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•

Ott PolntPiunnt, wv

December&amp;, 11182

Raw coOkie doqb co be

Ohio Lottery

.Browns
defeat
Bengals

•

barmful to your bealtb
W-'SHINGTON (AP)- The
Agriculturo Dopa tment says tbat

one of dlilclbood'a IP-Old trciU
- Iickinl raw coolde and cake
dou&amp;b from mom's JIIWnl bowl can be harmful.
Salmooc:Jia
•
y 11 Ibis tmc of year.
Tbc department says even
homemade JCe cram llld egg nog
can be fatal io "the elderly, the
youns and those with weakened

=

Pick 3:
275
Pick 4:
0042

Page4

~cker :

•

812-3471

'!teritidis

. Yo!. 43, l.lo. 158
Copyrlghl8d 11182

SBUB FBjSB' ·

. WOOSTER, Ohio (AP) - A
womu who has spent men than
SO years providing shelter to the
homeless could lose her home.
Dorothy Mackey, 82, was
served Thursday with a foreclosure
lawsuit tbat scelcs payment of the
$3,798.72 balance
the
mortp&amp;C she took on her
in
1976.

Man killed in scuffle
with police officer

lellllininc

From starr and wire reports
A suspected drunken driver was
kiUed early Sunday morning when
be scuffled with police and the officer's gun discharged, a statement
from the Gallipolis Police Department reported.
Police received a report Sunday
from West Virginia aillhoritics lhar
a possible drunk driver in ari older
model Chevrolet Chevene had
crossed the Silver Memorial Bridge
and might have been headed for

I··------II:C-~
;DIAMOND !
. ! . RINGS I
Berry exports way up
WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S.
berry exports are in the pink.
.
They have grown from less than
$50 million in 1987 to $130 mil. lion in 1991, ljlaking the United
States the world's second largest
exporter of berries, say trade

expcns.

•''}be global appetite for berries
is a healthy one," says a report in
the November issue of AF.pon.er
magazine. "World trsde m berries
from 1985 to 1990 grew 2 1/2
times to $658 million, according to
the United Nations Food and Agriulture organization."
J U.S. berry exports grew even
faster than world berry trade, it
• added.

percent of U.S. belTy exportS. They
tripled from 1987 to 1991, rising
from $29 million tp $91 million;
" The rise in exports ll)ay be .
overstarcd because of undcrreporting of exports to Canada prior to
1990," the report said. "Even so,
strawberries showed Slrong growth
of 14 percent bet)Veen 1990 and
1991."
More than lhree-fourths of U.S.
stra·whelrr; production comes from

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J 5 DIAMOND SOLITAIRES

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DEU ONlY

TREE OF LIGHTS • The Meigs County
SeliiOr Citizens Ut tbell Tree of Lighta on Friday
evening. 'rhe tree serves as a memorial to all
deceased members of tbe ceilter.11151de the ceater, anothr tree bearln1 handmade wooden

TAWNEY ··•
JEWELERS

i

·e 422s.-1Ave.os, ... ll
----------~

CDC, doctors plan first national ·
fight against child lead poisQning

'
,•

WI ALSO FUftll&amp; all.7 Willi I 1' OF IDLil CAllY
. ID0U81180 I I BE l'fOBE.
.
.

Slap Byfta
Dldl Far Yaar
· Party ~fray
Waeds.Ordar

Seeks position

(ra~~ev;:~~~e &amp;- tfu;.:ft!:~ ~
OPEN SUND.AYf! 1 TO H.M.
'P,.,.__.,.,..._~.,rowr--~ .

•

oraam.m ta recoiatza doaon' lrleads, family
.members and aeilhllors. Thoac wooden omammta..wbkh c:ast SS, arc ths &amp;iftn to the doaor
lifter tbe holi!la.JS. H~e, a ..,.., or seniors pose
with the tree ontalde.

One Fro• .Oar
.List or Create
Your Own!

.

·Vaughan's Produce
has a wlda ••lactlon
of Frail Baskets or

Spacial Order oaa.to

Ill t•r naada.

.

atyla available.

•••••••
.
.
*Ia•:
Dell Deluxe Club Balagna..... P!!~. .
7
c
Frazan Orange Juice.....\,.!!:.~... I
•1801~

.

••J
..........
and
·gama lllal malca peal Clulatm.- gifts far .
VAUIIIII'IIID. baa

U1J age. If yaa waat a liard to Bad •ovla or
....., we c•n gallt. ltop In · ad check oat
our aelacllaa and low prlclia today.

t\TI.ANTA (AP)- Lead poisoning is caUed the most serious
environmental threat fac&lt;:d by
Amcric11's youngest citizens, yet
many parents don't know that simple home renovations can permanently jeopardize their children's
health.
DQctors and public health offi.·
cials hope to change that as they .
begin a tllree-day meeting today to
map out a strategy to fight lead poisoning.
.o 'This is a real critical lime,"
said Dr. Suzanne Binder, chief of
lead poisoning prevention for the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
· "Still we have $:hildren J!Oi·
soncd because their parents didn't
know not to break down walls in
old housins and doctors don't
!mow to screen blood.··
Lead, which·can be found in
paint in older houses, can stunt a
child's intdlectual. behavioral and
physical develnpmenL Many doc·

tors believe any exposure· to Ie8d
causes permanent damage, but
nobody IS certain beeN""' it hasn't
been adequately studied.
• •
Tile doctors and advocacy
sroups meeting a1 the CDC hope to
develop a strategy to eliminate.
within 20 years. childhood lead
poisoning, which the CDC calls the
most serious environmental threat
to children.
It docsn 't tate much exposure
for a child to reach what the CDC
~onsidcrs a dangerous level of lead
m the blood, experts say. Tbe CDC
estimates 3 million U.S. children
have reached tbat danger zone.
The big,est culprit is paint in
the S7 million houses built before
1978, when the government banned
lead from household ~nt. Chil:lren frequently eat J?aint chips.
They also inhale lead m dust, usuaUy whcli their homes are la!Ovalcd.
.
Lead is also ~t in poUuted
soil and air and in some drintins

wafa'.

Adults get aU this exposure, 100.
But childreo's bodies ..« s lead
diffcrauly, so lbcy lblolb ~ 10 SO
percent of tbe lead tbey ingest
while adults absorb only ·10 percent..
·
• 'Clhildlm are being used as the
barometer of lead in tbc environme11t," said Dr. Howard Mofenson
of Long lslend, N.Y., a member of
the American Ac.demy of Pediatrics' commiuce on lead poisoning.
"lt's similar to when tbe coal
miners used to put a CIDIIY down
tbc mine to ace if it could survive
~·t 100 much carbon

:!!:

MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- Two U.S. F-14s flew over the
capital today. and Ptntagon soun:cs
said U.S. Marine combat troops
would come. ashore at frrst light
Wednesday to begin a U.N.-authorizcd men:y mission.
Tbe sources, who spare on condition of anonymity. said F-14s
from the aircraft carrier USS
Ranger flew reconnaissance missions OYQ' Somalia as ~ of flRal
prepanltions for the military inter•ventiqg,_
.
.
. l'he sources also said Ambas. sador-at-Large Robert · Oatley
would meet .with clan warlords
today to tell them what the Marines
planned to do. He Ul not done so
·by late in the day, but did brief
international aid workers about
dcvelopmcnts. ·
Cable News Network reported
that a lealD of U.S. air traffiC controllers landed today outside
Mogadishu to help guide in planes
tbat will bring more troops and
supplies once the Marines secure

.

· The ;:anger the child, the

?sk~~:~,Prist
1ft

I ,,,..n e sa'" •
.lIr.ia,.._.n
'JS.

because tbcir nervous systems

WASHINGTON (AP) - Unreleased White House tapes show
that l'lesident Nixon wanrcd to use
the attempted assassinl!tion '!f
Couoty; Kevin Lorin". 30, in . George Wallace, to diScredit
Muskinpm County· IamTc PaxiOD
Geo.rge Mc:&lt;Jov!l"' s 19~ Demo21, in Bclmolll~; and Dooaici crabc presidcntia! campBign, The
Wcllini:. 35, in Tuscarawas Coua· NewThYortcr Rf0'1S ~dNY:
d
ty.
. e magaz1nc S8l
•xon an
Task force information about Whi~S:~ ~Col· ·
Dillon has matcllcd lli'Ofde points son . li I&gt; ani!Dgthe ~
of the suspeclcd tin« created by campslgll terature m
,:·
the FBI, laid Chief Deputy DBIIe tee lljMblbltof~-be am_n
Shryock of Coshocton County a MaArlhur Brcmer ~-llourswj,-~
lead tastfortcinmdig;aror.
'
Y 15, 1972
f AI'OIIUUIUba'g. .........,
Dillon, a 1m joumalism .....,_ go.vc~r o
a ma, W\'1 C811!·
uate of Obio SIIIC n ..:.....:-"'j;, p111grung fcc the Dcmocralic pi'CSI·
w'd be ...... _ __. :::::".:.".!' •oo dential nomination wben he was
.;:'life'"""" -~v ..... J shot.
SS.:Ury--'- ~d Dl'llon was fol ·
. The expectation was t!'&amp;t tbe
- - ' ~.
.
discovery of the Democranc camI.u..... • - 10 "! IS ames driv- ~n material in tbe apartment
•DB hundl~ '!f ~ tlu'oulbout
d be leaked in such a way as 10
~ ~· incl~g the coun· ~ to lint McGovern and his
llCSm whicb tbc slayinp oa:um:d.
to tbc Wallace shooli"" the
Dillon 'WOikcd ... .n.... tbc weet
. said.
_
..... .
-....
mapz1ne
for tbc Canton water dc~eoLBUt the idea fizzled becaUIC the
~ !Jul~oftbclive~-oaiiiiCII FBI quietly scaled off Bremer's
tillings·m Clll~ Ohio occurred apartment, ilcconting 10 tbc artic:le
on a w,..bmd DiUoa -on vaca- by journalist Sc
M. Hcnh
lion whea Lorins was tilled on
ymour
•
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1990, Shry- '
oct said.
.
.

' t0 pnme
• suspect
PTOJa.f:l
l e k eys au th 0 riJi••es
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- A pro- .
me by the FBI's National Center
for the Analysis of Violent Crime
concluded the person ret&amp;O:::
for the deaths Of five ou
·
in Ohio was most Iitcly a white
male, at least. 30.xears old with
above average intelligence.
The profile speculates be may
spend considerable time in rural
areas, normaUy driving, and he also
bas acv~ wcapon8 in his home. · ·

Thomas Lee Dillon. 42, identi·
tied last week as a suspect, is being
held without bolld in Cantm on an
unrelat.ed charge of buying
firearms. Dillon, of Masilolia,
about 10milcssouthcastofCanllln,
bas not been clwged in any of the
deaths.
A task force is continuing to
investigate the slayinBS of Gary
Bradley, 44, in Nobfe County;
Claude Hawtina, 49, in Coshoctou

• t:s
_,_;,___ Loca·I brie
-

Fire destroys structure
Fire desb'Qycd ali unoccupied structure on State Route 124 in
Syracuse on Mon$y morning.
Units were dispatched at 1:40 a.m. this morning, and were on the
fire scene until approximately 4 am., according to Fue Chief Jack
Peterson. The ~SIOI)' fnunc SII'UCture is owned by Ed Bartels of
Pomeroy, according to Peterson, and was maintained as a rental
property.
Pomeroy fire deparonent also responded. The cause' of the blaze
is undetermined.
.

Blaze damages trailer
A mobile home owned by Leo Zwilling of Racine was damaged
by fire on Sunday morning.
Units of the Racine fue department responded 8111:09 am., and
Captain Dave Neigler reported that the trailer sustained clW:nsive
fue and water damage. .
.
A e&amp;Ulle bas not yet been determined, and Fire Chief John Holman was not available a1 press time.

Patrol probes accident
A Syracuse man escaped injury in a one-vehicle accident on •
Ohio 124.in Suaon Township Sunday around S:30 p.m.
Accordiq to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
HiiJhway Patrol, 18-y-·old Jason L. Powclf was Clstbound on
OhiO 124 ud llnlek a suanlrail after attempting to pass another
eastbound vehicle.
.
Damage to the pickup truck Powell was driving, a l986 Nissan
Hardbody owned by John M. Powell of Syracuse, was listed as
IighL The~ was not dalnaged.
· No cillltlons were issued. .
'·
Contiaued on paJIC 3

airfields.
Diplomatic sources said 1SO
Foreign :bcgion pamtroopers based
in neighboring Djibouti likely
would arrive in Somalia after the
Marines and be followed by 8SO
French soldiers and Legionnaires a
day later.
The effort gained new ur~ency
with reports of a bloody Slcirmisb in
tbe interior, where food is short and
hundreds of Somalis are starving to
death daily.
.
More tlllll\ 28 ~le were tilled
in Sunday's ftrc!ight in Baiiloa, a
iown200milcs west of Mogadishu
where anarchy has imperiled the
relief effon and forced out most
Coreisn aid w&lt;dcrs. More th8ll SO
people are daily dying of hunger .
and disease in Baidoa.
There had been speculation the
1,800 Marines on three ships offshore might land as early u Tuesday. They are the frrst of 28,000
American soldiers and Marines
being sent to stop clan fighting and
safeguard food.

Nixon wanted to discredit
=:~:l.~reor~': McGovern in '72 campaign
. older children.
·
:..::age

where Lamm was pronounced dead
and tbe officer was treated and
released. An autopsy was to be per. formed this morning at lhe Franklin
County coroner's office.
:Oetective Michael Tucker
would not identify the officer, nor
give any details of the incidenL He
said additional infonnation, inCluding the officer' s name, will be
releas¢ later this afternoon foUOVI·
ing an investigation.

Gailipolis.
A police offiCer stopped a vehi·
cle filling the description, driven by
Donald Lamm , 37, 123 Fourth
Avenue, Gallipolis, shortly after
2:30 a.m. on State Route 7 near
Johnson's Mobile Home Part. ·
Tbe statement sai4that after the
officer plllled over Lamm's vehicle, the two scuffled and the officer's gun discharged.
Lamm and the officer were both
taken to Holzer Medical Center

Troops will go ashore in
Somalia early Wednesday

..

J

. 446-1615

"As a result, the U.S . world
market share grew to 14 percent,
up from I 0," the report said. "In
addition to the United States, the
other major players in berry trade
are the EC, which dominates wilrld
trade at n percent, and Canada;
which lost market share, slipping
from 7 to 4 pen:enL' '
Strawberries represent about 70

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State Democratic Party Chairman
Eugene Branstool bas applied for a .
position in the Clinton administration,

.

.

M,.

dlt

J

HElSlEY'S KISSES•4 oz.
II 01 . .
II' Kl,.
REESE'S
BU11'ER CDPII40z.

~

1 Section, 1o P - 25 centa
A llulll....... Inc. Newapoopw

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo; ,Monday, December 7, 1992

BI.IELESS

Could lose home

!

LoW toalghtlll lOs. Cloudy.
Tuesday, portly ounny. Hlp Ia

059465

St.
011.

Tbe risk of food poi100iq rises
durinl the holidAy ICIIOO bcc•nac
of the popularity of buffets and
because some seasonal treats are
especially IUSCCplible 10 salmoneUa
contamination, said John Mason of
USDA's Animalllld Plant Health
'""""" . SCrvi
-r.s~Ua
is a J&amp;:.
terium that can mate you sick if
,you don't handle food safely," he
said.

'i

'·

upper lOs.

liDDIIIIC systemJ.''

RIVER VALLEY"FFA PLACES 15TH IN CONTEST· Pic·
tured above left to right are Jason Bowers, Wayne Brannen and
Collen Goddard who recently placed 15tb iD tbe State FFA Soil
Jud~iog coiltest at MarysvUie, Ohio•.This team had placed second
earher at the District 10 FFA Soil Judging contest In Marietta
which earned tbem the honor of participating io the state contest.
AU tbree students are members or tbe River VaUey FFA.

..

Super LottO:
8-15-27-29-37-39

..

Nixon lawyer R. Stan Mortenson declined to comment on The
New Yodta" story.
. Hersh~ not say in the arti~le
If be had direct access to~ stiUsecretla~JC:S. ~ ~· 14 18SUC of
the magazme 18 available on news·
~=g· to the magazine, the

~=m~~~les

G.
"Bebc" Rebozo f.ve the president
h d b
h
~
cas an
oug I a ouse •Or
Nixon's younger daughter, Julie,
and her husband, David Eiscnbow·
er.
-Nixon and White House chief
of staff H.R. Haldeman "openly
discussed the sale of ambassadorships- to what country, for bow
much in contributions."
Nixon allegedly insisted that
people Wllftting to serve as ambassador in more desirable posts be
iold the~ould lose the job
. after a
year
they made an additional
contribution.
- Nixon conducted allegedly
improper Oval Office discussions
will) Chief Justi(:O W81J'C11 Burger
about Watergate and pending
SupremeCouncases.

'.' Frankly, there is some disappointment that they have not
arrived here by now. 'ftc would
hope that they would hurry up and
arrive," said Rhodri Wynn-Pope.
team leader of tbe CARE international relief agency.
The Americans are leading an ·
international force to neutralize
bands of unruly gunmen who have
plunged the nation into chao's,
stealing relief shipments intended

forthes~J·
Three · planes landed Sunday in Bar.der.a. another hard-hit
town near Baidoa where aid workers bad been down to their last 2S
sacks of grain. The U.N. said 160
people died of starvation in
Bardcra 011 Saturday.
Aid groups said they planned to
paracbute food to tal8 of~
of people in vi111ges around
Bardera, where the diinser is compounded by land mines.
Food, meinwhile, was movuig
again from Mopdishu's port. Aid
workers ~ay loaded a secoa~ .
convoy of vehicles with u.s:.

~~:'tor'!ea~o~e:r=~rde~

city.

Disagreementa . between
.. Mohamed F811'8h Aidid, tbe warWei who controls the 'southern half
of tbc capital, llld rival leader Ali
Mahdi Mohamed in the north had
kept tbe pon closed more tban a
month. After two days of ncgotiations, the first shipment was
aUowcd Sunday.

18

·Surviyors recall 'Day that will live in .infamy'
By
A~~ Press
Commemorations planned for
today'sannivmary'oftheJapancse
allaCk on Pearl Harbor 1re low-tey.
almost as quiet as the Sunday
morning S1 years ago, before the
sound of ailpllncs brotc the trnpical stillness.
Frederick Bowen was alone on·
duty at bis Jumy Air Cups base in
Hawaii when be lard pllmea roar
pasL
"I tbou~ht it was tbe Navy
buzzins us, • Bowea, of Parter,
Colo., iaid. "They were always
doinl thaL We'd buzz them and
they'd buzz 111 bli:k."
'lben be saw a Japancae~Iane
bearini down 011 Wheeler
They "came down tbe ramp

h.e

where we parked the planes. The
f111t one strafed thc ,cockpits with
incendiaries. They bumecl out the
middle of the planes. They had it
planned pretty weU."
Tbe
which came without
warning or a declaration of war,
killed 2,403 Americans and
wounded 1,178 and plunsed the
Uniled Stalell into World War u.
In Hawaii, Retired Vice Adm.
Samuel Gravely, tbc Navy's firSt
blactadmilal, istospealtataceremony that will focus on tbc role
thll minorities plaYed in tbc segreU.S. military at the time of
auack.
.
"We've ncvet examined the
Pearl Harbor auack through the
eyes of ethnic minorities .,... and

•lack.

C

each one has a different story to
tell," said Blanca Stransky,
SPOkeswoman for the National. Part
Service that runs the USS Arizo1ui
Memorial.
·
Samuel Bishop, a mess attendant !lained to set fuses on the USS
Bagley. was one of~ few blacts
ondcckduringtbcaaact,Stransty
said. Bishop. whoac ship was creelited with shooting down one of the
Japanese planes, also IS to speak.
In Lexington, Ky., the Pearl
Harbor Commemorative Associalion planned a daylong program
today. Featured speakers were to
Include retired Army Col. Walter
D. Sh!Jl1oand retired Army Maj.
Gen. GeorgeS. Palton m.
Short is the sqn ofGcnrnll Wal-

te~ C. Short, commander or the
U.S. AnnyatPearl Harbor on Dec.
7, 1941. PallOR is the son of World
War U hero Gen. George ·S. Pauon
Jr.
:
Bowen joined about 720 people
attending the Pearl Harbor Sur- · ·
vivors Association national conventioninLiUleRoct. ·
The convention also is a reunion
for at least 7S of the people sta·
tioncd at the Naval Hospital, whee
Iggy Brown of Tucson; Ariz., was
· working thst Sunday as a .pharma·
.cist's mate third class.
''It was hell, that was all, ' '
BrowQ said. "Th~ haldest thin!!
was seeing the burned bodies. I'll
never forget the pain and agony
tboac tids.sull'ered."

