
23 Homt ol ~
Adam
24 ScarloH

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27 Llldy
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amount
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39 Dovtlopocl ,
40 Colllr lhlp!t
42 Dry and '
wlllltred '
45 GrHk epic .
48- voce •
47 Cloth belt :
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50 Long
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popularity and possible risks
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81

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UNSCRAMBLE LEmRs

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the chuckle qu oled
by filling in the missing words
you develop l rom step No. 3 beklw.

Overheard at party : "The government keeps saying
our economy is on the right track. The big problem is.
the train doesn't seem to be MOVING."

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�Pllgl 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daughte~

explains why she won't
worry about ·her f'lther at Christmas
Dar Au I 1nden: You ubd
why cllildren WOUld igncn • 84year.OOS ,.all who says. "I did my
best. • Well, hele'1 why I igncn my
84-year-old fllhlec.
When I wa5 12. my falber""' ¥ted
the family should 1110ve 111-. nic:«
holue 50 miles from his job. The
move was an expensive. one and
Mom had 10 go to wort. Dad bought
a new car for Clllllllluting while Morn
walked a mile to the bus stOp.
Dad spent his weekends at lhC
II'BCk, playing the hones. If one of
us was sick, dial was Mom's responsibility. If the plumbing broke, it was
our fault My sistm and I worbcl
our way lhrough college. Dad neve3'
gave us a dime.
Mom got cancer afew yean after
Dad retired, and everylhing lhat
needed doing fell on me. He neve3'
lifted a finger. W)len Mom died, he
found himself a girlfriend, bought a
new car and had no time for our
phone calls. The last time I called
and asked, "What have YQU been
doing lately?" He replied, "That's
none of your business.•
This Christmas we won't worry
that Dad is alone because he has a
new car and a girlfriend and lots of
stories to tell about how rotten his
daughters are.- CAROL IN CALIF.
DEAR CAROL: The mail on Ibis
subject has been depressing. So
many family members are at each
other's throats and have no intereSt
in making amends. Read on:

unlit it was dart oullide. He bepft
"' .
Ill hit him widl his fiSIS and woul*'t
••
stOp even lhouP my brother's 1101e
.
was bleeding and he could blrely
stand up. I srepped in and gave mv
ANN LANDERS
fllher a lOck 1111 the jaw dial iiCIII
"1!191, LooAapleo
him
rcclina. He never laid a hand
~.,
Tloaeos,-011 any d us lf1ec lhat.
Crelllon SJD&lt;!iule''
Todly none of his sons has
anything
10 do with him. We fiJUre
De.- Au: This is why one child
he
has
camcd
his loneliness.
(me) wants IIOihing to do wilh my '
Los
An&amp;eJcs:
My motlltc, who is
84-year-old parent. You asked,
now 81, wu alwt)'S so J*lialto my
"How is this possible?"
older
silla it was humiliating. She
We sec mother twice a year. The
would
Ill)' in front of peOple, "Poor
woman is a hypochondriac, a
'Lenore'
(me) is going to have a lwd
whiner, a congenital pessimist, •
time
in
life because '1~' (my
inveterate nitpicker, a habitual
sister)
is
so much prettier. We will
cmm:tor, a gossip, pushy, critical,
oulrageously demanding, conii'Olling probably have to buy Lenore a
buslwrxl.• I grew up feeling ugly and
and rRIOipulativc. She is IOtaUy self·
unwanted
It took years or therapy
ccnlered and never did one damn
to
rebuild
my self-csreem. I have
thing for us tids. My Calha, who
forgiven
my
mother but I no longe3'
lived wilh hec for S2 years, was a
sec
her.
The
pain of the past is too
saint. - RICHMOND, VA.
intense. I hope one day I can handle ,
From Kansas City, Mo.: You
it
but for now it's more Ihan I can
can't understand why a child would
bear.
ignore an 84-year-old parent Maybe
Drugs are everywlrlre. They're
I can explain by telling you what
easy
tc get, easy to ~ IJIId even
my father is like.
ea.sier to ,etlrooked Oil. I/ you have
He came from a family wilh
queslions abolll drugs. you ~teed Ann
money and snubbed my mother's
Landers'
booklet, "The Lowdllw11 on
people who were of modest means
Dope."
Send
a self-addressed, h111g,
but much fmcr lhan his clan .. a
bUJine.u·siJt t11w:lope and a.check
bunch of drunks. He was vf:ry hard
or money order for S3 .65 (this
on us kids and would knock us
includes
postage and luwJJjng) to:
around for the slighleSt infraclion.
Lowdow11,
c/o Ann I.mtders, P.O.
Once I became ineensed at the way
Box
11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611·
he beat my 11-year-old brother be0562.
(In
Ctllllllla,
send $4.45.)
cause. he had stayed at the library

Ann
Landers

Buckeyes
defeatOU
Bobcats

.

&amp;
~

The receni Presidential election . makes it possible for teenagers
and Thanksgiving holiday are only from around lhe world to spend a
two of lhe countless thiQgs that semester or a full school year living
make living in America truly spe- wilh American families and learncial. These and many olhcr every- ing firsthand about the customs,
values and lifestyles. Students
day events can hold a brand new
meaning when shared wilh a young attend local high schools, participate in community and family
boy or girl from anolher country.
Shirley Coleman ·serves as local activities and develop friendships
coordinator for one of America's that last a lifetime.
most well-respected student
Mrs. Coleman now has applicaexchange programs, Academic tions of boys and girls who will
Year in America. This program, arrive in January and would like to
sponsored by AIFS Foundation, spend lhe second semester in Ohio.

A family need not have teenagers
of lheir own to host. Single ~nts
and retirees are also invited to
apply.
The sooner you select your sbldent, lhe sooner you Cl!D begin to
get to know each olher. All AY A
host families receive a travel scholarship which enables a member of
their family to travel or study
abroad on a pro~ sponsored by
AIFS. Opponuntties include weCic
long tours to Europe and campus
prograins in many different countries.
To receive more information or
to arrange for a host family inter·
view, contact Shirley Coleman at
614-742-2125. Lynne David,
regional director in the AY A
national office in Connecticut, can
also provide information about lhe
program in Ohio. He can be
reached 81800-322-4678.

.•

YoL 43, MD. 155 .
' ca,ilglilld 1112

largest, was sponsortcl by the P!l!Deroy Mer.
chants AISDCiatlon In eonj111Ction with Christ·
mas open house.

MEIGS BAND • The award wianing Mei11
High School Marching Band, under tbe dlrectioa or Toney Dingess, playtcl lor sever111 hundred people along tbe streets or Pomeroy on
Sunday afternoon. The crowd turned out lor one

Duke Lech Walesa?
He called Wierzchowski" a
Some monarchists have come "self-appointed regent who has no
up wilh a fresh approach for restor. right to give aristocratic titles, as
ing the monarchy in Poland _ · only ruling monarchs are entitled to
bestow noble titles on people of do Ibis."
·
merit, notably lhe president
Krasicti said lhere are several
However, the Regency Council hundred acthe monarchists in
docs not plan to l'ropose Walesa Poland. Wicrzchowsti's group in
for ting. The time 1sn't yet ripe just lhe soulhcm city of Sosnowiec is at
yet for Poland-10 become a consti- odds wilh ochers because it claims
tutional monarchy, said its leader
to be a sole representative of lhe
Lcszek Wierzchowsti. He consid: Polish monarchist movement, he
ers himself lhe prince regent
said.
The presidential press office
Krasicti says he and his friends
said Walesa learned about the title do not want to restore a monarchy,
from news reports and has no com- .but to promOte conservative values.
incnt
·
The Polish nobility.numbered
_. The handing out of titles docs about 200,000 before World War
not sit well with other active II. Many w~re tilled by lhe Germonarchists. "I lhinlc what Wierz- man occup1ers-, and then by the
chowski did was simply stupid "
communists. Others were forced to
said Kacper Krasicki descend;nt emigrate after the communists
of a Polish noble family.
deprived lhem of their land, nation.
alizing it after the war.

•

No Place Like Home!
As the saying goes, "There's No Place Like Home" and did you
know that Veterans Memorial Hospital has a long-established,
efficient Home Health Service which enables you to stay in your
home and still receive care?
I
If you feel you're a cani:lidate for the service, check with"your
physician or give us a call.

We're
lo-sing starry nights, say astronomers
.

\

.

unkJI)wa...