�•

'

.~
~

·commentary

Monday, December 7, 1112

..

The Daily Sentinel
c-t 8taeet
...ro,.Oido

. D:CVO'I'ZD TO TIIB l1'l'l'BitiiiiT or 'I'RB IIBIGS-II.UOI'f A11aA

•
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publllller

CHARLENE HOEfLICH .

PAT WIOTEIIEAD
AsslsWit Publlsher/Coatroller

.

-

Ac:c:u-Weather•

Ge~~eralMUJ~~er

LETI'I!RS OP OPINION uo welcome. They sbould be leu than 300
words. All !etten 110 subject lo editing and must be oigDOd with 1111ne,
oclciRn and lelepboae number. No unoiped !etten will be pablilbe&lt;l. Lellln
should be in good taste, lddnsoiDI imlel. not pmollllili•.

Inaugural challenge:
Striving for simple, .
..~ccessible, elegant
.·
•·

ByWALTERR.MEARS
. :;
AP Special Corretlpii!MI..,t
•: WASHINGTON - In the ceremonies and celebralioas that dnunatize
(be difference - and distance - between the role of a president aad the
lives of lhe citizens he leads, incoming·presidenas alviays loot for a way
Ji! say that lhey won't lose conract with OldiDary Americans. · .
.• President-elect Clinton is making that a centtallheme or bis inauguralion nat RIORth. What's more, his people say he Is dettmlined 'to make it
Jist when he moves into the White House, and thM would be a bJCak·

WASHING._TON - Air Force
Chief of Staff Gen. Mcnill A.
"Tony" McPeak is I! former fighter pilot who proved he had the
right .stuff when he flew 269 cornbat missions over the jungles of
Vietnam. Now he is locked in a
bureaucratic dogfight over his
obscssim with appearenccs, which
he has been kltow to take to comic
extrmles.
. The emphasis on style has not
been lost on the Air Force rankand-file, some of whom have
launched a bureaucratic-style guerrilla movement by using an underground press 10 ~ke fun at each
step ofMcPeak s controversial
re~ .
. .
In the second and most recent of
what these secret scribes call the
"Brown Papers:·• McPeak is
tweaked for his allemptto mold the
Air Force in his own image what c.ritics derisively call the
''manl man., look.
Do~ Brown Papers .have espcciaUy made light of McPeak's decision to ban crew-neck T-shirts for
open-necked uniforms, in favor or
V-neck T-shirts. ''The implication,
of course, is that the more chest
hair, the be Iter," the fll'st Brown
Paper StaleS•.

By Jack Anderson
and '

galle graffii1 artist cb'ew a miiSIIIChe

on the 1eneral's official portrait
widl I felt-lip 11181ta'. The defaced
oil )lliatiag hung on a Pentagon
wall for a full day to the amusement of passersby in a busy hallway before it was taken down and
repaired.
"To be a ~ ~-of the manly
The "Brown Papers" appear to
man, we must ~ a di.slinclive · have sprung Ill&gt; [l8rlly as result of
Air Force uniform, ' the iecond , anxiety among noo-pilots in the Air
Brown Papei' stiles, golns oo to list Force, who fear they 'U be the first
the three no-acis for the fashion- ones eliminated when McPeak
conscious fighrer pilot. "1be lhin:l tranJforms the force into a leaner
worst thinJ is to wear the wrong oodlt geared more 10 fighter jocks
kind of Ulldergllrmeni:J ... the manly than su~ petsonncl.
man pays peat atleDiioo 10 uncia"Cncs of so-called 'equal
garments.'
· . .
opponunity' are misplaced. The
Indeed, many crilica aot their Air Force does provide equal
ftrstglimpte of Mc:Pellt'1 leader- opnnrtunity for everyolie within
ship style when oae of his first ~genetic limitations. The probexecutive dtrisiona wai to change .hD has been that those without the
the. Air Force aDiforma. McPeak getlcs 10 see like an eagle or tn propenonally intmduced the SU mil- ducc the proper neck-to-waist ratio
lion prototype uniform on Hal~ actually think !hat they can comloween 1991, ltrutling iiiWUIId .the pete wtlb the manly men that do,"
P':n.!Bgo~'s h~~ways. Air Fo.rce reads the second Brown Paper,
mii!IORS lmPiedlai';IY began com- • obtained by our associate Ed
panng the new uaiform to some- Henry,
thing out of the television series
white the rank-aitd-file enjoy a
"ThcShortlLovc Boat."
, laugh at McPeak's expense, the
Y after .~ uniforms were geuaa1 has employed a ractic most
unveiled, Mc.Peak again had his · recendy .11Sed by Ross Perot - an
sense or style insullel! when a rene- "infomercial" - where McPeak

Michael Binstein

~n't worked out even when a prcaident has lried as diligently as

flllllJly Carter did to cut through formality and security and keep in cornincn touCh.
.
:: "We want to make sure that people IDidersland that they arc lnlly in
dlargc of the f!Ovemment, that the govcrnmcat is 100essible to them, that
lhc p!Wdcnt ISII'I ~cone who is out of touch with their problems and
!heir concerns,'' said Clinton spokesman (Je(qe SlephaDopoulos.
So thcRl arc eight free, open-to-the-public eveni:J built into the fourllav exuavaganza that will sllmlWid the Clinton inauguraJioa on Jan. 20.
'nie last of them will be a public reception at the White House oo Jan. 21,
celcbnued by Democratic planners as a signatUre event for Clinton.
''We have a president who is accessib!C:, who wani:J to mc:et and talk to
real people, who docs not W!IJII 10 he coofmed in. the way that prcaidenl:l
have been in recent years," Democratic National Chainnan Ronald H.
Brown said. · ,
• President Bush came to office saying he didn't want to be
• ·coostrained either, and held a lhrcc-hour open house at the
ihc day after his inauguration, roo.
. ,· It was called the Whire House American Welcome, a
· m10 a m:eption as the JRSidenl and Mn. Blllh peeled many
people who came throUgh. Some of them had camped
ihc head of the line. .
.
.
That was the f1111 public illaugural reception at the White House since
;_William Howard Tafl held one in 1909.
.
Wbel! Andrew llcbon opened the White Houac for a reception the
...!light he was nominared in 1829, about 20,1XXl people showed up a mob
' that ruined the furniture, drapes and C8I)ICIS.Jachoil feft by way Or ml'
."Jiindow and went back 10 the hotel where he was Slaying.
·"·. ~ve~ Abraham Lincoln~ receplion llOUble, after his second inaugu! ~00. m 1865. The crowd lined up for his public reception brotc out of
, .. Jine and crashed a separate receplion held for official guests, grabbing
r./OOCI BJ!II snatching Whire House silverware and pieces of the clrapelies as
UlOUvc:rurs.
,,;• , In the modem White House, with gusrds, gates, metal detectors and a
set SysleDI for public toms, any crowd control problems will be outside as
-people ~~to get in ~ 9 a.m,.-40:~ receptionl!Jic. '.'Anybody can line
,1gp and go,, Brown.said, calling 11 a Sign ofa pn:s1denlial accessibility.
·:· Clinton s bus lrlp to Washin~n from Thomas Jefferson's home in
~e, Va.1 on Jan. 11, IS intended to symbolize that, ton. It is a
last rcpnsc of the c1&amp;bt bus tours of lhe Clinton campaign, 115 miles that
·:~take all day w!dlhands~ sklps along the way.
. • .• 1be Dcmocrauc celebration comes complete w1th gliller, black-tie
•obllls and pageantry to rival the Republican inaugurations that installed
.;I'!Wdent Bwih and Ronald Reagan berorc him.
,'..· There .e 10 be 1~ inaugural balls, with room for 65.000 people. Harry
~8. Truman got by wtth one. By the time Carter was ihaugurated, in 1977
~there were seven, but he called them parties instead or balls to fit hi~
,IJiessqe or simplex, more ~ govcrtl!"enL J:le and his wife 'walked 10
jhe White House ~'ron! the Capllol m !hell' own maugural parade. In office,
Carter scrapPf"' Wh1te House perks, toted his own garment bag and
clrolliJed uHaili(, the Chief."
'
'.; £¥earuaUy, the Carter people found that some trappings and rilllals are
· pan or the ~denlial image Americans cxJ1ecL
So the ~ton planners say theirs will be an inauguration lhat pre-serves tradiuon and accentuates the dignity of the office while symboliz.mg an open JRSidency.
, •; Symbols are the easy part. Delivering on them is the challenge.

a

NatHentoff

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

s·erry!s World

~~
ID 1992 b., NEA . Inc

"/ reslfze that stopping to ask directions is
. 'tantamount to cheating, ' but ... "

•
,I

a,

'

the cutbacks and changes confrmting the Air Force.
The video, which features a
grim, sober-looldng McPeak, was
sent to aU Air Force personnel.
''This drawdown hurts. II hurts
bad. The Air Force has beCn a family, aad aow we' re hurting the family," McPeak says. "We shouldn't
(about fuiUre budget cuts),
fighl the problem or get mad about
it," a stoic McPeak reminds his
troops. "We're damn good now
and we're going to set even better!'
Ironically, McPeak himself did
plenty of ~blinJ earlier this
year when
• ):..cs Alpin, 1)..Wis.,
chainnul of
Houle Armed Services Commitlee, pn!pOsed trimmint,: additional :ps billion rrom
the • CIIIC budget. Ml:P!U called
the plaD "a recipe for mililary dis'ascer," ..(It) requires great menial
chutzpah 10 think we caa meter our
size with any great precision," he
said.
.·
When McPeak arrived on the
scene in October I 990, the Air
Force was already at tho brink of
an era of near-unprecedented
val for the Armed Forces.
h the.Air Force would steal
ow in the Gulf War, an
impression McPeak fostered. it
faced an even more formidable foe
than Saddam Hussein back' horne:
masaive budget cuts brought on by
the Cl1d of the Cold War.
Eater McPeak. Fresh from two
years IS head of the the Pacific
Command in Hawaii, he took
charge in the middle or the Gulf
WJI build-up after Gen. ~hael
Dupn was ruec~ ror telling a television interviewer that the Oli1f War
would probably begin with air
sttilces on ~·
· If McPeak s record in Hawaii is
any indication, budget cuts were
the last thing on his mind as he
moved up through' the ranks. Last
December, we reported that
McPeak ordered $5 million in renovationS' to the Hawaii headquarters while he was in charge. In a
lime or austerity, McPeak's subordinates tried to re-number the
wings or the headquutm building
as 14 separate buildings so the
gold-plated rentodeling jobs would
t look like a series of small maintenance jobs.
·
Jack. Aaderaoa aad Michael
BiDsteiD are writers for Vatted
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

'

Bill Cliaton's transition has
been a thing of eft'iclenc)' aDd dispatCh so far. His teams were put in
place with a minimum of false·
stari:J, staffed for the most pan by
competent, experienced hands, and
all OOIWircl 1111!1 point to
.
ful wort witliin. But th~
underslailding what kind cl government he inlends 10 run is 1101 to be
found in the J!1IChinery cl the trail·
sition. To find lhll, look to the people he selects to fill the most
1ll1pOii lanl jobs in his administration
- and 10 tbe ones be doclnoL
If the_past.is any guide to the
future, Bill Clinton will have awted to show his hand when thia is
read. Early to mid-Dcc:ember has
been the lllllallime fe¥ a new JllCSident to begin inttoclucing h1s top
lllPOinbnCIIIS to the COUIIby. Speculilion along the Potomac - 11011•
• stop speculation - about the new
lords of the Waslling!OO univenc is
fueled by names, flats of names,
old, famous name1, uaknown,
~n·, even out-of-town umes.
s lime, however, this president-

remained in effect early today for
the 10U1ben1 San 1oaquin Valley in
nub ceantJ CalifOIIIIL
..
Heavy rains were forecast .for
central and southern California,
with a chance of Dash flooding and
mud slides. Moderate to heavy
IIIIOW forecast for Nevada and
most of Utah. Freezing raiD and
sleet was forecast for the Nonh·

the West on Sunday dumped IIIOQI
thaa half a foot of snow ia tile
mountains of Ncrtbcm CaliforDia. .
Highs today were forec:ut ia the
20s IIClOSS the IIOI'Ihcm tier, in the
30s IIClOSS the Northeast, across tbe
Great Lakes region and much ot
. the Plains and Far West; in the 40f
in the Mid-Atlantic swea and ccntra1 California; ill, the SOs and 60s
west.
across the SOillhczil tier; and in ~
Llaht IIIIOW was expected to fall 70s in southern .Florida.
over the eastern Great Lakes, while
The high for the nalion Sunday
light snow, sleet or rain Could fall was 80 degrees at Fort Lauderdale,
on the mst of the NMhcast.
Fla.
·
The winter storm that invaded

\

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partial c!C!Iring. Low in
the lOW 20s. Tuesday, partly SUDII)'.
High in the upper 30i .
Exteadecl forecast:

~

1

Wedlleaday tltroqll Prlda7:
.Wednesday aad Thursday, a
Chance oriiQn or SIIOW. Lows in the
20s. Highs in the 30s. Friday, a
chance of SDOW. ·Lows in the 20s.
Highs in upper 20s to mid-30!.

-~.-Area

deaths--

Roger Swartz

Clero Baker

Roger A. Swart;r;, 27, of
Clero M. Bater, 97. Middicoort,
Coolville, died oo Sunday monun
.
• "•
died Saturday, Dec:. 4, 1992 at VetDecemeber 6, 1992 at his resi- CIIUIS Memorial Hospitsl.
dencc.
Born on March 24, 1895 in
He was born in Parkersburg, Poiat Pleasant, W. Va., he was the
W.Va., son of Vernon Swartz of son of the late Charles H. and
BIG V.EGGIES • If you're really lato tara ips, this five ·
Pomeroy and Sharon Surnmcrf'JCid Maria Cossin Baker. He retired' in
P.O,!IIIder could lillke a wllole meal. Georp Baer or Forest Run dug
r&gt;onahue of Coolville. 'He was a 1952 as chief train dispatcher at
1t froiD Ills gardeu Tll1rsday aloog wltll this giaDt Japanese radisb
1983 graduAte of Fcdcril Hi:K:Idng Grifton, W. Va. After that he
whlc:ll
welabecl four pouads. SIDce Baer reUrecl20 or so years ago,
High School, where he graduatcil . =andasslocohnialed•
• wtheithu~~-sonFurs:
10
he
has
soue luto prdeuillg Ia a big way.
·
as valedictaian, a 1987 graduate cl
..,._
the Colunibus CoUege of An and nilure Store in Middleport. He
Design and worked as an advertis- attended the Middiepcrt J'resbyteriing director for the Universisal an Church and the First Baptist.
Matrix Corporation.
Church of MiddleporL
Three accidents, involving vehiBesides his parents, he is surHe is survi vfd' by a da':f~ter,
AI 2:S3 p.m. a car owned by
vived by his step-father, A1 Don- Mar)' B. Hindy, a son and
fit· cle damage but no injuries, and a Gayle R. Conkins, 22, Gallipolis,
altue, Coolville; a brother,' Rex of ter·m·law, E~ison and Bem1ce car fire were ·investigated by caught fire under the hood.
...... gh , Pa.; -~Pomeroy firemen were on the
Plu.ouur
"""" s•·........: Mn.· Baker and a dauf:ter·in-law, Flo- Pomeroy Police Friday afimloon.
RoDDie (Robia) Rusaell aad Mrs. renee Baker, al of Middleport,
Bob (Rena) Vales, all or Coolvillc, eight grandchildren, 16 greatand Mrs. Bob (Tina) Halper, Bel- grandc~ildren, six great-g~eat­
pre; several nieces and nephews;, granck:hildren, 8nd several RICCCS
Continued fioom page 1
and maternal arandparents, Rex and~: .
' and H Ana . Summerfield . of
~s his....-. he, was pre: ReedsvWc.
• ~ tn death by his wife, Anna
He was preceded in death by his Wmdom Biker, a son, 1ohn W.
Meigs Emergency Services units answered the foUowing calls
over the weekend: SATURDAY, 10:38 a.m., Pomeroy to State
paternal grandparents, Vero and ~· five brothers, and two sisROIIIC 143, Carl Roach·IO Veterans Memorial Hospilal; 1:15 p.m.,
~er!cW:Z~m be held on Tucs- Funeral services will be held
Middleport squad to Ovabwok Center, C1ero Baker to Veterans;
day at 2 p.m. at Coolville United Wednesday at 11. a.m. at the Fisher
3:22 p.m., MilldlcpM 10 Oliver Street, William McNallas 10 VeterMethodist Chun:h with Rev. Helen FUIItll1 Home with the ~. 1B!BCS
ans; 4:42 p.m., Pomeroy squad to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita·
Cline officiating. Burial will be in Seddon and .the Rev. Kri~ Tne!'tion Center, Paul D'Amico to Veterans; SUNDAY, 8:17a.m..
Cooley Ccmetliry in Coolville.
tong offi~lating. Burial wiD be ID
Racine 10 Sixth Strect, Frances Roberts to Holzer Medical Center;
Friends may call at White· Clr!'vel Hill Cemetery in Cheshire.
11:09 a.m .. Racine unii:J 10 State Route 124, trail« fire 81 the Leo
Blower Funeral Home in Coolville Fnends may call at the funeral
Zwilling residence; 3:28 p.m., MilldlcpM unit to Williams Street,
on Monday from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7 home Tuesday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Lana lames, treared; 3:55 p.m., Syracuse squad to State Route 7,
to 9 p.m.
p.m. .
Cecil Baker to St. Joseph Hospilal; 6: 19 p.m., Racine squad to
Cherry S~t, Larry Spencer 10 Veterans; 7:S7 p.m., Pomeroy
In ~icu. of Dowers, memorial Stanley Moore
squad
to Spring Avenue, Susan Taylor to Holzer; 8:09p.m., ·
CORtrlbUIIODS may be made 10
'
Moun
Pomeroy squid to the police department, Lsura Haley, treated; 10
Columbus AIDS Task Force or the
Stanley Moore, 72. 1976
I
Athens County Hospice.
Tabor Road, Vinton, died Sunday,
p.m., Rutland squad to Price Hollow Road, An&amp;ela White kl Holzer; .
Dec. 6, 1992, at Holzer Medical
MONDAY, 1:40 a.m., Syracuse units 10 Stare Route 124, structure
Center.
fii'C at the Ed Bartels property, 2:091\.m.. Pomeroy ass.isred; 9;01
Born Nov. 19, 1920, in Prantlin
a.m,, Tuppers Plains aiKI Ponlcroy uruts 10 an auto accident, Ttna
County, Ky., he was the son of the
Harold Sedgwick
Cowdery and 1onathan Newlun 10 O'Blmess Memorial Hospitsl. ,
Harold T. Sedgwick, 48, late 1oseph Louis and Effie Cox
Columbia, Mo., .died Saturday, Moore.
He retired in 1982 from the
Dec. 5, 1992.
Kentucky
Depanment of TransHe was born Ott. 6, 1944, a son
small antiqoc 10 share. HostesSes
Formerly
of Frantron,
portation.
AAtomeet
of Evelyn Sedawick, Tuppers
arc Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, Mrs.
Ky.
;
he
was
a
res1denl
of
Gallia
The
Pomeroy
Group
or
AA
will
Plains, and the late Harold SedgCecil Blackwood, Mrs. Michael
County
for
the
last
two
years.
meet
Thursday
at
7
p.m
.
at
the
wick.
He attended the University of Sacred Heart C81holic Church. Call Elberfeld, Mrs. Gary Moore Jr.,
Besides his mother, Mr. SedaMrs. John Rose and Mrs. Arthur
wick is survived by bis wife, Kadi- Kentucky and was a Kentucky 992-5763 for informatiOn.
Skinner.
leen, Columbia, Mo.; and many Colonel
Womea'• Fel'-sbip to meet
He
was
a
staff
sergeant
with
PortlaDd
PTO
to
meet
aunts, unclet and couSins•
The
Meigs County Women's
2Sl9th
Army
Air
Corps
Base
Unit
Portlaud
Elementary
PTO
will
Besides bis father, he was preFellowship
will hold ii:J monthly
and
as
a
side-gunllet
was
caplllred
meet
Tuesday
at
7
p.m.
at
the
ceded in death by a brother, Donald
meeting
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at
in
OerrnMiy
during
World
War
U,
school.
Everyone
welcome.
K. Sedgwick.
the
Hemlock
Grove
Christian
managed
to
C8CIIIlC
£rom
a
prisonerMemorial services will be
Church.
Officers
will
be
inslalled.
•
of-war
camp
and
entered
SwitzerSorority to meet
Wcdnesda.Y at the Memorial FunerPublic
invired
.
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
al Home m Columbia, Mo., 1217 land.
He 1arer served in the 884111 Air Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
Gnagetomeet
. Business Loop, 70 West,
Engineering
Squadron
and
received
The Rock Springs Grange w!ll
Thursday
at
6
p.m.
at
the
home
of
Columbia, Mo.
several deco111tions and citations Donna 1ooes for a Christmas party. meet Thursday at 7 p.m. There will
Bring $S to $10 Cbrisbnas items be a potluck dinner. Meat and table
for his service.
The Daily Sentinel
The last of his immcdiat.c fami- . for the exchange.
serv1ce will be furnished. 1b~re
will be a while elephant gift
ly, he is survived by several
(VIIPII 11.-,
Chester Fire Departmeat exchange. Bring non-perishable
cousins in Fnllkfort aad by special
. Publlohtid ...., .nor-, MODIIoy
~ Friday, 111 Coart St., p
.,,
.
friends, An and Leslie Adams of party
items for a Christmas projecL
The
Chester
Fire
Department
Ohio
by
lllo
Oldo
Y&amp;tloJ
·
ViDton.
ComoonYIMolllmodla Inc., P
.,,
· Services wiU be held "today at Christmas party will be Sunday at S
·Board meeting cbaagecl
Ohio M*r n. 1182-Jtlll. ca.
pg~ilp pUG et l'ai•GJ, Obio.
The Eastern Local Board of
7:30 p.m. in the Crenleens Funeral p.m. Everyone wbo participated in
fundraising
for
the
department
is
Chapel
with
Richard
Adams
olfJCiEducatioo
will meet Tuesday, Dec.
JUmblr: The ,• j•IM PriM, M4 the
aling. Burial will be in the Moore invited. All attending bring a COY· 15, rather than Dec:. 17 as ~­
~
~,:4;:Family Section of the Frankfort creel dish.
ly scheduled. The meeting will be.
Nut(\
·
'118 Nr.t _...,
Ceme~ay
in
Frankfort.
Now
N•'!lllltl0017.
at 6:30 p.m . at Eastern High
· Friends may call at the funeral
Leaiou Aulllary
School.
P08'l'MAII'I'BR:-- .... J "'
Drew Websrer American Legion
chapel today from 6 - 7:30 p.m.
1110 DillY lloDIIMI, U1 Coart St.,

BIG PRODUCE • Fen Norrli. Route 1, Racine,._ tile
cal toueb for arowiD&amp; lariC veaetables. Jllll take a look at
tvmlp aacl two radishes lie IIIII arowu iD bil prdeD. Tbe tarufP,
weJcbecl lu at lbotlt llve ~ ud the ·two radilibes welab.ed
over eight pot1D11s.