'

The scientists' lonely, campaign

~h:'t lhey ~all light poUutton IS gatrung a Wider audience as
others realize that shading the
lights can save money as well as
heavenlY. views.
Over the past few de~ ades
wban glare expanded wilh Ailleri:
can cities. Even in their isolated
observatories, astronomers noticed
lhe difference.
ReleQtless light from surrounding cities has effectively shut down
lhe ~gcst telescope at Mount Wilson m Southern California and
olher observatories are ~ed
Crawford said.
.
'
· Many amateur astronomers
mus~ travel an hour.or more to fmd
a swtably dark spot to sec the alan
particularly on the East Coast'
"From a place like Boatob, you'd
~ve to go 60 or I 00 miles. By that
lime, you're in anolher urban
area," Crawford said.
The International Dark-Sky
Association, which Crawford
founded four ycarw ago u "a IOI't
of a nighnime Sierra Club "
doesn't .adYOCate pulling the pl~g
on outdoor lights. Instead, the
I ,200-mcmber group wants to
make them cheaper and more cffi.
cienL

t? C!!fb

•

Kroger, director of the CDC.'s harassment, loss of insurance or
ByLAURANNEERGAARD
National AIDS Information and loss or lhcir jobs, experts say.
Associated Press Wfiler
• The CDC counters that it takes
ATLANTA- Federal heallh Education Program.
"The CDC also will publish ads about 10 years for most people
officials marked World AIDS Day
today with a new ~ to help to P.ush -the message that AIDS infected Wllh HIV to develop fullblown AIDS, and during that time
businesses educate lhell' employees isn t spread in offices.
About I million Americans are lhey should be treated as any other
about AIDS and keep lhose wilh
the disease working as long as pos· infected with the HIV virus lhat worker wilh a long -term illncss.
causes AIDS, and people aged 25"Havin~ the facts about HIVsiblc.
·
·
44
who
make
up
most
of
lhe
AIDS
contributes to a calmer, more
·"Business Responds to AIDS,' '
nation
'
s
workforce
are
most
productive
and supportive worksponsored br lhe Centers for Dislikely
10
be
infected.
place
when
emplolees learn of
ease Contro and Prevenu"on, will
"For
Ibis
reason,
among
olhcrs,
mfected
co-workers,
'.said Jo-Otis
help corporate America establish
lhe
worliplace
has
an
increasingly
of
lhe
American
Red
Cl!&gt;ss, which
workplace AIDS policies, train
.
important
role
to
play
in
the
is
participating
in
lhc
program.
supervisors to deal wilh infected
Kroger said it would be difficult
eml'loyees, educale employees and nation's response to lhe HIV and
AIDS
epidemic,"
Dr.
William
to
put
a price tag on the program.
lherr families and encobrage comRoper,
the
CDC
director,
said
.
"What
we are doing is putting
munity service and volunteerism.
Monday.
togelher
pieces
lhilt were already
"What we are offering is a one.
Although
federal
law
prohibits
out lhere and consolidating lhem,
SlOp service to businesses so lhcY.
can initiate ~s lhey haven t job discrimination against HIV • and drawing on non -federal
done preVIO\Jsly ," said Fred infected people, . many report f'CSOW'CCS, •' he said.

_ __...People in the news _ _

By ANNE STUART
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON - As cities brighten
lhc sky with outdoor lights, people
are losinj! lheir view of lhc heavens. WJthout controls, some
astronomers say, old-timers will
someday reminisce about ni~hts
when you could see the Milky
Way.
"If things keep going lhe way
they are; the only place you'Dsee a
really dark sky is a planetarium "
said David Crawford
~n
astronOmer at Arizona's IGti Peale
National Observatory and founder
_or lhe International Dark-Sky
•
· -Association.
: While astronomers have long
:said that artificial light lhreatens
Jheir ability 10 study lhc stars, some
~ now saying the glowing glare
ihreatens everyone else's view.
"The absolute majesty the
Incredible power or a truly dark,
star-packed sky was part of the
experience of all or humanity
lfu;ouabout all of human history,''
Jatd Alan MacRQbert, associate
editor of Cambridge-based Sky &amp;
Telescope Magazine. "Now in
developed countries, it's practically

The parade was spcliiSOI'e!l by the Pomeroy Merchants Association wbicb also observed open
house.

CDC launches ·program to educate
employers and workers about AIDS

The annual Christmas dinner for
American Alloys employees,
retirees and their families will be
beld at the USWA 5171 local ball
on Saturday, December 5 from
II :30 A.M. to 7:00P.M.