No one injured in weekend accidents

r------Local briefs...- ,___._,
EMS units answer caUs

about student free speech and free
press righi:J. The librarian later IOid

me that, as with the other guests.,
the kids were talking aild arguing
about their opinions for days after.
Similar sessioas can be arranged
by teachers and librarians anywhere. Also, with talk radto
becoming ever more popular as the
modem equivalent" of the town
meeting, a bright station manager
could do well with ratings and
adv~ by programming some
time on weekends ror discussions
on the extent to which the Bill of'
Righi:J protects yOIDigsters, in and
out of school. Teen-agers are a
·huge markcl for snealteB aad COS
and other stuff, and many would
' tune in to.ask about the censoring
of school papers, dM8s codes, -locker searches and other involuntary
learning experiences.
'
1be callers, of course, shouldn't
be limited to students. There wonld
surely be indignant calls £rom JWin·
clpals, reacheis, sehonl board melilbcrs and paren1:1. In lin'le, youngsters might be wearittJ to school Tshins emblazoned wtth the Bill of
Righi:!. And what would principals
do then?
Nat Hen to" is a natloaally
reaowaed autbority 1111 tile First
A•eadmeat alld tile rett or tile
Bill or Rlahts aad a syadlcatecl;
writer for Newspaper Eaterprlle;
Aaodatioo.
•

-Meigs·announcements--

ClintOn 'ii .dee~. ih~ you can be..
Finally, if the president decides:
swe that Bill Clinton llllellds 10 run · to break Democratic Party prece-.
foreign poliCy himself. ~ will be "dent and name a chief or staff, it;
emphalically serving. noace ~the wiD be another suona signal that•
.
elc:cl's ftrst decisiOn in elch case is new government W~l Cl!nceatrate this will be a hi~hly centralized;
not the ideality Of the IIPDOiDtee but on a handful or pre88lllg ISSUCS and presidency in whteh creativity in'
the purpose he envlsfcins for the let the rest sort t~emselve.s out the C&amp;binet ill less important than'
~·That done, he seeks the indi- wilhontcloee American 111enaoo.
tidiness in decision-malting. If
vtdJial- . . · 1. .
Similarly, If the much touted there is no chief of staff, cabinet
. .-.tart wt~ th1s ~pos~uon . If idea c1 a dorncslic security council government may be given another
Bill ~linton tS to achieve his goals, is implemented, it wiD say more chance. Ralb~ than a rigid pyra-·
he will name the men or women . about the reality of power in mak- mid, the geometry of power will be
closest to him to the jobs that be · iq economic policy than the Idea- beuer captured by the image of a
bc1ievc1 will be the most Important titles of the new T~ury .......,._, slow I 1a 1
1
to his admiaistrallon's succoas. ~tor or the Off'n:e of~- broad~g cone se upon a
Couversely, tboae jobs to which ment and Budget or chairman of
people of peat distincdoo but brief the CouacU of Economic Advisers.
The basic point is that all the
acquaintance with 1be1r beneflctor 1be new llnlCIW'C would create a chiiU in the world 110 imlevant to
are nominated will be oaea that ·new power cenrer;·a DDCably 1n the way !hat power actually flows.
stand higher in public eatilllalion ·tho penon of the domeade security
than In ihe new chief eliCCutive's ldVIICr, which by the very IIIIUre
Hoddl11 Carter m, former
calnll!!dons.
of its newnea would iJe the center Sfate Dep1rtment apobsman
This leads to some working or action. Conv~y. if the idea and award·wluiJui repo1 ta, edtassumptions. If tho prcllideDIDIIMI were abandoned, it would vasdy . a ud pablllller,la .,. ul•t or
a lonatime lntim1te as natjonal increase the likelihood that ceo- MaiiiStrwt, a W....... D.C.·
security tldvla and pull.a penon n~~licy would be set more baaed tele'flaloeaaCtloa comin. charp or the Stile Dep.lment · co
y. And, the Jobs at OMB . Yand I
Wikir,..
whoae public aervice roaume ill · an.d casury would become far f::,.,lper lterprlle Auoela·
longer th• his coonection to Bill more mcaninllful. ·
tloa.

rio..:t..:t,·ng
C'--er
111
uu1
"',,

I

zero in 1882. Sunset tonight will be
at 5:06 p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at
7:41a.m.
AlWI11l tile utlclll
Rain llld IIIIOW coniinued falling
over much of the West atrly today.
A winter storm warning remained
in effect for the mountains of
southern California. ·
Clouds covered much of the
Dation except the Rocky Mountain
region and the nonhero Plains,
where a high-pressure system
brought clclr skies and cold rem~
A wmd and dust advisory

--------Weather----.~

:=

r:

.n1

'f

forecaslalllid.

The Jmlld-hilh tanpcnlure for
this dale • the Columliua· wcelher
statioo was 64 deareea in 1892
while the Jeeord·low Wll 1 below

• IColumbusl37" I

grum*

Tile ~laled ,..._
Fonx:aslcn asy Ohio c:u OIJICCI
aTuelday
break iD ,..., wealber acllon oo
...,.
.

IIIIOW,

T1le Dally SenUnel Page 3

conditions forecast for Ohio Tuesday

No riia, ileet, laOW 'Of eveD
n.mcs are Iikdy, aa:onlin&amp; to the
Nllional Weathtr SeM:e. Bewever, it will COIIIinue 10 be cold with
higha in the 30s.
The~ may recum on
WedJwday m the form or rain or

appem, pointer ia himd, 10 explain

What's important.to new president?

pv....

roR.ca.t for

MICH.

How kids learn about the Constitution

brought into the schools by the
,During t~e presidential cam. pwgn, I was m Columbus for a ses- .·
Ohio Center for Law-Related Edusion of the Ohio Centa for Lawcation are milking stUdents in some
Related Education. Sponsored by being tauiht the exclusionary rule other states more involved in the
the 81a1C ACLU, the Bar Associa- - without which the Fourth unexpected delighl:l of constitu.
tion, the attorney general's offiCe Amendment Is a sham. Some tional&amp;rg~~ments, including ihose
and the state Supreme Court, the reporter should ask the new JRSi· concerning aflimative action.
center has grcady quickened ldds' dent what he lhinb about that rule.
In those stares, cities and IOWRS,
interest in the righl:l and ·liberties His prrdecemw wanted to do away however, wbere there's liltle if any
they share with the rest of us ~ withiL
funding fcir malting the ConstitoI mentioned during one of the tion come alive, there arc other
quiet as that sharing is kept in most.
sessions tliat a presidential cam- ways for the work of the Framers
schools.
For instance, youngsters in' paign could be a valuable teaching to become immediate and. exciting.
schools throughout Ohio .now corn- mstrumcnt not only for kids but For instance. Dorolhy Middleton, a
pete in mock trial competitions also for all of us wllom the Consti- Wt::'a~ public school librarian,
wid) at least the same passion as tution conneci:J bchealh our multi- ce
the Bicentennial of the
their schoolmates do in baskelball cultural identities. But it didn't · Constitution in 1987 by orcheslrathappen in this or any election year. ing a series of brown-l)ag lunches.
tournamentS.
.
While there, I looked through The candidates spent hardly any 1udgcs came, prosCcutors, defense
some or the books that textbook time on the state of health or the attorneys, law proressors, cops,
publishers - quick to move in on a BiD of Rights and the 14th Amend- mayors,legislaiOrs.
growina market - have been ment (equal protection under the
She also had a constitutional
· lawyer present, and on alternate
pushing. In "The Living Constitu- lAws).
For instance, I do 1101 recall any weeks he talked with the students
tion" (OlencociMcGraw Hill), the
students are introduced to the serious discussion of affirmative aboul vilal constitutional cases "suict guidelines" police must fol- ·action. Instead of ~~eferencc bcina federal and under the Wyoniing
....;,
. .
low
before they can search and race:-specifJC, would it not be more Constitution - and also answered
,· . EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mean, vice pnsideat and Cilium· ·
seize.
The Founh AmcndmeDI, the fair and more constituliooal to base questiODS the ldds felt had 1101 been
alit for Tile Associated Press, has reported on Washiagton aad
kids .e IOid,;::sa searcb war- affii'Diative action on class? 1bat fully answered by the guests who,
-natlaaal politics for more thaa 30 years.
·
rant - and
le cause to get was the position of Wi)ijam 0. ·in their various ways, lived with
that search wananL 1bc warrant, Douglas, perbaps the most liberal the Bill of Rights every day.
moreover, has to very specifically Supreme Court justice in our histoAll the adull:l volunteered; the
....
indiCate what is to be searched for. ry. If ~~eferencc were given on the siUdents brought their own lunches;
And because of the exclusionary basis of poverty and on gready and so the project did 1101 cost the .
rule, "even illegal ilepts found dur- unequal access 10 jobs and educa· taxpayers a ceRL For the Sludenl:l,
ing an WIIUihorized search cannot tion, white kids in West Virginia it was also voluntary, but word
be used as evidence in' a lrial."
would beaefit along with black went around, and the sessioas were
I was glad to see that ldds are youngsters in Loll Angeles.
very wen allended. I was there for
· Flll'li1nalllly, programs like.those one of them, answering questions ·

1

D~y

.Air Force cli1ef overly image-conscious

· 111

.

OHIO Wedthor
T"aday, Dee. 8

Page 2-T1le Dally Sentinel..
Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio
MOnday, December 7,1892

--

Porneroy-lllddleport, Ohio

Poo•- OHio -1117t!a.

IUNCJUPnON IIA'nl

.,.c.ntor..,--·
ODe w..IL
............................" ............at.ao

One Moalh................ ............ .............UII

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nro&amp;

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uw..u............................. -......... .71
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a w.-............. ................ .~.........

••

'"

DonaldLamm

Donald Keith l..amm, a resident
of 123 Fourth Avenoc. Gallipolis,
died Sunday.
He was the son of the late Thelma Faye Lamm aad Charles
Lawrence Lamm•
Complete futiCfal IRIIIJCIIIC.IIII
w1U be ilnnolmccd by Wllilb-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.

License granted

=•

"- mania1e license has been
issued in
Coontr Prob1te
Bdwatd Kulll. 33,
Coull to }
· Tupper• Plains, and Melinda
Laliae Styer, 34, 1'u!Jpai Plaipa.

scene. The j:lr was towed from the
Beacon Slation.
AI 12:28 p.m. at the i.ntenection
of Locust and East Main, a vehicle
driven by Joseph Browning, k, 30,
Letart, W. Va. was struck in the
rear by a car driven by Arlene
Barnes, 34, Elyria.
folice repOned .that Browning
had SlOPPed 00 East Main in preparation (IW making a tum into Locust
when his vehicle was.hit in the rear
by Barnes car. She ·was cited for
failure to maiatain asswed clear
distance. The Browning car had
moderate damage to the rear, and
the Barnes car moderate damage to
the frml end
AI 2:31 p.m. aa accident
occuned near the intersection of
East Main and s~. Richard
Gaugler, 38, Seville, backed the
truck be was driving into a car
behind him driven by Dale Lawson, 150, Partland. Police said thu
Gaugler was baclting up 10 make
way for a semi-trailer in front of
him. There was go damage to Gaugler's truck and light damage to the
front end Ol the Lawson car.
Gaugler was cired for improper
bacldng. .No one in either vehicle
was injured.

Hospital news

None.

·

. HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
!a.Diacllqes, Friday, Dec. 4 ltll"ark Bowen, Nicholas .McCain,
Breanna Shephard, Tracy Barton,
Roy Crabtree, Misty King, Char·
loue McCain, Dewilda McGuffm,
Randall Flint, Beverly Jarrell,
Hilda Bailes, Anna Dow, No1a
Swisher, Bernice Nelson, Phillip
Thomas, M1s. 1ason Landrum 81111
son, Brandoo Hankinson, Adriaune
Bowling and Nicholas Dayton. ·•
Births. Friday, Dec. 4 - Mr.
and Mn. Gary Facemire, Bidwell,
a daughter; Mr. and Mn. Scull
Wolfe, Racine, a son.
•

Dilebarges, Saturday, l)ec.., 5
- Evan Cunningham, Shellie
A~!kins, S~lly Brewer, Kevin
Nance, Carrie Beaver, Mn. Rlllliie
Bolin and son, Walter McGbee
Ted'Fulk, M1s. Kevin Hoffmlll and
daughter, Nancy Casto, F111ntlla
Sisson, Shannon Fallon, CaacJice
Gray, Kimberly Dillenpr, Betty
GiUenwater and Wanda UlOpcr '
At2:59 p.m. on the upper park-·
Births,. Saturday, Dee. 5 ;:_
ing lot in Pomeroy, James Brew«, Mr. and Mrs . George Hoffman,
82, Dexter, Slruek a parked vehicle, Letart, W.Va., a son. ·
.
owner unbtown. Brewer reponed
10 police that he was backing his
DischaJlet, SUDday, Dee. 6 ·car out of a puting space on the lot Cheryl Reuter•. Wanda Dant, Mn.
when he hit the vehicle in the space Gary Facemue and dau1hter
next to him. He said there was no Veronica MiUer, Susan ReyDC&gt;Ida)
damage to die other car. There was Cheeyl Gill, Sadie Richie lnd Mn.1
light cJama&amp;e to the left side front Scon Wolfe aad son.
.. ,
of Brewer's vehicle.
Births, Suaday, Dee. 6 .......:
None.
!
1
Lottery numbers -"::':"':'-------:...
Kicker
.,

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
0-5-9-4-6-S
Ohio Lollery says WednesdaY"s
(zero, five, nine, four, six, five) '
Super Ultto jackpot grows to $16 Pick 3 Numbers
million after there were oo tickets
2-7-5
sold naming all six numbers select- ·
(two, seven, five)
ed in Saturday's drawing, worth Pick 4 Numbers
$12 million.
0-0-4-2
Here are Saturday night's Ohio
(zero, zero, four, two)
Louery acleclions:
Super Lotto
8-15-27-29-37-39
(eight, fifteen, ~wenty-seven,
twenty-nine, thirty-seven, thirty-