BUILD INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSIDPS! • AIFS exchange
_studeDII are currently seeking American host families ror a five.. moatb ally beginaing in January. For more information, call 1·
800-312-4678 or Shirley Coleman at 614-742-2125.

ol Pomeroy's lai'Jest-eVer Cbrlstmu parades. .

"Th~ee-fourlhs of the lighi in
lhe sky JS c~ by ~Y designed
and ba~ly msta)led hght fixtures
that pomt up inst~ad of down,"
MacRobert SBJd. Lights wilh visible bulbs also conrribute to glare
. Shielding lights so that lhey il·lummate lhc ground, ralhcr lhan lhc
sky. cuts the overhead glow, proponents ¥Y· Because lhe downward
beam is more concelllrated, the fixture can provide the same amount
or ground light wilh a lower-watt
bulb, savihg e-gy and money.
They say energy savings quickly
outstrip modifJCation cost.s. "In lhe
United States, we probably spend
$2 billion a year just to light up the
· sky," Crawford said.
· Such efforts are already under
WIY in IICverai Slates. In Maine, the
state legislature passed a law last
year ~uirina new stile-financed
street lights to be shielded and
aimed downward. The l1w also
requires officials to conljc!er allernativea 10,new highway li&amp;hll, such
as lower speed limits, reflectors
· and lines.
In Arizona, uppaded lipting in
about SO communities hu deepened the darkness 11 Kill Puk,
Crawford said.

Beary Christmas Contest
Pl.... enter my name In the di'IIWiilg for the 12 costumed Teddy
Bears you are giving away at Vetet'llna Memorial Hospital.
NAME-------------------------------ADDRESS----------------------------PHONE-----------------------------(Mall ~ Veterans Memorial Hospital Bear Contaat, 115 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio, 457611 by Die. 15 or depoalt In hoapltallobbr
box.)

{i0fETEUNS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
_1y_n_j
1111........ Drive
Veterw. ........ HoiPital

.
i

-

.

·-I'OJ '

992·2104

2 5ee11ono, 16 P•ue• 25 centa
A llulllmedla Inc•. .._.,..,...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 2, 1992
...

Cli CLUB • Tbe Bid Bend CB Club participated iD Suaday's annual Christmas In r..eroy
witb this float. The parade, one of Pomeroy's

Lciw tonight ln mid-lOs.
Thursday, Chance ot snow 40
percent. High ln mld·JOs.

.

-

Wright regains board
seat after emergency stay

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

By MINDY KEARNS
OVPNews Stair
Qlston 0. "Nick" Wright
returned to his seat ·on lhe Mason
Coimty Board of Education Tues·
day .evening wilhout much fanfare,
after a Kanawha County judge
granted Wril!ht an emergency stay
to prevent focal board members
from ·naming a replacement
Wright had earlier been
removed from office by State
Supmntendent Hank Maroctie for
refusing 10 attend seven hours of
clasSes required by law of all board
members. Wright maintilined that
lhe legislature made lhe law after
he was electc.J, making him exempt
from having to take part.
On Nov. 20, lhe court granted
Wright a stay 10 prevent lhe local
board from namitl$ a replacement
until a full heanng is held on
Wright's petition to void lhe state
superintendent's order.
ing. State SQperlntendent Hank Marockie
BACK IN THE $ADDLE AGAIN • Olston
Mason County Superintendent
removed Wright from office lor refuslna to
... : . 0. "Nick" Wrigbt, rigllt, was back In hiS seal as
of
Schools Grant Sheppard read a
attend seven hours or classes required lor board
: a m-ber or tbe ~ County Board or Eduletter
from Marockie during lhe
members. Also pictured is Superintendent
.. catloa Tuesday eveni111 after a stay was granted
meeting,
which said the petition to
Gra11t Sheppard. . ·
. In KIIII8Wba Coonly preventing the local board '
void
lhe
order
has been assigned to
f'rcm naming a replacement, pe~~dinl a lull bearJudge McQueen of Kanawha
County.
'
"He will schedule in the near
future a hearing on lhe merits to
'
'
determine if lhc State Superinten·
"Put toy safety on the top o,f in ·cQopera_~lon with the '?hio soft cork tips, rubber sucuon cups; dent's order removing Mr. Wright
your- holiday list 'this year" urges Department of Health, provided or other eye protecting tips.
was a proper exercise or lhe State
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing guidelines for purehasing toys for
Noise Hazards. Toys making Supenntendent'·s authority,"
director at the Meigs County young children. They are:· .
loud noises or using caps may darn• Matdctie wrote.
All toys are not lor all cbll· age a child's hearing. Watch for
Health Department
"Until the Circuit Coun hears
Chances are that Ibis· holiday dren. Look for age and content. warninv: labels which state for usc the case on Mr. Wright, the
season most parents and others will . labeling, like "Not recommended only outdoors.
.
Novemller 20 ruling means that
be buying toys for the children they for children under age lhree; may
. Electric Toys can shock or Mr. Wright continues to be a memlove, so, says Torres, "when you contain small parts". Toys wilh bum. Improperly manufactured or ber of the Mason County Board of
make that selection, make sure you small, removable parts are espe- wired elecb'lc toys may shock or Education as if the order of the
check it twice by keeping safety in cially hazardous to children under bum children. Electrically operated State Superintendent had never
mind."
lhree years old.
toys wilh heating elements are rec- existed. Tbaeforc,heisentitledto
Be a label reader. Look for key ommended only for children over back pay for m~tings he attended
The nursing director said that
the U. S. Consumer Product Safety words such as "nontoxic"for lOy eight years old.·
and to be seated on the board,"
Commission estimated that surfaces; "flame resistant/retarAs a fmal word on toys, Torres Marockie wrote 10 Sheppard.
163,600 toy-related injuries dant" for fabric products; "w~h­ advised lhat several precautions be
Point Pleasant Hi~h School stu·
occurred nationally last year. able material" for stuffed toys and taken - always read lhe directions,
About half were to children under dolls, and "U.L. approved" fQr keep toys for older children away
five and 80 percent were to chil· electric toys.
from smaller c~ildren who rrtighl
dren tmder age 1S. Almost one-half
These thinp avoid for infants choke on small parts, always superinvolved children choking on bal· and toddlers. Avoid toys with vise young children, regularly
loons, small balls and toy parts, small parts which pose a cholcing inspect new and old toys for broken
according to Torres.
hazard, long strings, cords or rib· or missing parts, and follow buying
"Most of lhesc incidents involv- bons lhat may create a strangula- guidelines.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi"With increased concern for
ing young children are pre- tion hazardl.
vcnt.ilble" said Tones. "Careful toy
Look tor sale construction. safer lOy buying Ibis holidaY.-sea- dent-.elect Clinton's economic·
selectiQD and piopet supervision of Toys for children under eight son, we hope lhat many children stimulus program will provide a
children at play are .the best ways should be free ot sharp edges and will avoid needless injury from small boost to lhe economy next
to pro!cct children from toy-related points. Choose new toys that are new toys over ~e holidays and all year, enough to make only a tiny
dent in lhe unemployment rate, the
injuries, she said. She advised par- well-constructed, durable , and year long," concluded Torres. ·
nation's top business economists
made
or
safe,
non-toxic
materials.
ents and Olhel} 10 but toys lhat are
predicted
today.
Eye Injuries. Nearly 14,000
apP.ropriate for lhe individual
While
Clin10n has promised to
chtld's age and development, and children received toy-related eye
focus
like
a "laser beam" on ·lhe
not be tempted to give toys which injuries last year. Toy guns and
economy
once
in office, lhe survey
the child can "grow iniO."
toys that ftrC projectiles can cause
by
the
National
Association of
Today the Meigs County Heallh serious e:r-e injury or the loss of an
Two people were injured TuesBusiness
Economists
found lhat
DepartmentJS;AFE ~s Coalition, eye. ProJecti c toys should have day morning in an accident on
analysts
at
some
of
lhe
country's
State Route 7 near the intersection
largest
companies
held
decidedly
ofS.R. 143.
Kevin A. Lambert, 17, 39002 low-key expectations for what lhe
S.R. 143, Pomeroy, and Lisa J. incomin$ president will be able 10
·
Willinghurst. 26, Reno, were trans· accomplish.
The
association
said
the median
ported by Meigs County Eme3'genexpectation
of
41
_Pn!fessional
fore·
cy Medical Service to Veterans
casters
surveyed
m
lale
November
Memorial Hospital where they
was that Clinton's prograln would
were ll'Cited and released.
According to lhe report, Lam· result in a slight, 0.2 percent
bert was nortllbound when he lost increase in econotnic growth next
control on an ice-covered bridge year when compared with what
and slid into lhe soulhbound lane they would have expected had
and struck broadside a vehicle driv- President Bush won re-election.
While Clinton is still formulat·
, en by Willinghurst Bolh vehicles
ing
his shon-terrn economic pro·
were knocked off the roadway
gram,
he has indicated lhat two key
struck guardrails off their respcc·
elements
will be jnvestment tax
tive lanes.
· Lamben was cited for driving credits for businesses and a boost
left of center. Bolh vehicles sus- in spending .on roads, bridges and
tained heavy, disabling damage and other public works projects of
around $20 billion next year.
were towed from the scene.
In a $6 trillion economy, such a
package would represent only a
small dose of fiscal stimulus, ana- ·
lySIS said.
But the bu$iness economists
grolf said It h~ Ointon wOuld
not listen to advJSCrs owho are urgTOLEOO, Ohio (AP) - A man ing him to take a bolder approach
convlctCd in one of tbe nation's in an effon 10 get the unemploy~
1argcs1 food stamp frlud cases was ment rate down quicker,
hospi!a(iztcl one day belen he was
''Our advice right now is to be
scheduled 10 be sentenced.
· · cautious," said asioclati!ln PresiMichacl Hebeka, S9, was ~n deQt Joseph W. Duncan, the chief
to St Charles Hospilal on Monday statistician at Dun &amp; Bradstreet
night complaining or chest plins.
COrP. ''Clinton needs to maintain
This is the second time he has the confidence of business and the
CHOOSING SMI TOYS • Here ftft-Jtll'- SoMy Fallller . been hospitalized just·befcn sen- markets."
klob Oftl' a ftl'leiJ fll t!lyl wWdl are IIPIII'GIIItale far her 1p as
tencing in U.S. District Coun in
Dimcan said an old-style Demoher •odler, Carol Folller, ~ o.rwwu plii'CII-. l'lr·
Toledo. He was hospitalizcd wilh cratic public works spending pro·
nts IJ'e belq eKOilraged b' tbe Melal Couaty Healtb Depart·
chest pains on May 19, one day gram lhat would in{lare the already
before he was to he sentenced.
huge federal budget deficit would
-~ Ia P!ll 111J safety at the lap fll tbeltltollda, 1fst.
.
. .
.