1

nine)

~~~=~£~ ~"=~-:::::::::;;:?;::~l1

will be a $5 lift cxcbange. The cys·
tic tlbrusls cliild and IIIOihcr will be • ·
guests lithe dinner.
• ·· .

~:~o~tary PTO

•·

will meet Tuelday • 1 p.m. 111e

=~ Plosrw wiD

,

&amp;~: ~:r~!~g;~·:~~~ ~

(I

BOUDA1' SBASO'N

.J:j

J

Buy That Special Person On Your
Christmas Ust AGIFT CERDFICATE to the .: .
BIG lEND HEALTH &amp; FITNESS .CLUB
. You can purchaH monthiJ, 6 month, or
yearly m...ershlps
CALL 992•2849 For Details
Or Stop ly At
333 Mechanic Stroot In Pomeroy
.

DAR to...
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chal!ter, Daugbten or the American k.cvolulion. 'will meet Friday at ·
1:30 p.m. at Grace Churc1t Parish ..
House in Pomeroy. Mn. Kay Cecil,
.
1ntique collector/appraiser, will ~

.

VeterausMe..-lal ;·
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS·
None.
.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Mark Gneglein.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Gerald Douglas, Coolvillc.
.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES -

SIIAPB UP i'BIS WJNTBR!

~

..-~JJ&amp;a~.-..,.-.~.,u~•~•§~ii{ .

'

�•

Sports

7. 11m

7

The

The DallyMonctav;
Sentinel

'

Miller defeats.Eastern gents 69-54

Declmber 7. , .

By SCOTT WOLFE

~IiDel CIIPTUpO!Ideat

Fallin&amp; to an 18-11 dtl'tcit In the
ftrst quarter, !he Eastern E8gles
boys' basketbllll team dropped a
69-54 non-league season-opening
matdt to the Miller Falcons Satur·
dlly night81 Miller High School.
· Eas!em is now 0-1, while Miller

c 'tf."-'1i:iL6a
.
lad ,

·In the NFL •••

--

AMP(CAN CONFERENCE

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NATIONAL CONFERENCE
. T-

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19
21

DOING IT ALL - ClevelaDd rilnlni !lack Eric Metc811 (lU
catches a pass In front of Cincinnati Unebacker Alfred Willlam
duriD11 SIIDdlly's secoad "Battle of Obio" In Clevelalld, whic:la ,tile
Browns wOii 37-11. Metcalf c:augbl six paS&amp;eS for 73 yardll nd a
toucbdowu, rulhed for 53 yards on aiDe carries and returned lift
punts and a Jdckolrtor a iotal of 84 yardll In the aae•.(AP)

Ualaa 24

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1
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-

yard touchdown .pass to Michae1
Jackson.
On the Bengals' next play from
scrimma~e . rookie quarterback
David Klingler was sacked, fum·
bled, and Mike Johnsal recovered .
in the end zone.
In less than two minutes. the
Browns' 13 -7• halfiime lead bad
ballooned to 34·7,.and the Browns
were well on the way to aveJ1ging
last month's 30-10 loss in Cincin- ·
nati.
.
"I don't think I would call it a
revenge 11ame," said Kosar, who:
was sidelined by a broken ant,le ·for
the first meeting. "It's getting
toward the end of the season, and ·
it's important as a am 10 get some ·
wins and finish strong."

A3 good as Metcalf was, ~­
matched him. He set a Cleveland.·
record with an 82.6 percent COII'I·
pletion rate, going 19 of 23 for 239
yards and two touc~downs, without
an interception. It surpassed Biian
Sipe's efffciency mark of 82.1 .F.·
cent (23 for 28) set in 1976 agaitisr
SanDiego.
,
Klinglet, the rookie first-round
draft pick who replaced Boomer
. Esiason as the Bengals' siBrter lis&amp;·
wel;k, was victimized rqx:atedly llY
dropped passes. He completed l 2
of 25 for 134 yards and two toldldowns, without an irtle.ccption.
He left in the fourth quuter
~use of a bruised left thigh, but .
said he did not think it woUld pre- ·.
vent him from playing next week. ·
Sacked 1o times by Pittsburgh
last week, Klingler was ·sacked .
another four limes Sunday. He
threw tou.chdown passes of 26 ·
yards to Rodney Holman and 10
yards to Jeff QQery.

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JOHN WADE, ·M.D., 'INC•..~
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT •AllERGY
etiEAIINI AIDS • lEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
ler Ytur

addedeighl

_LAKE ERIE (52) - Katie
Hobson, 1..().2; Tatiana Lechowick,
2-3-7; Amber Gamet, 4-2-10; Jen
Calvey, 6-1-13; Carol Peterson, 70-14; Shelly Shupienis , 2-2-6.
TOTALS l2-8-5l.
RIO GRANDE (86) - Kim
Sowers, 3-3-9; Gena Noqis, 1·1-05; Stacey Riuer, 2-6-10; Michelle
Crouse, 1..0.2; Amy Reynolds, 3..().
6; Merritta Blevins, 1-2-4; Tricia
Collins, 6-1-13; Angie Cress, 1·13; Stephanie Gudorf, 2:5·0-19;
Lori Hamilton, 6·2·14. TOTALS
Ui-6·16-116.
Halftime score: Rio Graade
52, Lake Erie 24.

•

Box scon:s:

NOTRE DAME (69) - Rosie
Scbneider. 6-0-12: Amy Bican, 20-4.; Amanda Will iams , O, J-1 ;

Ia ~-. .. tr fll[otltNU dtll games,

Lake Catholic:joins CAPE, St. Henry,
Saint Marys,,St. Ignatius as champs
. ,.....

. II!GA.

pace thCWildcals {14..0).

Tins W'ri11n"
FW 6D SL '&amp; .. WilkaSs,
•

'

___,__

-.via * -"- - • • * • I
... '

,..........

Stacy Howlett, 0-1..0.3; Lissa Latina, 0-1..0.3; Missy Rizzo, 7-1-15;
Dessa Dzubak, 5-2·12; Hollie
Ksiezyk, 5·1-4-17; Karen Kromer,
1..().2. TOTALS 26-3-11-69.
RIO GRANDE (85)- Kim
Sowers, 2·2-6; Gena Norris, 3-0-6;
Stacey Ritter, 7-0-14; Michelle
Crouse, 1 -~ ·0-11; Tricia CoUins, 23-7; Stephanie Gudorf, 3-4-2-20;
Lori Hamillon, 5-8-18; Ginger ·
Smith, 0-1-0-3. TOTALS 23-11·1585.
.
.
Halftime seore: Rio Grande
34, Notre Dame Ui.

7

.. fii+ jll •

111 Saca.. St.·=·

RIO GRANDE (107) - LaM·
ont Harris, ~-1-5-14; Jeff Brown,
1-0-2; Troy Donaldson, 8-3-19;
Mall Powell, 3-8-2-32; Jack Morgan, 1-0-2; Walter Stephens, 0-2..().
6; Tim Christian, 7-2- 16; Breit .
Coreno, 1-3-0-11; Lyndell Snyder,
0-1-0-3 ; Jason Curtis , ' 1-0•2.
TOTALS 25-15·12-107.
HIGH POINT (72) McGlother Irvin, 2-2-6; Michael
Skinner, 2~ ; Demetrius Alexander, 3-0-6; Tooey Loy, 0-4-2-14;
Gary Mearite, 3-0-6; Toby Brown.
4-4-12; Michael Alexander, 4..().8;
Keith Simmons, 6-2-14; Daryl·
Annstrong, 1..0.2. TOTALS 25-410-71.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
52, .High Point 41.

for 33 percent from the three for
Rio Grande; 29-~2. 3-8 for 37.8
pen:ent on the outside for Notre
Dame}.
· For Rio Grande, the difference
eamea the line as they hi115 of23
for 65 percent to the Blue Falcons'
38 pacent (8-21).
Lake Erie, playing with a roster
of six, feU qwckly as Rio Grande
zipped ahead for a 28-poinl halftime: lead. Gudorf had 19 points,
Hamilton hitl4, Tricia Collins netted! 13 and Ritter had 12, while
Amy Re~lds brought nine of Rio
Grande s 46 rebounds. Collins

•i'sdiltdlnohlThe Storm was led by Carol
.,. p•iw
*S rm.IGCi!al
Peterson with 14 points and 14 of
alils I 7 Z . . . BY Isiia.
~ t · their 3\ boards.
ltini. . 17 p -.
Mil SRC:D
Rio Orande was 43 percent from
a• !• I _.llliiay tiuD Jl""''"' !he llooc (32-74, 6-17 for 35 per. . iii 15
. . 17 oll!illm. cent from the three) and sank 16 of
D
"s4., I %
'lkllall 281 free throw attempts for 57 percenl Noire Dame i:onnected on 22
ol 88 tries li'om the floor and was
4Z.9 peiCCnt (8-19) 81 the line.
Rio Grande hosts West Virginia
Sllle Tuesday at 7 p.m.

--flip,

c•++ e._-.ll:e!IIEldof
.. ~..__.
- - ••
~-vw

IISIUICE

1-4. TOTALs Ui-1;.27-130.
CONCORD (79) -Jim Pettus,
1-1-3; Jeff Suto, 2-1-5; Joe Yates,
2..0-4; Ben Spielman, 2-2-6; Todd
Keffer, 6-2-1-19; Daniel Snider, 2·
1-0-7; Sh'iinnon Brehm , '2·1 -5;
Erick Wood , 3-1-0-9; Tommy
Williams, 3·1·7; Eric Rich~dson,
2-0-4; Tommy Webb. 2-3-7; Aaron
Keaton, 3-0-6. TOTALS 2!1-4-!179.
'
Halftime score: Rio Grande
53, Concord 28.

Redwomen net pair of road victories

•

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The win was the 20th straight
fm: SL Ignatius, which also won
stale titles in 1988, 1989, and 1991.
' "We weze very businesslike a1
halftime." said Wildcats coach
&lt;i:liuclt: Kyle. " We .had to dig a lit·
tie: deeper this time. We had to
make some adiustments on !heir
passing 81111ck.'r
Sl Xavier (13-1) went into the
lialf With a 14-10 lead on two tD
receptions by Scott Solbnan.
In Division IV, Cincinnati
Academy of Physieal Education
relied on the ntmlng of Rashawn
Byrd and Jlian Smitli to knock off
ddcnding champ W.-ren Kennedy.
Byrd and Smith each ran for
TD's - a four-yarder for Smith
and a 37-y:rcler for Byrd. Byrd ftn·
isbed die day with 108 yards.
Kennedy's Tom Paolucci tossed
a 31-yard tD pass and a two-point
CXIINt5SiOD to go into the half traiJ.

A- I, I J fJI.
,
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w.m.
y
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7
11-7 11DIIk~
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7- .,.!lliinll' JSM .r~
Witb ni.ne minutes to play,
h i - I FA
it+:ZS, ~ 1111 for a 34-yard TD, but
1-4
.liitlt:.
tile. extra point auempt failed. A
final
Kennedy drive ended on
R II IW'ID-ali:E-.11
dowlls 1t die CAPE 30-~ line.
Rntlter than risk a (ourth down
.... . . .. . .
I •ID (111111. CAPE's Smith ran backwards
5

·

7

f,..........

"I was gelling· the ball off a little quicker," Klingler said. "l')le
rece1v~ need 10 get used to me, :
and the offensive line is getting
used to me. This week, I felt mucb ·
more comfortable. I think I made
good reads for the most part." ·
Don Hallas filled In after K:lin- ·
gler got hun and threw a 24-yard
touchdown pass to Query wilb
three minutes lefL

.........

.. ....,rt;:.;........3

t

ByCHUCKMELVIN '
CLEVELAND (AP) - II happens to Eric Metcalf aU the time .
Broadcasters call 'F m Terry. Writers call him Terry. Last week, the
Cincinnati Bengafs' press notes
called him Terry.
It's easy to see why.
"We're such carbon copies,
running the football," TeiJ¥ Met·
calf, the Conner All-Pro back, said
after he watched his son produce
210 all-purpOJe yards Sunday,
helping the Cleveland Browns bea1
the Bengals 37-21. ·
"Not a lot of men getto sec
their lives repeaL This is a chance
to see myself again," the elder
Metcalf said.
Eric has the same quickness, the
same versatility that let his father
gain nearly 10,000 all-purpose
yards during six )'C8ll!. with the SL
Louis Cardinals and Washington
Redskins. Coosequently, much has
been expected of him since the
Browns picked him in the first
round of the 1989 dlafL
"I want him to be his own per·
son," Terry said "A lot of people
say that he has to fill my shoes. I
want him to wear his own. It
doesn't matter to me if he"s as successful as l was."
Terry, who lives in Seaule, had
not seen Eric play at Cleveland Stadium until Sunday. He couldn't
have picked a better day.
Eric ran nine times for 53 yards,
re!Umed five punts for 75 yards,
had a 9-yard kickoff return and
caught six passes for 73 yards.
Included was a 35-~ to~wn
pass from Bernie KOsar that sraned
the Browns' 2l·point third quarter.
It was Metcalf's fifth career.
200-yard day, but his fust in Cleveland.
.
"It's a spedat feeling, because I
had my dad up there watching,"
Eric said. "I wanted to play the
best
e I could."
cf::Jand (7..(,) took control In
the third quarter, scoring three
touchdowns in a span of 95 seconds.
Kosar and Melcalf got it started, ·
beating a Cincinnati blitz with a
pass over the middle that Metcalf
lurnecUnto the 35-yard score.
Lined d"p as a wide receiver, Metcalf mid the blitz, slanted over the
middle to give Kosar a quick tar·
get, and danced out of Eric
Thomas's arms on the way to the
end zone. .
"Eric broke the route off, as he
was sUJJil(lSe(l to do, and BCmie hit
him, •' lirowns coach Bill Beliehick
said. "When he broke out of the
tackle, it wiiS an over...
Cillciruwi (4-9) then went t1uee
plays and oul, and Metcalf's 21·
yard punt n:tum set up Koa's 45-

I

'**' .

Cleveland posts 37-21 ·
win over Cincinnati

Wll.-uc.- 29, -

WL~Ga

~ ..................9

7

Y-SL42,Citadoll7

EASTERN CONFERENCE

, ,. . , , _ _ _,

u

NCAA Dlv. I·AA qurterftaall

In tbe NBA •••

allk- 27 of31 for 87.1 percent and Con:4 tw'-V&amp;) coni was ·Srl.9 percent (9-17). Rio
*»"s liiJ'c Grande also controlled the
~alan · - r
•o. rebounding47-37. ·
c
.. ,
a • s 5 ' r. PoweU led all scorers again .in
N.C.
!be High Point confl'lmtation with
JlioG ' p1 iilntlk•'"api- 32, with Donaldson pumping in 19,
• T·z __, ...,.
a:: of( Cbristil!l 16. Harris 14 and Coreno
Jlilllt :ftinl (K£..) ltll'-71 • Fri- 11. The Panthers' Tooey Loy and
..,.. Cl • • ... • i
llost Keith Simmons each had 14.
c
..
Rio Grande shot 60.6 percent
-~
W, wiDllilalllllll ol (40-66, lS-28 from the three for
S6 r - - . . .
liD lie 53.6·pen:ent)"to High Point's 40.3
41fM:i:;1" "
pen:enl (29-72, 4-14 from the OUt·
lllc nZ ;04 W a • c P
n side for 28.6 percent). At lbe line,
,.. nC
• tJ:r a •izltaws the Redmen connecred 12 of 13 for
Itt .... ...._ «:1
d dts. 92.3 percent and High Point was
. - : _ . U 7 a:JIJ 5 .. lltdf. 10, 14 for 71.4 percent. On the
liaebi. ..
boards, Rio Grande had 42 1p the
7't II, wiDitniZ:Jt
Em and opponent's 30.
I I, -~tJ:rTq · The Redmen (7-1) will be a1
D
71 -.iiltR,......rci&amp;Jit home Thursday al 7:30p.m.
.
"
. Wilmin
' gton.
- . I• , .
- .... _ H
. , .""17
.
(ICIMb.
•l!BIIIst
16 r... ._ Oacw _. Uliy Box scoms:
'lia&lt;'L ( . IID-r.4 - IiJn
RIOGRANDE(130) - LaM·
al-.: I7DaE. TaMI..,..._ die on! Harris, 5-1-4-17; Jeff Brown,
... JIIJa' a 11M: ..
- l.iitns: 1-2-0-8; Troy Donaldson, 6-6-18;
=~- iilnt4 IT 's sari'ng, Matt Powell, 4-S-1-24; JackMor0\
gao, 2-2-6; Walter Stephens, 1-20a • , .. 10 :RiD&amp; +was 19; Brett Coreno, 2-4-0-16; Tim
S2.4 1
(6G, 17-36 filr41Z'.2 Christian, S-3-13; Kyle Schroer, 01
1iaa 11M: 41r.c) wlilt:.O. l-4-7; Lynclell Snyder, 0-4-4; Jason
aal
7 7465
~71 1 Cunis, !)-1-1-4; Larry Caudill, 0-1llltill .
- *'r
r
aC
a UO.W 1ta!1111i ill'

12

Ohio college
football scores

- · Doc.14
LA. -Il~9p.m.

....

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Hawaii '16, Pillalpoqh 23

Nawo.-.

l'ldw. . 8ft f.lnat 1ow:, L·R) Wes

ArbBPIIh, Pat Newlaail, Chad Savoy, Jeremy
CliDe aid Randy Kaylor. In the back row are
Ullman, Robert Reed, Cbarlfe Bissell, Matt
Marlin, Jeremy Buckley, Mickey Goode and
assistant Roaer BlsseU.

Redmen net third tournament title

6
7
I
10
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13

Noloaab 31, X.... St. 24

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Alabama 21, PbMia 21

.. " -CIIJ, 1 p.m.

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CUMliANDII Daaaalo; I p.m.
OIDMatW·~, 1 p.a

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10
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Ploiladeljlhia .............3 11

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Deaver •I Bull""'- 12:30 p.m.
N.Y. GiulllatPimaU,4pm.

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We+tn. . 21J'l.Y. Oi.-10

I

ByTIMPUET
Aaoc:iated Press Writer
His team is stru~Ung, but Dayton coacb Jim 0 Brien remains
opiimistic that the Ayers can tum
into winners before the season

'

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.

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.

28 yards into the CAPE end zone
for a safety to cap the scoring.
Paolucci finished wilh 110 yards
on 17 carries.
In Division Ill, Mentpr Lake
Catholic's Pete Jelovic threw three
touchdown passes as the Cougars
(13· 0) dommaled Ironton (13-1)
throughoul
Jelovic threw for 2S9 yards on
16 completions in 27 auempts.
Scott Yownell and Carmen Dacqua each caught six passes for 114
and 72 yards respectively for the
Cougars. Dacqua also ran ·for 117
yards on 21 carries.

••

·Dayton was limited to 32 per·
cent shooting from the field, leading O'Brien 10 call the Flyers'
effon "horrible" and add, " We
didn't play a tough-minded basketball game.''
Chip Hare led Dayton wilh 17
points. The Commodores won for
the fourth lime in five stans and
were paced by Billy McCaffrey's
2S points.
Six other NCAA Divisi on I
teams from Ohio played Saturday
and the only winners among them
were Ohio State, which defeated
Southern California 73-56, and
Wri~t State, a 1,12-53 victor over
DiVISion ill opponent Wilmington.
Jamie Skelton had the best day
of his career for Ohio State, comlug off the bench 10 score 20 points
and hitting two key three-point bas·
kets in a row late in the game as the
Buckeyes improved to 2..0.
Wright State (1-1) jumped off 10
a 10-1lead and crUised from !here,
with Sean Hammonds pacing the
Raiders wilh 23 points. Man
Combs with 10 was the only double-figure scorer for the Quakers
(0-6).
.
Ohio University (0-2) lost 72-70
at Roben Morris on Myron Walk·
er's layup with 18 seconds to play,
Walker had 32 points for the Colonials while freshman Gary Trent
scored 18 to lead the Bobcats.
Toledo lost 73-52 at Detroit in
its season opener, with Tony Tolbert scorin\113 of his team-leading
15 points m the first half for the
Titans..Archie Fuller of the Rockets led all score:s with 19.
. Nebraska won its own tourna·
ment, the Ameritas Classic, 85-61
over Kent (1-1). The Golden FWhes were within 45-39 with 16 min·
utes to play, but Nebraslca, headed
by former Ohio University coach
Danny Nee, put the game away
with a 33· 11 run.
· "Mainly, we just wore out,"
said Kent coach Dave Grube. "At
about the 12-minute mark, we had
some fatigued kids on the floor and
started making mistalces. To their
credit, they capitalized on il"
Rod Koch scored 16 points 10
leadKenL
•
Youngstown State came away
from Northwestern with an 87-57
defeal, with the Wildcats going on
a 29-6 run in the late fust half and
early second half to ensure their
victory.
"We had a good effort in the
fust half,'' said coach John Sttoia
of the Penguins (1·1), who has 10
new players on his team this year.
"In the last minute (of the first
hall) we had too many freshmen in
there who didn 'I make good deci·
sions and didn't execute well. We
also rushed too many shots. But up
to that point, I was proud."
Re~e Green and Reggie Murphy each scored 12 points to pace
Youngstown.
There were four games involving Ohio teams in both the Nonh
Coast Conference and the Ohio
Confezence.
AUegheny took two overlimes
to defeat Ohio Wesleyan 71-69,
Denison downed Kenyon 59-44,
Earlham outscored
106-87
and Wiuenberg got by Wooster 6258 in overtime in the NCAC.
In OAC action, Capital clipped
Mount Union 57·50, Hiram took an
82-78 decision against Heidelberg,
Johri CatroU topped Marietta 92-80
and Ohio Nonhero was a 71-59
victor over Baldwin-Wallace.
Malone hosted the only presea·
son tournament in Ohio this wetend, but lost 77-66 in the championship game to Calvin.

doubled their'scort.'l, fell to a 36-22
. cleficilll the half.
Eastern coaeb Greg Ullman:
made some adj USiments 81 halftime'and Jlastern fought hard to pulb :·
back to within 11 at S0-39 It the ·
end or the third frame. The Eagles
never could get over the hump
though, and fell to defeat 69-54,al
the buzzer.
Easlem had 35 rebounds. led by
Charlie Bissell's 15, hit 16-54 f~eld
goals, 3-9 three pointers, and was
9-14 at the line . EHS bad 15
turnovers and 15 fouls.
Miller hit 15-58, 9-16 three.
pointers; and was 12· 15 81 the line.
No reserve score was available.
Eastern goes to Trimble ,friday .
Quarter totals
Eastern ............:.. 11 11 17 15 = 54
MiUer ................. l8 18 14 19 = 69
MILLER (6!1) - Lanning 1-66-26, Paige 6-1-0=15, Peyton 2..04=8, Dully 3..0-2=8, Men:Jde 2..0·
0=4, McGrath 1·2-0:'8. TOTALS
-15·9·1U!I.
EASTERN (54) - Savoy 5-32=23, J3issell 3-0-4.=10, Arbaugh
0-0-1=1, Newland..l·0-0=2, Reed
2..0·5=9, Cline 3..0~6. Kaylor 00·1=1, Martin 1..(),0=2. TOTALS
- 16·3-13=54.

..,•

'

'•

•

.''

.

EASTERN COACHES - Greg UllmaD (right) will lead the
Eastern boys' varsity ~etbaD team Into ba~e in the !12-!13 ca~e
campaign, his first lull seuon as tbe Ea&amp;les mentor. Ullman IS
assisted by reserve eoaclt Roaer BisselL

Unioto girls record 55-44 win
over Eastern in weekend play
Returning 19 letter winners
from last year's regular season 190 club, the Unioto Shennan Tanks
rolled to a hard-fought 55-44 non:
league girls' basketball victory
over the Eastern Eagles.
Eastern was led by Stephanie
Otto's 13 rebounds and 13 points,
whle Jaime Wilson hit 8 of 10 at
the line to notcb 12, Jessica Karr
had 10, Penny Aeiker six , Tara
Congo two, and Amy Redovian
one.
Aubrey Eblin led Unioto with
14 points, while CoMie Fazio and
Bridget each added ten.
Eastern, Intimidated by Unioto's
8-9 field goals in the first period,
feU behind 20-6 at the end of the
ftrSt quarter. Eastern fought bard
the remaining three quarters, but
never could get over the hump.
Eastern pressed the remainder of
the ~ and puUed to within 2619 rtgbt before the half. A couple
mistakes. off the press allowed
Unioto to post a 31-20 halftime
lead.
Eastern outscored the visitors
17·11 in the third frame, culling the
score to 39-3S when Jaime Wilson
hit both ends of a· two-shot technical. Eastern had the possession, but

coQidn't eapitali~e and that's as :
close as the young Eagles came.
The plriod ended a 42-37. East·
em came as close as six points on a '
couple of occasions and once again '
cut the lead to five, but time ran :
OUL
;
Eastern hit 13-53 from the field, •
and 18-31 at the line. Unioto hit :
19-54, 3-7 three's, and was 8-12 at :
the line.
Eastern actuaUy outrehounded :
· the visitors 28-26 led by Ott's 11 '
and Aeiker's 6. Miller had eight for ·
UHS.
.
.
EHS had 19 turnovers, 8 steals, ·
and 16 fouls. Unioto had 30 :
lwnoverll, IS steals, and 22 fouls.
Eastern plays at Waterford
Thursday.
Quarter totals
Unioto ................20 II 11 13 SS
Eastern .................6 14 17 7 = 44 .
· Unloto (55) - Oberer 1-2· •
2=10, Fw;io 5-I-10, Eblin 6-2·14, :
C. Oberer 1-1-0-4, Wilkins 3..().6, :
Scaggs 1-0-0=2, Thomas 1-0-2,
Miller 0-3-3, Haynes 1..0.2. Totals
-19·3-11=55.
Eastern (44)- Otto 5-3· 13,
Wilson 2-8-12, Redovian 0-1 •1,
Aeiker 2-2·6, Congo 1..0.2, Katr 3· :
4-10. Totals 13-G-18=44

=

Oberlin

'
W'inning tournamencs
out of
state were Cedarville, 86-84 over
With 16 seconds remaining in host Lock Haven, Pa; Walsh, 80·
!he fust quarter, Jelovic threw a 20- 69 at Salisbury (Md.) State; Rio .
yard TD pass to Scott O'DomeU to Grande, which blasted Concord
extend Mentor Lake Catholic's 130-79 in Catawba. N.C. and Cen·
lead 10 10·0 after Jim tta1 State, 94-91 at t.(ercyhurst in
Novakovich' s 23-yard fteld ~· Erie, Pa.
and the Cougars nevm looked
.
Defiance lost 81 -63 to Penn
State-Bebrend in the title game of
Jelovic tossed a 60-yard TD that team's tournament, also in
pass to Scott Youmell, and llacqua Erie; Brock of Canada beat Mu*'ran for a four-yard sc~~~e to ice the ingum 63-61 in the championship
game for Lake Catholic as It took a game of the Roclater Classic 11nd
Urbana overwhelmed Wilberforce
24·7 lead inl.o the half. .
Joe Leith teCOvered quartabacll: 105-79 in an all-Ohio third place
Ryan Guthrie's fumble In the end game 11 the Adrian, Mich., touma·
zone for Irontoli's ooly SCO!e.
menL
"

I

Dayton lost 75-53 Saturday to
Vanderbilt to go 0-4 on the season,
prompting O'Brien to say, "We are
a bad basketball team right now,
but we aro going to be a good team
when this is over. We have to think
g:f~!ye. pull together and work

moves 10 1..0.
Senior guard Chad Savoy
poured in 23 points,.while Charlie