N-prsing director urges toy safety

Chrisbnas dinner
scheduled

WARSAW, Poland (AP) -

Pick 3:
387
Pick 4:
1738
Buckeye 5:
11-12-14-16-32

Page·4

AIFS seeks host families in Ohio

CHICAGO (AP) - · Though his
rchabililllion isn't complete, Ben
Vereen can walk again and has
regained usc of his right arm. For
that, he says, he has the almighty to
thank.
'_'I'm lhankf~ lhat God hi:S once
agam ~en bunsclf 10 be miraculous,' he SBJd. " I say when you
sec me, you sec God in his workshop."
The _Tony- and Emmy-winning
entenamer wl!s critically injured
June 9 after bemg struck by a small
truck 1!5 hew~ al~g a hi~hway
near hJS home m Malibu, Calif.
Vereen, who played Chicken
G~~rg~ ~~.the 1?,77 television
muuscn~ Roots, talked_Sunday
about h1s recovery at Chnst URI·
versal Temple.

0 hio Lottery

dents' are once again dismissed
from classes today due 10 furnace
problems. Sheppard repOrted durmg the meeting lhat lhe school sys1em· had no alternative but to
replace lhe furnace.
He said he had been in contact
with Columbus Heating and Vent·
ing Tuesday afternoon, and piping
was to be received Wednesday
morning. Sheppard told board
members he would know more
details Wednesday afternoon,. but
students could possibly be out of
school until Monday.
The superintendent noted lhat
lhe furnace had not been inspected
in IS years, according 10 Columbus
Heating.
Students were dismissed last
Wednesday, a day earlier than
expected for lhe Thanksgiving holi·
day, due to lhefumace problems.
Sheppard reported lhe furnace
system at Wahama is running, and
students are back in class, after
lhey were dismissed Monday.
George Mille3', assistantsuperintendent, brought board members
up-to-date on the building programs throughout lhc county.
He stated bolh the Beale and
Roosevelt additions were completed, adding the Beale project was
completed at $788 over budget
after revisions, and Roosev.elt
$·1,200 over budget after revisions.
The Ashton job is still ilngoin~,
according to Miller, who said It
looks as if the project is going to be
approximately $40,000 under budget. Also ongoing are lhe Ppint
Pleasant Junior High School music
complex and Wahama High School
addition. Miller noted bids are still
out on lhe Wahama project, which
is expected 10 cost approximately
$845,000.
·
· Tom Nunnery, Ashton Elementary principal, spoke to the board

members regarding bus routes. He
said some children are arriving at
lhe school at 7:15 a.m., having to
wait an hour and 10 minutes before
classes begin. He added lhe same
children are not getting home until
between 4:30 and 5 p.m.
(em)Board President Harry Siders
asked Sheppard 10 look into lhe sit·
uation.
Also speaking to lhe board was
Jonnie Meadows of Citizens for
Mason Colinty. Meadows said she
had encountered no business, organizati1,m or individual who had
given proxy to the delegations
speaking at lhe last meeting. Two
delegations had attended giving
support to lhe board in naming a
reptacemcnt for Wright The delegations added they were representing businesses, organizations and
individuals.
MeadoWs also.spoke on consolidation. She said lhe .P_COple of lhe
county voted consohdauon of the
lhrec high schools down twice by a
3-1 majority. "The million dollar
question 1s: How can you vote to
overturn the will or the people?"
she asked the board members .
Meadows was referring 10 priorities
set by the board in requesting
School Building Authority funds
for local projects.
Member Paul Docffinger told
·Meadows consolidation was on Iy
one of sbt priorities submitted 10
RESA. ''Even though we submitted
lhe projects, there is no guarantee
lhey will get funded," he said.
Board members entered into
executive session for approximately 45 minutes to discuss personnel
matterS. When they returned, members voted to delete the position of
· coonlinator of financial affairs, and
post a position of accountant II. A
special meeting was set for Dec. 9,
5 p.m., to discuss personnel.

Economists see minimal benefit
from Clinton's stimulus program

Two injured in
Rt. 7 accident

Man bospitalized

·before sentencing

~

I

end up causing more harin than
good because it woi.Jld push longtenn interest rates higher.
Even wilh an expected modest
stimulus package, the forecasters
said lhe budget deficit will be $16
billion higher next year than if
Bush had won re-election.
They projected lhe deficit total
at an all-time high of $340 billion,
compared with an· imbalance of
$290.2 billion in the fiscal year that
ended Sept 30.
But the added stimulus program
will have only a moc!tst impact on

the nation 's unemployment rate
lhe business economists said:
predicted the jobless rate would
average 7.2 percent during 1993
only slightly below the current 7.4
percent level.

They

Part of lhe reason for the expectations of only a modest pickup in
growlh is a widespread belief lhat
the country 's trade performance,
which has been one or the few
bright S{J?lS for lhc economy, will
begin widening Ibis year and deteriorate even furlher in 1993.

Home sales down 10.3 percent :
WASHINGTON '(AP)- Sales
of new homes fell 10.3 percent in
October, the first drop in six
monlhs, lhe government estimated
today. Analysts noted, however,
that preliminary sales reports
throughoui th is year have been
underreported and subsequently
revised upward.
The estimated decline was
spread throughout each of the
country's four regions. If it is not
revised, it would be the largest
drop since sales plunged ll .5 percent last March.
The Departments of Commerce
and Housing and Urban Development said sales totaled 600,000 at a
seasonally a d
·usted
= annual rate,
down from a s
ly revised 7 per·
cent gain, to 669, , a monlh car·
liec. The government initially estimated September sales had fallen I
percent
In advance or t!te report, .many
analysts had predicted new honre·
sales.had risen slightly more than I
percent in October.
The Commerce Department has
said the revisions occur because the
preliminary reports often are based
on just 60 percent of the data
sought and then updated as the
remainder of the information
becomes available.
Adren Cooper, a department
s)l?kesman, explained lhat the ini-·
ual estimate is based on applica·

•

lions for building permits and later
revised wilh actual sales information. Until recently, lhat resulted in
relatively small adjusuucnts.
But the problem has worsened
recently because economic weakness and ti!lht credit conditions are
causing builders to pos1p0ne filing
applications until after lhcy actually have made a sale, Cooper said.
The result has been a consistent
bias toward underreporting.
'

days until·
Christmas

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