Bissell notched 10, Robert Reed
nine, Jeremy Cline six, Pal Newland and Matt Martin two eac)l,
and one each from Wes Arbaugh
and Randy Kaflor.
Bruce Lan mg led the winners
with a game-high 26 points, Eddie
Page had 15, Willie Peyton, Bill
McGrath, and Jeremy Duffy eight
each, and Manny Men:Jde four.
Due to its size this season, Eastem has to be able to set the tempo,'
but that never transpired Sawrday
evening, when the host Falcons set
the early pace and controlled tlie
inside game as weU. Miller ppened
up the inside with an awesome
three-poin t shooting display of 914'6VeraU.
Eastern was also playing without one Qf its staners. senior Jeremy Buckley, who !wisred an ankle
Thursday evenin~.
'
Miller, sporung a veteran ball
club, picked up where they ended
the season last year, making wise
decisions each time down the court
and using the extra year of experi·
ence to its advantage.
Eastern fell to an i 8-11 first
quarter tally, then as both clubs

*2500
FACTOiliii.UI.

•
•

•

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY. INC.

·----

106 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 4.1'760
(614) 9?2-2635

TOLL FREE (800)426-5581

•

...._,l.
,... •

t ...

•••

�.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.

. •.

·•

I

•The .Area's Number 1
Marketplace -

.

Monday, December7,1812

RATES

an ad
Call992-2156

...

!'·
•
~-

••I

' Ado .....W. ... co..IJ ,.... ad rao
be pnpoid
• . _.. dlooout lor .U pold Ia
• '-Ado• Ci-wayud Fotmd oulo ...... 15 ...,.uw!ll loe

_....,.. ...........

..m.-.

....... "' ... r...... copkolleu.n lo clo..lo ......., .......
• 7 pciatllao typo oaly ....!
• S..IIMllo- ...,...u.lo l~r
dot (c...k
lor....,.lh-llclo7 Ml'lllllill po,_). CaD bofon 2:00 P·•·
cloy aft.er publlooU.. to """'• _ . . . . ,
t Ad. tlaat
be paW U. .dwaaoe ant
CenJ ol TINoalu
Bapp7 Ado .
I• Mlil ril•
Yard SU.
•A
plocecllll tloe C.Ulpolo Doily
T..U.... (-pt C._li'...J Dlop!ay, s....e.. CenJ or Lop!
NoU..) will oleo oppoar Ia ... PollltPiouoat Repw ud
.... o.u, S..tbNI, ...hi.. o-18,000 ..._

"""".,._lint

A CHRISTMAS SING • Middleport rourtb

,•

,

araden uader the direction of Becky Zurcher
entertaiDecl with a variety ot Christmas sonp In
the lobby of Peoples Balik following the parade.

As • ·part of Its holiday open bouse Thursday

evening, bank employees served cookies and
punch ud gave nut candy favon.

'

by Brian J. Reed .
• •..: As 11 news reporter and occa\ ·: sional columnist, I never really
1 iJIIBiined myself sharing recipes
1 ind coOking tips with my !Wiers.
l Those who know me well will
: ·~ttest to my kitchen repertoire,
whicb at best includes these items:
anything frozen with instructions
: on die back of the box; hamburg' en; llizza; bologna, peanut butter
l 111d Jelly br Spam sandwiches (I
'I ilways burn grilled cheese); hot
1.dogs; popcorn; and iced tea
: .... Th..S, my culinary skills are best'
• nhibited by eating food prepared
• -by someone else or in tbe drive: ..throu&amp;h window or one .of several
:; ·tllst food establislunents.
k • Ho\Yever, received across my
: desk this week was an item from
• Nighthswk Publishing Co., entitled
: !'Venison: The Diet Food of the
: 90's".
Tbe anicle at once grabbed my
•
•: attentillll fCll' two reasons. Firstly, I
:• will consider anything with tbe
~ word Mdiet" contained in the tille.
! Second, my lack of hunting skills
: Janothcr column subject) instills in
,, ~~e an obligation to make some
,. kind of contribution to the
: . ~COD!munity.
• CoiJsider these veruson facts: ·
~ • • has half as many grams of fat
as turkey Ill' chicken, a tenth as may
as lean ground chuck and a twelfth
e aS many as lean, cured ham;
• • bas fewer calories than the
:
size serving of roasted chick-

This is included in a new book
by John and Denise Phillips, entitled Deer and Fixings Cookbook,
which includes over 100 venison
recipes and 100 side dishes.
Two other venison recipes are
available, free of charge, by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Night Hawk Publications,
P.O. Drawer 375, Fairfield, AL
35064.

1_
--------~------~~---­
...

~.- .

Commaulty Calendar items
.": appear two days before 811 event
~ iad, tile day of that eveut. Items
,, muat be received weD in advance
•, . :'Dd-:n publicatl~.n In the cal'

MONDAY
J POMEROY • Revival at Hill·
: side Baptist Church, through
: Wednesday, 6 p.m. nightly. Dr.
: Kenny McComas, guest preacher.
Doug McComas. musical evangetiSL Special singin~ nightly. Rev.
,. -James R. Acree Sr. mvites the pub-

..•

:.Jjc.

.

.

.

• .,PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town; ship Trustees will meet Monday~at
I 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Town-

llall·
.•
LETART FALLS· The Letart
• Township Truslto-.s will meet Moo: clay at7 p.m. II tne office building.
•• •
. • ·~ RACINE- Racine Chapter No.
i ,134, OES, installation of officc:rs.
I ·~Y • 7:30 l!.m. Members bnng .
l a,aiadl Cll' sandwtches.
REEDSVILLE • Olive Town! sbl_p Trullces will llle!:l Monday at
a"1:311 p.m. at die Shade River State
1 1'01CIIrf Bliilding.

''

CHESTER • Chester PTO will
• meet Monday in the school cafere: ria. All ·parents and teachers are
invited.
~

i RACINE • RaCine Council will
l meet Monday at 7 p.m. at council

.•,

' cbambell at Star Mill Park.

'

... . TUPPERS PLAINS • Orange
ToWJilhip 1'rullees will meet Monday 11 7:30 ~ at the home of the
f c~ Patty _ way.

I

1

;

!

·

·

PRESENTATION-MADE · WJbe Amadn5.World or Light," a
45-miDute perf01"111811Ce OD lbe dllfereat Ida ot lights Blld bow
they can be used,- pr-~ at Pollleroy Elementary OD Tb.,-sday by Mobile Prodactlou Inc. Alalstluswere,fr.ontJow, l•r,
Stoney Day, Casey WDIIams, Chris Pid&lt;ens and Marla Dren'llet.
Back row, 1-i', are Del Potter, presenter; and Kathy Haley, thltd
grade teacher.

Offtee, 992-6696•

'

.

anniversary gift and Mrs. Fetty
received hostess lifts.
The door prize was won by
DorisW'tlL
The annual Christmas dinner
will be Dec. 17 at Sebastian's in
Parkersburg, W:Va.
The next. meeting will be the
Christmas gift exchange at the
home of Linda Hubbard, Syracuse.
Dorothy McGuffin was a guesL

:~todoso.

15
15
15

TEAFORD'S GOLF
&amp;AWARDS
CHRIRMAS SALE
10%·20% Off

EXCAVATING

TRAILER liTE~
LMDCLEARIN
DRIVEWAYS !NIT
D
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

Charles L. Bissell dec' d, affid,
to Margaret K. Bissell, Chester.
Pauline Redenour, 2.282 A; to .
John L. Ridenour, Chester.
Willa Bowers, parcels, to
George E. Booth, Dorothy H.
Booth, Scipio.
. ·
Georae E. Booth , Dorothy H.
Booth, parcels to Mark A. Starr,
Kathy A. Starr, Scipio.
Wilbert McClain, parcels, to
John Wayne Stobart, Lerart.
Beneficial Mtg Co. of Ohio,
I .25 A, to Giles L. Hysell; Sarah
Hysell, Salisbury.

IPuttere. Beglooer Sata,
Youth Cuatom Drlvera.
Lo81onalncludod with
purehuo..

992·3838

Localad on Scout Camp
Rd., Cheater, OH.

:ClA!!IFID A~

11127

I

~"'~~.l$'!jP~"'~'!iP~~~9.~·- :-

.

4
· ·:.·.WASHER ANTI·FREEZE •••••••••••
s 99 ··' ·
ANTI·FREEZE.-•••••••••••••••••••• 3.99
2% MILK •••••••••••••••••••••••••• s2.1 9
PEPSI, 12 Pak••••••••••••• ~····· s2.994
PEPSI, 2 Liter•••••••••••••••••••••••99

Josephine Tyree
122 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy.
·

PRIC~S

GOOD THRU DEC. IS, 1992

. Holiday Glass 49¢ With Purchase of Gas
· Video Rental - Legal Beverages
'

Register to Win A Bicycle to be given
away Dec. 17

1.NASCIR MINI CAR • 1 INDY MINI CAR,

2 IICYCLES
DUWING DEC. 19th
AT GUND CENIUL MILL

i

STOP IN A,ND SIGN UP!

.

CHESTER QUICK STOP

l: : ; __

Rt. 7 &amp; 248 -

; •

.li,,:._u.::~~AI

p.m.

Slota Oaus will abo visit after

(

'.·,

..

I

(

GaDia Coanl)'

Melp CotQtty ){,aoon Co., WV

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

12- Situatlou'll'aarad
13- llliVanee

5- Happy Ado

576-Apple Gro-o
773-MMOa
882-New

5-~oadFouacl

,,

32- Mobile Ho-lor Sole

ot

1,

W..led to Buy
Li-k
Hoy .t: Craia
s-laF...W....

33-,- r ..... for Sale

u.B•l- !lulWiap
~5-- I..oto a:

&amp;,.....

-Real F.ototo 'll'uled

71-Au~otlor!a!o

89S-Letort

Auctioo

937-lall"...

9- 'll'aat..J to Buy

a...

c..,...

48- Equip••• for Real
49-Forl-.

8

14-B.,ipoHTroiDIDs
15- Schoolo a laolr\lelloa
15- Rodlo, TV &amp; CB Repoir
17-Mitc.U....ut
18- 'll'onrad To Do

7- Loot oad FoUDd
B-l'loblic Sole a

a.,..

742-Rut!oad
667-Cooi.oL.

n- Help 11'.......

4-GiWMtwa)'

45~

84s:.Port!a•d
247-LowtF.U.
949-Roclae

,\ I I I I , I 1

4T- w....,.. 10

2-I•M-ry
3-- Aaaouc:e.n~

675-1'1. 1'1-

992-Mlddleport/
Pomeror
98SO rtu

446-Gol!lpollo
367-Cbeoblre
388-Viatoa
245-lllo c....r.
256-G.,.oa DW.
64S-Anlola Dlot.
379-'ll'olmot

I \L\1 -1 1'1" II'

41- Ho-lor Real
Trucblor Sale
42- Mob~ Ho.• for Rtu~ot " '-- y,,_ A 4 WD'•
43- Fanu for Reat
Mo&amp;on:yclol
44--' Apo-t f0&lt; R•t
lloou 1: Moton for Sole
45- Fumillhod Rooou
Au"' Partt 6: Ace&lt;-n..l
46- Spooe for Real
Au"' Repair

51- Ho....hold Coodt
52- Sportias Coodt
52-AatiqiMO
~ Mi... Men:boacJ;,e
55- J;luildi"' SuppllOf ·

Eopa_.

,.....
PluabiatJ 6: Heatlcof
ExcawaW.,
Eloctricol &amp; Rolo,;p~,~~

8S- C..rol Haulla&amp;
Mobile Ho•e Repair
Uphoblory

Public Notice

Prollate Olvlalon, Court
Btraat, Pomeroy, Ohio

PUBUC NOTICE
A public lnapectlon of the
Squthern Local School
457111
D'
The' object of the PaUUon
lllcict'a 1993-94 Budget,
Ia to determine the halra, Hearing, Notice, Submla- .
the County
Auditor
next of klil .nd peraona . alon
underto Ohio
Ravilld
Law
anUIIed to the eatete of 57Qs. 3o will be held on
KaUe ·Quth, Dec .. aod. In December 21. 1-2 at the
order ltat a clelrlbuUon of Southern High ci:rlng the
ulcl-t. c.n be 11111de.
You are herelly requlrod regulae meeting of the
to .nawar tha PatiUon will&gt;- School Board.
In lwMty-e!ghl (21) dctya .nDennla E. Hill,
ar the lui publ!caUon ol
Tre0~urer
thla noUca which will ba -&lt;12) 7• 14, 21c
pubHahod once a WHk lor 1--------:..,--j
alx (6) aucc..alva waeka.
If
Thalaat pubUcation will bl
...
made on the 7th dey
J111uary, ui3, and ini
""
twenty-eight (28) day. lor _
an•warlng will commenD!'
on 't hat data. In ol your

DEER CUT
AND
WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD

· -LAKE

Quality ·
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

6637

RACINE, OH.
949-2734

MAkE ARUll

St. Rt. 7
Uosltire, OH.

12-1-'92·1

KEVIN'S LAWN·
MAINTENANCE
949·2391 or :
1·100·137·1460

Sholllodoll· Coiloct. .
'Aldora In 81Doll'
8pocla! Edition ..... ...._

...,,

Lawn

Mowing, ,.

F~trUUzlng,

QUAUTY PRINT SHOP

Waadin111

• and Seeding. .,

255111111., llddlopott, 011.
1124314 Doya, 7424020 Ew.
III!HpmWookdayo
1 -u pm Salvniap unll

Shrub and Tree ..TrirnmlngfJ Removal
R-1.1~1

F'"eottmotoo
:
FIREWOOD FOR S.Al;E .

c~

AUforDaiM

USE waNT ADS,

AHANDY
TOOL

failure to •n•w•r or other·

w_lae -pond •• retptlred
by the Ohio .RuiM ol Civil
Proo•dura, judgment by ~-::---_..:.._..:..:,;,_--l
default will b• r•nd•r•d
eplnat you lor the relief
demMclod In title PetiUon.
Datad title 25th day of
Novembw, 10112.
Robert E. Buck,
fi
·"
Probat. Judge
• - · K. ..- ..1--' Clerk
111~ lt2i1.1•.'21.'2a:
11) 4 &amp;tc
'

CHARLIE'S

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION
HoiMS

SMALL DOZER ·
WORK · ·
DRIVIWIY WoRK
anti LIMESIOIE

ClASSifiEDAOS
8supernakef

IELIYEIY SERVICE
S•all lour Work
$25.00 ,., . _

Stop&amp; Compare

for 8V8fyflind

FlEE ESTIMATES

IWOIIIIll

. 985·4473
667-6179 ..

CHRISTMAS·
TREES

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

.(;YOUNG
992-6215

PIIIIII'OJ, OhiD

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Fresh Cut Daily
5' • 8' Tall
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden's
Residence
Rutland, Oh.
742-3051
SR124
Re11dv Nov. 26

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

.24 SESSIONS &amp; FREE

f-Ill!• I 1110

1

(CHatylotMI21)

IEISOIIAIU

PONDS

.'

lashan Rd., Racine
939·2126

b

ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR I MONTHS
11-2)-'82·1 mo.

~mCJ~~~:J,~ ~.

WATER &amp; SEWER

Real Estate General

HAUUNG: Urnoatone;;
Dirt, Gravol and Coal ~

LICENSED and BONGED · ·

..

The Family Of
ARTHUR ALLEN
STOBART
who paiiHd away
suddenly, Nov. 19,
1992, while working,
want to thank
everyone lor the
food, lovely flowera ·
and plantara, money
gnta,cards,phona
calls, prayara,
stopping by, just
being there or any
acta of klndne11
shown.
Also AI Hartaon for
hla comforting Worda
arid sarvlce, .
Middleport Church ot
Christ tor all they did,
Ewing Funel'lll Home
atan, Faenay-Bennatt
Po1112S, Laglon,
Middleport, tor their
part of tha urvlca,
and being pall·
baal'llla and for food.
Words cannot

REDUCED: LOVETT RD. • 2 itory log home with 2208
1q. fl. living apace, 3 bedroom&amp;, 2 belha, large
deck/porch, buih In aooenorie1 • 3 112 ac:r81. Beautiful
home a location.
. REDUCED TO $'18,000
.

NI;AR ALBANY • Lovely split Ioyer home with 4
bedrooms, 2 batha, decking, gerage, appllancea,
bal8~ent with workshop, 8.35 acraa with liuft treo1 &amp;
ahad. $54,000
·
DEXTER· 1 112 story home with 4 bedroom&amp;. cellar,
garden 111'88, added insulalion, large Irani porch, newly
palnlld. $16,000''
SR 388-1 ftoor frame home with 3 bld.-na, view of
river, needs repair. ASKING $5.800 make a good
fllhing/hunting cabin I

or-

1888 SKYUNE ManufiiCtured Home- 3 bedrqoma, 2
bath, CIA, fireplace , skylight, appllanon, aklrtfng, .-pa,
In 'Uka New' conclllon. Leave on ...-eliot
ID
looallon of your qholcel $29,1100 (OWNER WANn AN
OFFERI.)
.

. exprenour

appreciation, and we
will never forget your
klndneu. May Qod
BluaMChand

DON'T JUST DRIVE BY OUR OFFICEI STOP IN AND
SEE THE GREAT SECLECTIO~OF HOUSING WE
HAVE AVAILABLE! ONE MAY Bt: JUST RIGHT FOR
YOU I OUR DOOR IS ALWAYS OPEN ... TO YOUI

evaryone of you .

-2-

Lucretia, Tanya;
T. .ml, David,
Samantha, Rick,
Mllba,~and

Ryan
l .

992-2036

loclty 1. Hupp,
Agent

MOTHERS AT
Chrlatmaa Income!
Eaay worlt hm .

home. No Cllah aWl . :
up. start a t - and ;
you'll navar haw to
wonyebout

Clvlalmaa money

agalnllnCOIM that

16141 10·5264

SHRUB -&amp;
TRIM and ·''·
REMOVAL -~ .

SANITATION
$8.00

· n~~n9·.

giving
whole of the way; .
cherished amlla, 1
heart of gold.
the daareat mother I
the world could
hold;
appy inemorlea,
fond lnd true,
Ua Who thought
the world of you .
Sicily m!Saad and

BIU SLACK ·- :
'

992-2269
.

.

USED RAILROAD nES

CrHklo•tl
•••tlleport, o•io
lftt

614·742·2138

·
;
a
3890l· LH~•I

614-992·7144
I

BINGO

L-..:•;.:;;;;...:1.:;.0~-...l.ll Do youInnaeclalllllt
lffa?

MAXINE BURNS ON
HER 741h BIRTHDAY,
MONDAY, DEC. 71h
of striving,

•FIREWOOD ·. · .

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

you can't.
(114)378-6153
111111·12 pm and

In Memory

•UGHT HAUUNG '

HAULING

PLUMBING

kalpl going when

2

"

IMlrl~la110rt, Ohio 45760

De!:amber Specl81

•

D.c.O.

... 169

DAVIDSON'S

..........

cant 91 Thanks

Pomeroy

11·11·'WZ•I - ·

' •

- ~··­
742·1HO

. 12-5,tln

ure • Madlclna • C~t~cer'•
Fire • Hulth • Acclcren'f
•Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

'--I--'
Fi•r•ihci'es

FU TREE SERVICE
Trl

AMERICAN GENEUL
LIFE anti ACCIDENT
COMPANY - ~-

Senior CHIDI'II $6.00
II you naed truh pick·
up or more Information
caa
n.o.a1 Wltlte
915-4352
or
lenHH

.

PH. 614·992-5591

NEW LISTING· TUPPERS PLAINS- 2111ory, 3-&lt;4 bedroom
home on paved Rl. 1+ IICre, fenced baa!&lt; yard, 2
fireplace1, unique origin81 alyling.
$49,000

Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rental Progr~m.
12·1·2 mo.

FOREVER
BRONZE

UNES
-- ·
BASEMENTS &amp; ~;
· HOME SITES
t:

P.V.H. Commu. Room
Speaker: Marie Gravely, R.D.
{Dietitian)
· Topic: "Diabetes in the
Holiday Season•
Public iiwiled to attend. Call
304-675-4340 Ext. 281 or 448
101' information.

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT? '

. R&amp;C EICAVATIIIG

pd.

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

232 2ntl St.,

ASK ABOUT OUR

.. BULLDOZING :, ·

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.

BOTTLE OF lOTION
$32.00 .
Many more specials.

GIFT CERTIFICATES

1112111 mo.

·

uru

992·7553

RESIDE ICE
JS975 F..twad• ...
Pollwoy, Oltlo

HENRY E. CLELAND••--·--········-MH1t1
TRACY BRINAGER--·-·-'..·-·-···
JEAN TRUSSELL.--··-··-·.......... _._..._
OFFICE..........................- ••••• ,•• _._ ,••.;.....112-2211

•

$.05/day

Clcmijied page• c011er the
follovling leleplaone eschotige••••

DIABETIC SUPPORT
MEETING
Thursday, Dec. 8, 7 P.M.

BOB'S ~ARKET &amp;
GREENHOUSES, INC.
Will be closing at 4 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 8
for an employee
Christmas dinner.
We are sorry for any
inconvenience this may
cause you.

$ .42
$.60

I: I \ I \I '

BULUnN
4:30P.M. DIY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON

week for tbe moath ot November at Melp Junior High Scltool. L· r
r, are Erin KraWIII:zyn, English ud literature; Steven McCulouJ1h, '·
. read lug and speU1n1; Suclra Y011111• English 1Uid literature; ud 1
Mlcbelle Miller, ED1lltth aDd literature.

As far as I could see.
Beautiful as it was,
I longed to see the river
The mikes my·home complete
My heart was sad and I lcitew
Home was where I belonged.

LaPorte, lnd

15
15

PeulorSolo
Maoioallutc
to
FnUIO 1: Vtplolot.
59- Foi- Solo .. T....a. ·

$.20
$.30

=-.,...-- --1

fllTHf

STUDENTS OF THE WEEK • Pictured are studeats or the \

Tins Hysell j

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

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

1

Free
They soar above the clOUds
So proud and so free
Hermits from the mountains
Calling for me.
Flying so high
Flying so free
Calling, calling for me.

Over 15 Words

lAlLEY Ullllll

SI!PIIC IYITEIII,
HOlE liTES end :

'

.

1

AVAIL.A8LE.

dlmer.
I

I

tmdt~WOAK

The camp will furnish turkey,
ham, mashed potatoes, dressing,
roDs and drink. Members bring a
potluck dish and table service.
Tbe camp will deliver dinners to
the elderly, lick and shut-ins at 3

.

Devla-, L8911t••· A•
II THE
......- . _ EDolltora Md
PROBATE COURT
Aaalgna of Ollie Cenda,
Oil 11811 eouiiT't, OHIO Aiklr••• Unlcn-n; Ed·
Conde, ,AddrtH
PAUL
M.
REED,
:~:'::n;:
lh
. e unknown
l, I •• I r WWA
oflte ~of
of Kin, Dev~Ciicllt,Dunud
••-· LeaatHa, AdmlnJ.
atratort, !nouton• and
A..lgna of Edward Cantle,
LOliE A. : ~~-~ A d d - Unknown; a.dle
Garrlaon Cantle, Adtlr-.
c..
Unknown; lha Unknown
D 1 111, " - M7
Ha!ra, Next ol Kin, De¥1·
IIOliCI IY PUIIIJCA110N ••••· Lagateaa, AdcnlnJ.
To: DIHe Conde, Laat atratora, Exeoutora and
U* 118 laltlcaore, Mary- Aaalgna ol Sadie Garrlaon
IMid, Current • II w Conde; the Unknown ~ra,
un~n: Ill• Unknown Next of Kin, D.vl••••·
Heln, Nut of Kin, Devl· Legetaea, Admlril•lratora,
- · Leaata•• .._lni- Execnctora and Aulgna ol
alralon, lbcaoutora end KaUa Guth, Dec-od, and
Aao.lp a ol DIMia Conde, the Unkclown Hal,., Next of
• t'
Unllnowni Cher· Kin, Devla..a,
1aa Calida, Adclr- Un- Admlnl•tratora,
ltrAWa; the Unknown Ha!r8, and Aealgna
Ne•t ef Kin, Devlee.. , Conde,
L • - · Mlolnlth..WS,
You are har•bY noUIIad
lb_..,. and Aee!gna of that you have " - namad
C11ar1aa Conda, • dllr 111M Defendant. In e !age! acllon
Unlalown; Aabert Conde, entiUod Peul II. Reod,
.Adllre.. Unknown; the Admln!etrator WWA of the
Unltrlcw•i 11a1n, Next oiiCin, Eatai• of Kalla Guth,
Dawla ..e, AclmlnlalraiJDra, Deo-.1,. ve. Loulae R.
ibeotllafa and Aeel- of Cenda, alii. lhle action hM
Rill art Corlda. u*i"••• lleln aaelgn:!_~ Ntho.
Oll!a Conde, 17,220 andle ..--.. n •
Alldraaa
the Common Plaee Ceurt of
Llatlll anllitlra,
Melga County, Ohio,

~.Z!!!JI_ACICHDE

Camp 7230 will have a potluck
dinJier Satunlay ll 6:30 p.m. at the
Modem Woodmen Hall ul Burling·
.'

1
3
6

Rate

5' • 7' TALL

BURLINGHAM - Tbe Burlins·
ham Modem Woodmen nf America

him.

Tueoday Paper
Wednooday Paper
Thunday Paper
Fridcoy Paper
SWlday Paper

· PubliC Notice

' Public Notice

3

Po.et's comer...

Christmas potluck

!

•'

,

Property .transfers

I·

TUESDAY
POMEROY · · Ohio Eta Phi
, Ollplet, Bela Sipos l'hi Sorority,
: ~ have ill CbriJimaS party Tues•day at 6:30 p.m. at the home of
: CllldeDo Hodlidl, sponsor. There
will bo a Clllll'ed dinner and a gift
IIIII cfMII!CIIt exchanJe. Members
. w11o ._. eot plid dueure encour••

The November meeting of the
Chatter Club was held recently at
4he home of Janice Fetty, Pomeroy.
Dues and flower fund were cotlected and offiCers repOrts given.
Refreshments were served and
Rusty Holsinger won the drilwing.
Games were played and won by
Delores Whitlock, Brenda Bolin,
Lynn McKinney and Miry Myers.
Susan Cleland received an

Ray Foster, Marie Norris,
parcels, to Ray Foster, Midd Viii.
Bernice Fry by Executor,
parcels, to Dolphus Burke, Wanda
RAVENSWOOD, W:VA.- The C. Burke, Porn VilL:·
Erma M. Connolly, parcel, to
Christmas party of the River Valley
Mike
Connolly, parcel to Mike
Herbalists will be Tuesday at Jan
Connolly,
Sheila Connolly, Olive. ·
Gerhold's farm. Meet at 6:30 p.m.
Southera
Ohio Coal Co. , 13.00
at the shopping plaza in
A,
to
Edward
Butterworth, Leah
Ravenswood, W.Va. Bring finger
Nora
Butterworth,
Salem.
foods, cooties for exchange (three
Vinas
L.
Lee,
1.643
A, to Glen
per bag, four bags) and a wrapped
R.
Bissell,
Racine
Vill.
herbal omsment with a $5 value.
Charles Bissell, dec"d, cert. of
trans,
to Margarel K. Bissell,
POMEROY • Auxiliary of Drew
Chester.
Webster ~ost39, American Legion,
and the Etght and Forty will have a
combined Christmas dinner party
Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Crow's
Restaurant There will be a $5 gift
exchange and members are rememHome Is Where I Beloog
ber to take a gift a local cystic
I've gone a distance far from
librosis child.
home
Treated well, saw thing I've
WEDNESDAY
never seen.
POMEROY - Pomeroy MerDid things as ne- bef«n
chants Association will meet
Only to fmd "Home is where I
Wednesday at 8:30a.m. in the con- belong." ·
ference room of Bank One. Offi·'
Cob Webs hanging in every corcers will be elected. All members ner,
attend.
. Dust heavy on the furniture
Kitchen needed scrubbing,
RACINE • The vegelable growWaitins for me to return.
er's winter ineeting sponSCll'ed by
the Ohio State University and
I can knock away the cob webs,
Meigs/Washington County ExtenDust off the furniture,
sion Services will be held on
Scrub and wilt the floor to a
Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 shine,
p.m. at the Racine American
Because I'm back where I
Legion Hall. There will be a $5 fee belong.
to help defray costs of handouts
My visit was great, trees and
and to provide a soup and sandwich. land so flat
lunch. Reservations by Monday at
the Meigs County' 'Extension

RACINE • Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. fCll' installation of officers.

!

.

el.ollloolool•-•

Public NOtice

Chatter Club has me~ting_ ·

fCll' Di1Jht hours.

C mmunity calendar

~"

••t

:Z.:h~

Canon celebrated his
second bll'thday recently with a
party carrying out the "Barney the
en or twkey and half the calories of Dinosaur" theme. The party was
ham Ill' ground chuck, and is com- given by his parents, Steve and
parable to chicken and turkey in Renee Carson, at the home of his
cholesterolcontenL
·
srandparenU, Ralpb and Jean
- bas more protein than freshwa· Trussell.
ter or saltwater fish, beef liver,
Attcndinl or sendin1 lifts were
turkey or chicken, and is a rich Ralph and Jean Trussell, maternal
source of trace minerals incliJdinl lfBIIdparents; Russ and Pal Carson,
calcium, magnesium, zinc, pntassj- paternal grandparents; Sadie
urn. DhosDhorus and iron.
Trussell and Faye Kirkhart, materlfere's a recipe for "A-1 Veni· nat gmtt-grandmothcrs; Floyd and
son Roast", which you can pepare Esther Carson, paternal greatwith the deer that I hope you grandparents; Peggy. Missy and
bagged last week.
Jacob Ridgwa_I; Steve Trussell;
Pour a bottle of A-1 Steak Sauce · Scott, Teresa, Cheyenne and Scotover an entire venison roast that tie Trusiell; Scott, Linda and Lindhas been trimmed of the outside fat say McKinney; Keith and Trish
and muscle. Wrap the roast with Carson; Ralph, Patty and Rich
several. strips of bacon, securing Clark and Bobby Carson; Denver,
with toothptckS. Mix a package of Nora and Bill Rii:e; _and Avery and
ZACHARY CARSON .
dry onion soup mix with a can of Helene Goe~in.
cream of m~ SQ1!P and a cup
Also ~ a gift of a "Barney
of water. Pour over and around the the Dinosaur stuffed doll were Wendy Mcintosh, San Antonio,
roast. Wrap the roast in foil and Andy, Kim; Tim, Melanie and Texas.
bake for three hours at 300 degrees,
checking for doneness. This can
also be done in a crockpot. cooking

I

• 'I-

Cbesblre. Tbe pompou llriJ were jadged the .
. !)ell walldllg ult iD Middleport's parade Tbun- ·
day algbt. Man:ill BI'OWIIInl Is Instructor of ..e
lfUUp.
'

Zachary Carson celebrates
se,~ond birthday recently

Consider
this...

1·

. BEST WALKING UNIT. Lootlug very
Cbrlsunasy In their wblte cOlltnmes with red
trim were -members of Satin .a nd Lace of

DAY BEfORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Mcndily
1:00 p.m. n-iay
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thuroday
1:00 p.m. Prlday

COJT'( DI!ADLINB
Moodily Paper

MoN. tbru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.8-12
.
. CLosED SuNDAY
POLICIES

i.
••

Words

10
Monthly

To place

•

Days

0

EVERY THURSDAY

18 yra and up. E•n u
much u you want, full
or pan tlma from your
homa.Noc•h
lnvaatment, be your
own boas, evan II
you'l'll atllla atudant.

EAGLES CLUB
II PO.IOY .
1145 .....
..
Early llnl ,
$1000 l'lyoH
'lltlu4 , ... lor I
FIE
~Ill

c... ·

Thla Ia Income that

kMpa going even
when
don't.

Uc. llo. 0050-32

(61
11-12

•

GUN.
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
·SUNDAYS ·
12:00 Noon

WEBERS
• CHRISTMAS TREES'

Factory choke 12

Hllj:tlon of larger

Hbmeg~n-

caretully Sheared )

gauge only
STARTS

Scotch &amp; White PI""
4' &amp; \JP With a

' trMI.
C.1174Z..Z143 or
742-2171

and

I

\

�r

•

llorlday.

Pomel'cW" llddleport, Ohio

The o.lty Sentinel

...... •

;::::::::::::::r~S:N:AFU~®::by~B;,n:~~B~e:attk~~~----------r~===Mob:::lle::Ho=~=====r~42;:;Ma~~~~~le~~~m=..==~r-~----------~--------------• • •

ror Sale

••

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by lArry Wrtpt

for Rent

....,,••=•

a

•

o.e.m•

7, 1 -

.

Pomeroy llddleport, Ohio

Sentinel Page . t :

lor....

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==w:~~

71

Auloe

YIIAY lAlLY
"ULII

liM....
.
.
-Coop,.,., ........

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1ln.

'•

PHILLIP

!:J::il--a::.~
....._-,

111:12.

ALDER

flnoneo,

I

1100 - · .,,., ....... tM-1192·

·-Zllli14-UHZ27.

~

/

416- ~-~

•u•
Nice 2br

Tnllior, aoilai11.111.·I

Fl di.IM J

qulrecl. 11+211 1:1111

Jll8 53

.

8

Lost&amp; Found

W.ohl!90ft

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

-

"r,-,B"-'~

Elo"*'IIIY,

No

44

Aoqulnd. Phono:

Apartment
for Rent

•tlnO Evonl....
olbdnn. houoo, c... nl ~lr &amp; ·"*"l.
.WJII,
Rlfltaoriltor,
1 -~.
"'"""
heat, Nfttgerator. 14:ove, trMzer, No
......
Wiler
•

0.

la••••d I ......,, ......

2 •• cilport, U2S dopooll,
Ohio a 'lqlnlo, ~04-tf~. $325/mon., ovolllbll Docombor
Zl'lllorlll'ZGI.
151h, eM-1112-6537.

eluded. flOG

3117,

o.-. . -

5I

HouaehOid
Goods'

54 Ml194tlllneoU1

""-n:hanc:l'-

...

HE'S FEELIN'
PDRELY,
MISS
PRUNELLY

a VIcinity

to

ALL YIRI SO... MUll " Pold In
Adv.,_, DIADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
Ihe My I l l - I he·Ill lo
run.
S..ndor ldltlon • 2:00 p.m.

Employment Serv 1ces

Public Sale

15 Tl-lERE AN'(THING I

&amp; Auction
11
Rick PNroon Auolon Campony,

CAN [:10 TO EARN A
LITTLE EXTRA CREDIT?

full time •uataan.r, aompa.le

,

IUCIIon ..we..
u~
-,ohio I vqlnlo, -

,.,__

--·--·-

- to

-.011.41710.

Deer Heads.....................190
rkeys ...-...........·..............'1" 1~ 00
Flsh ••••• ~.............~ ••. ~•.'400 per Inch
Call (304) 895-3386
after 5 p.m.

18 W.ntld to DO

Fumlohed,

lOTALLY
I

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I

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AIJTOII()1M;
I

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:::...Woflll
Pori A8- , _ AI
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Tall fiOo,
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111.

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Bun writing for 11 good reast~~~11J MhasB 11 celllitr {irone?

.........
I Cau11ty

LIMRlD

lcHMI"rvlce

TIME ONLY
95

$69

....... $18.11

per ftiOIIth

.

eom..-

Allend Our FRII liM INA A To
All Apptlcotlon And
, _ , AbcMII ThO Truc!!I!IJI .In~And Our T - .

_ , -Doiaonlborl
1 P.M. To IP.M.

.ri'''r:!
=~=•
7
,Ohio
0

~

ExpMt:. atd: 1..eoo.zl7..4842
IMIPIMI cI d: 1.-..aJ.ZJII
USA Trvak

•• t:ll1 or

(U.S. a Cl!no•l

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replacement WTndows
·
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREt: ESTIMATES

Rup, Pllcemata,
Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Anlmal1,
loti of am~llertlclea.
-111dup

·OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
885-4356

11-»1-. pd.

.=;..~·,cr t~ -

IUit

:::

~ .. Odd - · ...._
IOuldG • lilt Uau au. Er..

..... F

F . . . . , • ~.

MUll . hlft .......

&amp;

cuns

.• ·

IUDFORD'S

,,.
...
or Cut Your o...
~

' CIIIIY IIIII

E•Jtefllrwlaoa II.
611 011 lrnel 101141
1~ . . . . . . . . .

WAICI fOIIIIII
.._....,.,:1:,;1~'-

I-

Read the Best 5eler
Read the

CJ,f\SSRD RDS

u. ·S. POST

..

53 .

1

NpiW 10

lloli+4011Wa1Polnl!!oalol•.
200 lllln 81, . PI
nt, WV 21110..

Mil
Rlvatllile
Aport.-. In 11-part, fn1111

Mo,_

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HoUM, ftOO(mo. • UdNU• No

Pill. CoM llalore 7 P.M. 114-446-

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1148821811• .

45

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-·All--

-.-WV. -71SAllotI •• • 2:00 p.m.,
Celt

RAVENSWOOD
IIYA HALL

••• a.....

I

llonllo, I -

ca-..o. ...

·HEw.u&lt;JI

NORTH /'fPJ.CA

Well

Nortb

Eul

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.'

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Pass

Pass

Pass

-.

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
'' - ~
Should • Colic - Vixen • Mender • ONE CHILD
My 75 year old dad w~tad to treat me to a movie
lor my 50th birthday, so he gave the cashier money
and said, '"One senior citizen and ONE CHILD."

..,

.'

The World Almanac.., Crossword Puzzle ,

..

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&amp; Puc II&amp;~ Nlillr

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77NIII• .

IVhiOCk

81 Farm Equipment

I DON'T
KNOW...

~-

'

Q. Is there a fancy word lor "to

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHYie&gt;~

~.-

OUR LANGUAGE
HOlCK ('bolk') lifts up or pulls: . . ._._.~
'Tbey struggled to boick tile trunk."
Don't pawn this spelling bjnt: HOlCK
without the I becomes HOCK.

A'JC7I). ( .

Al:c111 arill
....._ 1 r I?O, .,..

....,, "

-.Colt

Hot ..lhOid
Goodl

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you .develop' from step No. 3 below.

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8terll!!ll . - . -llotol.
114 , . . . .

.our N:nJT m£

-

,POIIWOy; ......

IHOTICEI
Q W1nt~ to Rent
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING co,
,_me,. lhol you do buol~ To Iouth
-wllh poaflllrou~-: For Wukuld
11111111 1'1111.
HOI'
lllo
111111 .,.M you hen ln...

to---·
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~loom \oU6 fotJ.£. 1l&gt; FU~O

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Tllo l J 00011 """""""' on

"WIU~NIDrelclertylnmyhorne, :z~

STAMPS

~ORNLOSER

Shop.

. . . . --ef4.441-.

21"aor 1 1V.- ollor,. ...
,....
114
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~118W~4~·~,-:---:---,c-

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Opportunity

no

Lonhdln G.C.IIurtlllr Co. Qol.

tt10. _.114
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CH lllld, :11044711-

131. c..w~an~o ~~o7· Hondonon, WV :1104-e
·
TIM toppi!IJI I 1-nt IX•
porlo- frM lllllmoloo, 304-

Wll Do -lllnlng, And
IJM 10 lla.,.._h In My
....... C.ll14 441 lfCM.

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54 Mlacellaneoua.

1!338.

· UO. I

PM.

• G I K NV L lyouhave finally losta ----· .
5 I
I I O Complete the chuckle quoted
by filli ng in the missing words
1·

--------------------------~------·
Anower to Prevl~ PuUie
ACROSS
311 ActreooZadora
1 City In Hawaii 38 Chertlhed
, 5 Hondle ol a
By Pbllllp Alder
animal
I
aword
39 Foolllke part
· 1n 1989, J ames Kauder wrote a book 12
II Central
12, Roma11
40 Director
Una
Prellllnger
· ·called ' The ·Bridge Philosopher.•
13 AbHnt
42
Subjection
has just been republished under the
14 Artz. Umt
44 Garden plant
tie 'Creative Card Play• ($ll.95, Law- 111 Small
47 Hawaiian
renee &amp; Leong, 212-866-5860). It Is
moaaurewreath
48 Paid, a1 1 bill
'over the shoulder' book. The reader 18 ~::'l:svP
111 Treat badlr .
listens to Kauder's thoughts d~~~~~~~~17 Boxer llu55 Noun oulflx
play of 61 deals. The major dl
hommad se
Pl1r
between this book and others of the · 18 UterlrJ lronr
bol1terou11r
genre is that Kauiler isn't always the 20 Awlketol
se Actor- .
:declarer. Twice be is confronted
22 EnlertllnNovello'
Witb blddins problems, once be has
m1nt
59WWUal'll
lind the Winning opening lead, and 21 . ~: =~=t eo FIOWar
81 Tarror
times be is the key defender.
ngure
F""ale deor
The text · is chatty, mostly to the : 28 Malirtllftvtr 82
83 Grafted, In
6 - Jlm1
point, but occasionally· with extrane- 32 AIIIIIIPOIII
he1aldry
7 EYIIOI- l-.
ous observatioos. The deals are chat-.
&amp;ad
84 Bllltlof
Mara
.....,.
burden
lebn~lbng_ - except, perbaps, the first, 3.3 M•~~8Bourlll&lt;e W IC ts t!lltitled ' A Simple Hand." ,34 Ught - ·"'-'
DOWN
See what you think.
flllher
11 Dec. holdiY -·
10 Emerald - . • _
Against your contract of three no11 How IWMI
trump, Westlleads the heart five: two,
queen, kins. How would you continue?
A three-no.-trump opening
......
:t PUT TOO MuCH
powerhouse
Is arguably the
....'
In
bridge,
but
this was rubber bri·d1e.l t.rt-t-+ON MY LAST .
wbere science takes a seat in
trunk.
·
LETT~, ANI&gt; IT
The risk is that East bas the dia·
OV~I"StiOT C:.I'II(AGO
moOid king and West the club ace, and
that when East gets in, be might make
AN.I&gt; weNT ALt. THE
a telling switch to clubs.
The technical play Is to cash the diaytAY TO .
mond ace, just In case the king drops.
But, as Kauder points out, if it doesn't
PIT1"5BUil6tl!
drop, the defenders will know all
about your Strotlfl suit. West might
even bave a chance to signaller clubs.
The practical play -IS to lead a low
,,..
........
T'"~"d'·~··,.~T~~~ diamond toward the dummy at
..,.. -""'"" PY11 ~...,N..,.,.
two. 'Kauder suggests that Ealit, not
USED TO
I be&gt;inl so sure about the diamond posi· , 1.4--4ourFU.Ntc:. ~
would have to be a genius to find
ALU~ 11-1
club sWitch.
lt.r+--+-

_.-P05TAG~

• ~ ••

$1. .. CoiiiM-1112-1011.

NCJI'ICE

Wo oldn, cut &amp; -

II

OffiG.t
I •

=~~~~~~~------

·::v~~ckly" or "to run off"? 1 coutd

,.....,..----------.....;~---~ · A. Try an early American word
I tHINK Hee Juer IJ.).o
that's now obsolete: ABSQUATUAT Mfii R::R BE! IN&amp; MS.
LATE. Tbls lancUul verb, pronoWICed
"ab-SKWAH·tyoo-late," was perbaps
formed as the opposite· of the verb
. SQUAT; Instead of squatting or staying in one place, you move on or decamp. Since its first use in 1830, the
· word has also meant "to abscond," but
anybody who leaves quickly may be
said to ABSQUATULATE.

-

...

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.llbrtty CIP'* ~..,. . . cr.t«&lt;II'Om quotal:lonl by~flmout; ptqlole, put Mel pr-.nt.
Eam ~ett.-ln tMo dphlr ttlrldltor lnOthet'. romy·, cNra: c ~-. u.

.wy v
EOZ .

TUCA
OAV

OZK

HWOXVH

UT

All Agee Welcome
Specl81 Claa 3-6

-· -

UPHUGVHDVZDV . '

0 AW

v.... olda

........

ReJI Es tate

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Children need to be valued for who they are,
Where 1hey are, and not for something In the future." -

Mr. Rogers.

GRAVE
BLANKETs ·

Ill ... blo rldl.
2 -~!_!1111 aonlon
tub. Oolllpolle .....,., 301-t7t7207.
1 -

•.ooo.

For Your Lost
Loved One.
Handmade with
whitt pine.

$20.00
(614) 949-2058
11121

Ill roam~, 2 bmh8, totalllllolrlc
with. wood-, born, lnd
-lldlftill. ApPfOX, t IC&lt;M, 3

tnorn Aoalno an Rd. Appointment only, • - •
2111.

I

I

DECEMBER? J

r_,tly provided you with
mallon, Ieithia penon know
well II
all worked out lor you and how much
you IIPfi'ICiated the Input
I
GEIIINI (...,.21-.lunao 110) II' a been said
that whM one Ia Iucky materlatlythey' r~
usually not lucky In love. However, what
dliYelope for you today could help dis
J)lllthla theory •.
'
.
CANCIR (olune 21....., 22) Something
could pta.!de you with the opening
you've wanted to draw you closer to
someone you .(!NIIIy like but have never
bean 1ble to relieh.
LIO (....., II-AIII. 221 Situations that
IIIIOClateo may lind Intimidating.
shouldn't prove erduouo lor you to
rrirn~ga. You hew 1 gift lor mal&lt;lng the

ftnd II. The Aatrc&gt;-Graph Matchmaker
Instantly reveals whlcll signa are romantically perf11ct lor you. Mall $2 plus a
long, sell-add..-, stamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH .
4410 t..a.28.
CAPRICORN (Die. :12-hn. 11) ·Your
· lead•lhlp qualities will be evident to
othera today and this WUI work to your I
advant-a-. They won't reeent dlrectl- 1
lrom someone who knows what he or 1
she Ia doing.
!
AQUAIIIU8 (JM. 20-Feb. 18) Today I
you might be quite anxious to make j
things~ for people you love. Thla Ia ,
a noble concern, but try to dolo with· I herd look M1Y today.
· out almullaneously admorilahlng them 1 v.JRGO (Aua. 21 llpt 221 You
lor their mlllai&lt;H.
hive to do lpeclll thlngllodiiY or
PIICEI (,..,_ 20-lilrclo 110) You tend around cer111n people In order to -""'" '
ID rollecl the periOIIailtlel of people youraell. The ltlnlhlne lollows you
O!o.I,1you're with today, 10 mal&lt;ell·a point to
be with cheery l)&gt;pes. Their company 11.
211 A window of
Thla might be a more active Year lor you , your auurlllCe Oil pleuant day.
opportunity leading to prOiplllty might 1
IOCially than you've expeMncecl lor AMI (--11-Aprlltl) Occaalonal- open lor you todly, but II could be of
quite IOIMIIone. Hyou hiPI*IIO be an ly, In order to get what we want, we lhot1 duration. Act promptly 11ter you •
u1111tachad Sagmerlan, 1hll could be must. flrat cast a little bread upon the U.lhlnaaup.
'
llf*llally true.
weter. A benlgll, thoughtlul gellure to 41COIII'Ki (OoL ......,, 22) Yotir _,...
IAQITTAIIIIII ( - . lloOio. if! I Oolng the right peraon could do the trick tor IO IUCCIIIIodll)llolodo llltlll bit more
thel;llll you can Ia a reward In~. but you today.
lor the other guy end allow how cooper.
IIIII' of today'• joba that you perform TAI!IIUI '"""' IO-I!IIY 110) ~cknowt·' at~ you really are. The rlghleKamp~ 11
,.I could reep 1 bonus. Take pride In edg"*" means a lot today. If aomeone, a magiC elixir. .

ASTRO·ORAPH

e

.

'-bar- .
'Birthday.

=•r-=~

''

•
•

.'
,.

~-:.-=

all your Iaska, large or

•
I.
•

WI llltlwr

where to look for romance and

...''•'
••

OBZFGVWWVA .

:till, ....... It Hi .......~

For Mor.lnfonnatlon
' Call 304-273-3721

'

··..·'

.'

OKUOVHDVZDV

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

-

. "'
•
•

BZTO ~ DR,

DYBOKYUUK,

IMONDAY

...........

.'
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•

···.......
.
_
_
:z.-.r;r..

PO..POM,
.
TU8LIIIG,
UJOII TWIRLIIIG

31 Homu tor Sale

CHRiniW TREES

IIIII.

Quol!l)' And Elf
,..,_ lo The
, FOr y - Chlld'l
Con. Colt Uo For A vt.N. lnllnt
"....... 11t 441 1227. , ....
choaloro l8chool Age 114-441-

Fmanc1al

(lo Sanilay CaDs)

Need 1 Gift?

pPIIIIoblolo..ilttdon'

EDEIIIFIIW

614-949·2101. 94.9·2160
or 915·3139

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS

0

lWslliW
th ••••·
PIIW ......_ ...01 Per Hour. IJ4.2q..
Yae.llona O.urantnd WlgM. 1443.
114-446-7217.
o-::--=---:--=--::-...:....:--....,_, E...-. 1
.Mioo Poulo'o Dor Con CoNw 1
·-,.,. ·-·
1 - Will 01 HMC On .lecklon
(NO~IIiioetloc
ory)
P1U 51-F 1 A.M. ..::10 P.M. II

=~1111 !:..L~~ ~
I

a

FRANK AND ERNEST

room oplll- 11 Wllae

•--~·-·.. CTrM*Io
Avolllble)

PEIIFOIIIIINCE

Ro-

l
Roqullad. t14-146-111t.
Graci... llv.... 1 Mil 2 bod~

-

"CELLUJ.8(i

a-

Cloen, No Poll.

00

.-. . .

-

·--.~-~
P.O.IIu 1011,

..GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

Soot~

:Peeking over
.•another shoulder

Gallipolis

My sister-in-law says there

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Opening lead: • .5

I SHORE
HOPE HE'LL
BE BACK
TOMORRY

I

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

JUGHAID
DIDN'T
CDME TO
SCHOOL
TODAY!!

Frldoy. - r odltlon • 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.

I

.K 2

....

C0 L B K

L.
. ...,...J•.-J 7 life than getting on the bath·
,.....-~---:-~.;..::..,. room scale and discovering

.AKQ
.AK6

r--------~--- -':"'--1 · ;:~~;_'

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I·'-__,_.._.,L.

tAQ,871

1

· IIIII 111M M Ill -

.1098 7

soum

PM.

Ne1r

t K65

AQJ 3

Tnllor l&lt;ir rontliiiiC.O.. ConiW
orN, 30W75' II ollor I:GO
Houee

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2

P·RINE

1--1,.-..,1,.~.--.1-.".1--1 ;. is nothing more rewarding in

EAST
. • 10987

J3 2

MI-. 0.!1011! a Acta . . . ,.._

Rentals

hdroom

..."

,

1!411

.9 7 2
U1093

3

low to lorm loor ~ mple wor·••·l

lumllhtcf,

00111111 lit, lldll!no, wll

"I guess I'm not a very good hockey goalie.
My teammates nicknamed me ' The Sieve.'"

-·

·O Rearrange
letters of
.
four xrambled word1

'

,.

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•

!-f•

1G-The Deily sentinel

Pomeroy •ddleport, Ohio

Monday, December 7, 1982,

•

Wildwood Garden Club meets ~ Coach sounds as if he
at home of Pauline Eynon ~
needs a brain transplant .

Evelyn Hollon presented the
program at the rec;cnt meeting of
the Wildwood Ganten Oub held at
the home of ·Pauline Eynon.
Dorolhy Smith was co-hostess.
Mrs. Hollon demonslrared making an arrangement She used gum
wood and SCOICh pine bodl sprayed
with snow. She also used white
mums on a white rectangular base.
Mrs. Hollon noted all the basic
shapes for arranL:ements. FactOrs
!hat influence a
ision would be
the kid of flowers and foliqe used,
the placement of the arrangement

and the size and,shaJJe of the eontaina. She concluded with the priJrciples of design and color achemc.
The meeting opcaed with devotions by Betty Milhol n reading
fr!lm Psalm 92. For roll C.U everyone 'was to make a deconition dJat
could be used for the holidays.
Kadlryn Miller gave a report on
the black-cii,W.Cd chickadee. It is
one of the biids ofren sear around
birtl feeders, usually feeding upside
down. They build their nest of
moss, hair, fcathei's and grass, lined
wilh plant down . They prefer cavi-

lies in rotted stumps, trees or
. .Dar AD I.ewclen: I have boca
deserted woodpoi:kei holes, 1-50
feet up. Their eus are white and I flidlftll lflldllr Cor R1111Y yclri. It
finely spOtll:d wilh brown. Orick- hal atwaya....,ecc mo die way die
Idees eat insecls, ~. ~~seeds .umat ri&amp;bll ~ png upm )'011
and wild fruits.
. ,bfw • • you believe it i.a r Mi••
Mrs. Eynon also bad a contest to !hat lllimlla be Uled for medical
ANNLAN»al'
.
see how many boots in the Old and teSCIUCh.
•tm,
Lao.&amp; : ••
New Testament everyone could
Where were lbese lllimll Ioven
name. Doris Grueser was the win· when a buD 111111ed "Wild W'lllie"
ncr.
was ~ly CUiniiCd in liont of ~----..;..._.;;;;;;~t
Members drew names for the Milslalppi Slue's' collcJc foolblll ::
iJi clov« from now on.
Christmas gift exchange and the
te1111?
Thil
J111t
of
the
COICII'a
Dar Alia 1•'Nien: I have never
hostess· served refreshments. plaa 1D PIYdle up lbe playen for
-lhla publcm di•ansrd ill )'0111'
KaJbryn Miller won the door prize.
a match · againat the favored column ai an)"tVhcR die.
UMoenityofT~~
My wife and IIJlCIII wccb planAnn, lhla "opcntion" per- · pm, and louking forward ., a riVer
formed without any anesthetic. cruise, e_legam dining' and-..:..~
· h
·.-When leveral ~ ..... i complained. th e nrg
t at a posh hotel in a
the coach ~mt and laid lhlt nearby city. Our hotel stay was
. it was "cclucalional"
that be ruined When the slobs in lbe next
bad ordnd la dCIIe 10 modVIIe lhe room kept us aWake until4 a.m. wilh
players. MiaiuiJllli Sw.c on · l(lud _talk, sbriCb of laughter and .
to upset Texas 28-10. Too bad. I door slamming. They even naled
now fear that this nutty coach the door to our mom aevaal limos
may decide it's a good way to just 10 mate awe we didn't get aay
motivate the team and be may R3L When IIIey finally decided to '
dresm up IICIIICihing IIICft biDm:
~~~~~-·Do Not
and iJibunBie IICJl yell'.
.,._,_"'
What do you think about this
.,.;, rsn't the first time this hll
kind of "motivatiOn,• Ami? I hope ~~ to us. Complaints ,., the
you will prinl my 1ctler and let that liOI8y neighbors usually fall Cll deaf
guy have it. - DISGUSTED IN cars or iault in even more noise as
a means of retalialion. ltla useless
GREENWOOD, MISS.'
DEAR DISGUSTED: So am I. to compla · to th
e management
'lbat coac:h sounds as if he needs unless YOUmare willing
10 get up,
a brain transplant. But you'll be
get dreased, pack up and move 10
happy to know !hat Willie is going
room in lhc middle of lhc
to be just fine (I cbccked). A couple IIIIOiher
nigbL
I am astwned 10 admit that at 6
of• kindhearted Mississippi Delta
businessmen heard about this · a.m., I turned lbe "Do Not Disturb"
ounge and pul up $2,000 each so 1111111 around 80 it requested early
the steer COUld receive excelleat maid service. Then I rang their
medical care. Willie is going to be phone evay 15 minutes, turned up

Ann

·

Tla.s,..........
c.-.s,.....,...

ana

0

the wlume on our 1V and walt lit
br Hast. I know dill they were
bothered by this because they
t.pd on lhe.wall and yelled a few
obecene "SUJIICSiions.•
Why don't bolcls enfOK:C · some
kind of curfew wbich prohibiiiiUCh
noise afler - 1""1•ht7 You travel a
Jot. Ann. 11M lhla e-IIIIJII e «1 to
Yfll(l Wbal sboilld .be dCIIe about it?.
_ DISAPPOINlBD IN PBORIA
DEAR PEORIA: Yes, lhla bas
Lijljitlled to me, and on IIIOR: lhan
me occl'ion. I call the •ti!l!nt
llllllll&amp;el, woo notifies the aec:urity
officer. He
at once to •..:.-.•
·th.e guests (drunks), and . you
wouldn't believe bow fast •they .
s00a- _., and quiet down.
Gem of the Day: A lilile girl liked
to. see the president of 1 large
company, Her. club was raising
mmcy 10 rate a trip, and lhe asked
if he would oontribute. Smiling, he
pot a dollar bill and a diJJie 411 his
drsk and said, "Tate whichever you
want. • The child replied, "My
IIIOiher always ranght me to rate the
smallest, but 111 need that green
piece of paper to Will(! it in an I

•

Ohio Lottery

Oilers
· defeat
Bears

Pick 3:
·373
Pick 4:
4240

\

Page4

g·o e s

't lose . •
II.
What's the trNth · aboNt pot,
cocaille, LSD, PCP, crack, speed
a11d·. downers? "The Lowdow11
011 Dope" has· Np·to·t~tl-minute
infol'!ft(lllo" 011 drNgs. Seltd a Rl/·
addressed, lo11g, busi11ess-size
eiiVflope and a cuck or IIU)IIey ·
order for $3.65 (this i11cludes
postoge altdhaNilillg) to: wwdown,
c/o AM La~~Mrs, P.O. Box /1562,
Chicago, 1/1. 6061.1-0562. (In

wm

·~·'

Vol. 43, No. 1St

CoprriJihled 1tt2

Pome_roy Council reviews revitalization ordinances
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
Several ordinances and resolutions pertaining to downtown revitalization were introduced when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session on Monday night. ·
Mike Stroth of SBA Consultants
and Deanna Figlestahler from the
City of Jackson oudined the resolu. lions and ordinances, which will
pave the way foc the grant application to be fded in early 1993. ·

The fli'SI resding on the articles
was·conducted last night The ordi·
nanccs and resolutions were as follows:
• An ordinance adopting the
rehabilitation standards and guidelines set forth by the Federal. Government to be used in conjunction
with the grant funds, and establishing a rehabilitation commission,
made up of councilmen, business
ownm and an architect;
· " An ordinance which amends

the village's codified ordinance
requiring sidewalk maintenance by
owners of buildings in the central
business district;
~ A resolution that declares a
p()rtion of the central business district (the buildings in the interior of
an area bordered by Sycamore,
Butternut, Secorid Street and the
Ohio River) as a slum and blighted
area, mating the area eligible for
rehabilitation monies;
• A resolution authorizing the

Poet's comer
Where Peaceful Waters
Flow.... by Barbara James and Tim
Coats ·

entwined together...
In a mind which was stirred.

Let's go where pescel\ll waters
flow ...
and our Spirits roam still free.
All our eyes still straight on 1he
sparrow...
·
along the one path we would
ever be.
.
With hearts filled with laugh-

tears from the eyes...

ter...
and hands held softly he !hat

An example of pain are
The epitome of ashes ...
are tbimes which have died.
An expression of joy
is a smile on the face
Visions of lillie girls
are sunshine and lace
Thinking of humbleness .
It must come with.grace.

calmed the fury of the mighty

·sea. ..

Spiritual
Restoration
and I know we're all willing to
go
,
Ideas .......by Tim Coats
, where peaceful waters flow.
. The extravagance of living is a
• Bear not what this realm says...
'
shell.
carry • only believe - come as
you are
It can by nri mC8JIS be compared
Transfonn, transcend. ..
to the innocence of the sour in
Don't change...don't rary
aU its simplicity.
Oh! We see once in a cloud
There IS nolhing so glorious in
We'll go so far ...
all the knowledge of mankind
In life's golden book of life
offered by God.
It's.all shown in the new glow ...
Where peaceful waters flow.
Civilization is diluted by its own
Beautiful flowers will be in arrogance.
bloom there
It strives only lhrough its own
and the lamb is the light therein.
understanding
. The land where we'lfliye forev:
of the word in contex..
er...
Unserved memory is not the
· I'm telling ~u in Christl know. vestage
So come w1th me wQD't you.
of recall at all...only neglecL ..
Where peaceful waters flow.
God's way is a vision of peace,
love, joy, wealth beyond hwnan
understanding. ..
The Epilome..... .From the Soft·
Even now with knowledge
ness and Tenderness ·of Our Inner being
Spitil... by Tim Coats and Barbara
a twin edged sword, men
James
cannot grasp his concept of
love and deliverance much
The epitome of love...
tq the dismay of the lost
are the flowers in the field
world and mankind itself.
The epitome of work is the
. sweat that we yield...
One day all ideas of entertaining
The epitome of poetry .. .
life
·
in the essence is a word.. .
and its principles will be over...

~

·

.an no opportunities shall prevail...
.
Foc aU the explanations and situations that leave us
in question...every individual
For Ibis one saul of mine
!here will be peace in the valley.

Lord, Have Mercy .. .... from
Praising Christ, Our Heavenly
• King ..by Barbara
.. James
'

.,.

Lordi Have mercy
on your children today.
l.ord; have mercy when we
forget 10 pray.
Lord, have mercy

as we awake each morning
To face a brand new day
Lord, have mercy
Please lesd the wny.
Lord, have mercy

on the victims of crime.
Some are hl1118')'
and they don't have a dime.
Lord, hive mercy
Where the homeless do roam
Bless them, oh Father
and give them a home.
Lord, have mercy. '
Let your love extend
cause truly sweet Jesus
You're man's only friend.
Your mercy is no tender,
loving and true.
What could this world
do without you?

Lo~"ou had mercy
on
vary you were slain..
You took on our sin
Our life we did gain.

'Distinguished Gentlem~n' provides
platfonn for Murphy's comic routine
The Distln(lllisbed Genlleman
RatedR
••• (out of five)
Hollywood Pictures
(Now playing at the Spring Valley
&lt;;tnema 7. Check lo~allistings for
lllne)
A movie about crooked congressmen? Not much of a stretch
for the imagination until one learns
that the con man turned congiessman in TM Distlng llisud GemleIMII actually hal a change of bean
and becomes honest.
In
The
Distinguished
Gentlemen, comic actor Eddie
Murphy plays 1bomas Jefferson
Johnson, a lllick-tallr;lna, fast-moving con man who eama hla liviD&amp;
by runninJ a phony phone sex
number which he IIICIIIO team dlny
lillie secreta about wealthy cus!Ofllers. He theQ puts lhc information to work ~lng the dirty
old men out of thousands of dol·

Iars

'

iohnson has higher ambitions,
however, and when his district's

popular incumbent congressman,
Jeff JOhnson (James Gamer), dies
of a heart attack during an after·
hours worlc session with a beaUtiful
campaign advisor, Murphy's char·
~tcr throws his hat into the (brass)
nng.
Thomas Jefferson Johnson
shortens his name to Jeff Johnson
and gets placed on the ballot for the
next general election. Like a good
lillie.politician, JolursOri IIICII name
recognition and voter ignorance 10
his advanf14e.
B_y keeping his face out of the
.media during the campaign, Jolm8011 is elcctcil to the lf.S. 'l::ongress
by clueless constituents who cast
their ballots for a (IllY dJat has been
dead for weeks.
Gtlllkman Ia just an excuse for
Murphy to chann lhe movio-going
public wil!l hla brilliant cbaracterfzalio~a and comic .p~noe. The
plot 11 sluglah, unm~g and
acDI•Ily pretty duD.
The audience will only be inter- .
ested in Murphy'• outntpousnesa
- IS minutes after accingthe 111m,

movie goers wm ·remember only
Mwpby. It is as if the script was
written to fill time between hla routines.
Murph(s retur.n to his outlandish, hilarious character style
last used in .fiims such as the 4B
hou~s ~nd Btvtrl¥ Hl/IJ Cop
moviCS, rs IS remslung as a clealt
pair of boxer shorts. Past endeavors
have disappointingly portrayed
Murphy a~ a low-key Yuppie, a
role as fitttng as a pair of stretch
paints on an elephant. He was
made for bigger and better lhiligs.
Gellllem/111 Ia a lllirical stab at
this C01811ry's ~lilic:al ~ but
unlike Mmpby • usual prt buD: noholds-J!aned style, Gtntlt!!lan's
bite Ia about as harmful IS a .P.OO:
dle's. Politiciana and the- political
lyaltm will only experience minor
sarfacc wounda. No serious damage here.
TM /)lstlttglliliwd Gentleman
problbly will not raiae Murphy 'a
swany blabl:r, but it will teeo his
!'lmC oa diO ups m111e tic:tet-'buy- .
0

ma:masee1

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Is IDW ape• for ,..
GrbltW

The FABRIC SHOP

Ftr ...111M lmllo111: If"!

HUIIIID'S, lynJCIM,.:
ft2·5776

·

Off All Crafts

=~!rldFC .
VIliS. .

Churc~

We No~ Carry the
Singer Handy St,ltch

•

Meigs Co1111ty, as well as the overall decision to allow the utility to
install $815 million scrubbers al
the Gavin plant to comply with
clean-air requirements.
The alternative, which AEP considered initially but discarded, was
switching to low-sulfur, out-ofstate coal. That would have cost
800 coal-mining jobs and triggered
deeper economic problems in
southeastern Ohio.
Randazzo said big industrial
customers each will see their ~lec­
tric bills go up S1 million annually
for each 10th-of-a-&lt;:enl increase in
lbo e~rate. per kilowatl hour.
Rates are expecte&lt;t increase by
three to five rimes that much, Randazzo said.
Also in the coalition · are
Anheuser-Busch, Aristech Chemical, Armco Advanced Materials,
LTV Steel, Owens-Coming Fiberglas, Owens-Illinois, Republic
Engineered Steels, Stone Container
and Timken Co.

•

State regulators will have 30
days to respond once the rehearing
request is filed, PUCO
spokeswomart" Stacie Gilg said. The .
commissiQn can order a new round
of hearings but usually issues a
wrilten deci~ion without holding
public hearings.
If the industrial group isn't sat·
isfied, it can appeal to the Ohio
Supreme Court.
Even if the industrial group
appeals the decision, AEP
spokesman Michael Mahoney said
AEP will "proceed with the busi-ness of making sure that compliIIIICC Sli'ate!Y fulf\1!4 ill promile of_
meeting regulations at Jhe lowest
possible cost for all our cus tomers."
· He said the plan "has gone
through two formal PUCO hesrings
and nearly two years of discussion
in the public realm. We feel pretty
confident all points of view have
been weighed pretty fairly."

Police officials release details
of Sun-day shooting death

Alfred.happenings

(AS SEEN ON TV)

9to5Moi.•SaL
1115 s-lay
ftatlrfttJ •PoiiiiHin II 7
colan, hlulltll "-IIIII.

li..Lell, wrNia, sprays -'

set

. $2999

s.a-.

A coalition of large industrial
electtlc customers will ask the Public Utilities Cormilission of Ohio to
reconsider its approval of American Electric Power's plan to install
scrubbers at its. Gavin plant hi
Cheshire.
Industrial Energy Consumers,
representing II major companies in
Ohio, including General Motors
and BP Oil, says the Nov. 25
PUCO decision will cost its membeil millions of dollars annually.
A t;ehearing request will be filed
with the PUCO in abouuwo
wcclcs, said Samuel- C. Randazzo,
artomey for lbe industrial-coalition.
. "It's censinly a very big C:£0•
nomic issue for our clients. We're
tallcing about millions and millions
a year. We consiller il a very serious matter." .
Randazzo said ·lite industrial
groue will contest the "reasonableness of allowing Ohio Power to
continue burning more expensive,
. high-sulfur coal from its mines in

mate up for any differences the "maximum" benefit for somebetween your actual earnings and one retiring at age 65 in 1992 is
the maximum tax payable.
$1,088 per month.
.
What this means for the man
What that means is that a person
who asked the question at my who is retiring at 65 in 1992 who
speech is that his Social Security · . bjiS paid Social Security taxes on
retirement benefit will be a little 11ie maximum wage base for every
leSs that it could have been had he year used in his or her benefit comcontinued to esm e11011ft to pay the potation would receive $1,088 per
maximum Social Secunty tax every month. But !here ate many ·people
year, but he will not incur any kind . who retire after age ~ and rec;crve
of "Jlenalty." There is no bonus for Social Security benefits higher lhan
paymg the maximum Social Secu- that because their extra earnings
rity tax ev~ 1yesr. He will
thC_ and special· "delayed retirement
benefit he will be due based on the credits" granted to people who
same formula used 10 figure every work after 65 increase the amount
else's Social Security benefiL
of their benefiL
Another myth about maximum
Social Security benefits is the idea
For more information about
of il "m~imum" benefit itself - . Social Security benefits and how
because there really isn't one. Part they're figured, call our toll-free
of the confusion may result from a number 1-800-772-1213 and ask
statistic Social Security publishes for a free copy of the fact sheet
every year called, "the maximum "How Your Retirement Benefit IS
Social Security benefit for a worker Figured;" (Publication No. 05.
retiring at age 65." For example, 10070).

''

ctilints su~rted a proposed joint
grant narrauve to be submitted by
Pomeroy and Middleport. Middleport is also seeldng revitalization
funds.
..,
Two public hearings will be
held in early January to allow poblic input into the application ~­
dure , and those dates wtll be
announced lhrough legal advertisements.
Council approved a request
Continued on pa1e 3

jeopardized
by indUstrial coalition

.

The Alfred United Methodist ville, Va.; and their grandson, Chad
will have its Christmas pro- · Lewis, Boston, Mass• .
P,DI Dec. 20 at 7 p.m. The public
Sarah Caldwell spent ThanksIS invited.
·
giving with Janice and Steve
Pastor Sharon Hausman Jed the Weber of Eagle Ridge.
worship and decorating of the
Marlene and MitbeUe Donovan
church salictuary witli the hanging and Bill Robinson returned recendy
of the green on the first Sunday of from a trip to Clearwater and
Advent. She was assisted by lay Sebrill$, Fla.
.
leader, Russell Archer, and memDoris and Uoyd Dillinger, Nina
bers of the choir. Matthew BoyleS R9binson, Susan Pullins, Will
Poole, Nellie Parker, Marilyn
litthefK~tAd~tam&amp;~
Nina Robinson and Clara Fall- Robinson, Charlotte VanMcter and
rod spent Thanksgiving with Nor- Florence Spencer to SL Clairaville
man Jean and Gerald Swartz, Reno. and Wheeling. They toured the
Leann and Kirk Fick, Colum- Ohio Valley Mall at St. Clairaville
bus; Lori Ritchie and Larry and and the Festival of LighiS at OgleAllen Harrison, all of Caldwell, bay Park in Wheeling.
were Thanlcsgiving JIUCS!s of Marilyn and Wilbur Robmson.
: Thanksgiving weekend guests
All states have laws regulating Inof Margueri!ll and Delbert Steams terest rates. These laws flx a legal or
were their daughter and husband, c:onveatioaal rate that applies when ·
Donna and Howard Stoler, Center- there Is no contract for interest.

application for grant funds.
sources for those fund s, which
. _Busi~ owners who opt to par- could include Community DeveltiCipate m the grant program will . opment Block Grant funds from the
receive matching monies toward county commissioners, Issue Two
fa¢ade improvement and other money, and possible in-kind contrirestoration work, if the village's butions from village departments.
application is approved . Up to
The village must also determine
$400,00&lt;! ~s available for qualifying how the JP:IDI funds will be l!dmincommunities.
istered, e1ther as a straight grant or
Stroth said last night that the vil- lhrough a revolving.loan propn.
lage itself will be required to pay
John Musser, Cbairman of the
10 percent of the total cost of the revitalization commiuee, was also
project, and outlined possible present, and reported that the mer-

Scrubber~

c tutada, send $4.45.)

.

2 Secllona, 12 Pagea 25 _,II
A lluHim- Inc._Newwpoper

j'Cimeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 8, 1992 _

Your Social Se~urity
By ED PETERSON
Social-rlty .
· Muager in Athens
I recently dehvered a speech
explaining Social Security programs to a group of local business
men and women. After my presentation, a man asked an interesting
question. He said he was very concerned that his Social Security benefits - whicb he was still several
years away. from receiving - .
would be reduced (although he
uSC!! the word "penaaizedj because
he was no longer paying the IJWli.
mum Social Secunty taxes.
Apparently hs: bad paid maximum Social Security raxes most of
his life, 11ntil recent Yeiii'S when the
taxable wage base exceeded his
salary. He· wondered if there was
any way he could pay extta Social
Security taxes so thai be could
guarantee he'd get a maximum
Social Security retirement benefit
one day.
The.re are several misunderstandings involved in thi~ man's
question which I'll address. But
fli'Stl should provide several facts.
In 1992, the Social Security tax
rate is 7.65 percent of your esmings up to a maximum "wage base"
of $55,500. Your employer maiCh·
es your tax payment doUar fot dollar. Self-employed people pay lhe
combined ~ployet/employer mte,
or 15.3 percent. (!{owever, there
are special deductions self·
em played people can take when
they file their tax return that are
intended to offset the higher tax
rate.)
P~~ple who make more than
S55.SOO continue to pay the Medicare portion of the Social Security
tax - or 1.45 percent (2.9 percent
for self-employed) -up to a
$130,200 limiL The wage base subject to Social Security tax generally
~~up every yesr. It was $51,300
10 1990, $53,400 in 1991; $55,500
in· 1992, and will increase to
$57,600 in 1993. (The Medicare
wage base goes up to $135,000 in
1993.)
Anoth~ fact you need to know ·
is that the .formula used to compute
Social Security benefits is based on ·
factors such as your date of birth,
the type of benefit you are applying
for, and most important, your esmings. Essentially, a Social security
retirement benefit is a percentage
or your earnings averaged over
most of yilur worldnglifetlme.
In a nutshell, the higher your
esmings (up to the maximum mentioned above) and the more you
pay In Social. Security taxes, the
higher your benefit win be. You
pay taxes only on lhe income you
earn. You cannot pay extta taxes 10

In mid 40s.

,._,....

,
.

Low tonlght ln·mld-20s.
Sunny. YVednesday,sunny. Hlgb

dispatcher early Sunday that a posThe two struggled on the
sible drunk driver in an older ground, with Lamm sitting on top
model blue Chevrolet Cheveue had of Carter. Lamm allegedly went for
crossed
the Silver Memorial Bridge the officer's 9mm semiautomatic
Monday afternoon, police offi•
and
might
have been headed for handgun and pulled it free of the
cials rel~ased the details of the
Gallipolis.
holster.
Sunday morning shooting death of
-The
police
dispatcher
infonned
While the two men struggled
a suspected dtunk driver, including
otber men and two other women who reside · the name of the officer involved.
LOOKING TOWARD CHRISTMAS • Retall patrol uni~ of the suspect, and with the gun, it went off two times_
there. Gifts or money ror purchases would be
l_dents ol the Meigs Cuunty Inftrmary on MulGallipolis Police Officer Lloyd Carter ~ttcd a vehicle fitting the After the second shot, Lamni
appreciated, and parties, proerams and carolers
berry Helgllts, Pomeroy, must depend on tbe
Joseph Carter w_as na~~ as t~e descripuon on State Route 7. He stopped struggling and went limp. ·
would lie e'!Joyed, advised Sharon Bailey,
generosity or others ror Cbristmas rem em- :
Carter called the dispatcher at
officer involved m the rncrdent m followed the vehicle, which slowed
matrOD, 992-5469. .
·
br. .ces. Besides Betty Wills, Ed Gordon and
which Donald Lamm , 37, 123 and accelerated while weaviltg, the ·· 2:49 a.m. and iadvised the departJosephine Mallory pictured here tbere 'Ire six .
ment of the situation. Lamm died
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, died from release said.
Carter pulled Lamm over at about one hour later at Holzer
a gunshot inflicted by the officer's
Johnson's Mobile Home Park on Medical Center, with a gunshot
weapon during a trafftc stop.
Carter,owho has been on the State Route 7 and the two men wound between the ribs and in the
force for 1 1/2 ·years, has been exited their vehicles simultaneous· left hip.
The officer was also taken to
placed on paid administrative leave ly. Carter spoke with Lamm and
!luestioned
him
about
his
driver's
HMC
where he was treated for
while the mcident is under: invest!·
hcense,
after
which
the
officer
injuries
10 his eye, face, knees and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- · approved a $50,000. grant to the
Operations at Mound, which galion.
asked
him
to
return
to
his
car.
hands.
He
was later released.
Accordin~ to a pre,ss release
Doctors who prescribe eyeglasses University of Dayton to study the employs 2,100 people in the Day- from Detective Michael Tucker,
Lamm reportedly lhrestencd to
Lamm has had several tangles
for about 160,000 Medicaid viability of turnin_gth~ fc:deral ton area, could be cut or close«!. the Point Pleasant Police Depart- claw the officer's eyes out, grabbed with local authorities, including a
patients Will be able to choose ~ound Labom!Dry ID ~anusburg The ~.S. ,Departmen~ of,Energy.IS ment inforined the Gallipolis police him and lhrew him to the ground.
Continued on page J
between competing suppliers under mto a commerc1al enterpnse. .
. constdermg consohdauon of rts
~~~-:-:-;::-~""":';']
contracts approved by the state
Members of the Controlhng · nuclelll' weapons progmms elseControUing Board.
Board include six legislators and a where.
The board agreed Monday to let re~res~ntative of Gov. George
"This possible ~uction in staff
.
and the level of activity at Mound
the OhiO\I;&gt;epartment of Human Vmnovrch.
Services spend $1.6 million over a
Welfare con~ts wtth the eye- Laboratory would be a severe loss
five-montli F.od for glasses ~- glasses labs will run from Feb. 1 1101 only to the Dayton ares but to
duced by etther Classic Opt1cal through June. ~0. Total co.s t ~f the entire state of Ohio," the board
Laboratory, Youngstown, .or Top glasses for rec1ptcnts of Medicatd, was told in a written request.
NetWorkOhio, Columbus.
the federal-sta~ medical pro~am
"Therefore, it Is important to
'ln other action, the . board for the poor, Wlll be $3.2 mllhon investigate possibilities by which
for a full yesr.
lhe staff and facilities of the Mound
Fran~ Blazewicz, senior JM?Ii~y Laboratory might be retained at.
llllll!yst m. the Bureau of ~csid their present location, even with a
Policy, ~d the qency previOusly change in mission,'' it said.
used a smgle vendor. The move to
There are 100 buildings on the
two companies is an attempt to 305-acre laboratorY site.
ensure quality.
ifi.
.
In other action Monday, the
"There are very spec rc pnces board:
o~ the I~ and the frames. We
·- ApProved state-backed loans.
will be paymg all; average of may~ to ·help-four school districts keep
$22 for a pau of glasses,
their classrooms
The •·,;,est
B~a~
·
~a
"W~-th
be amount, $1.6 mill on, was for the
'~" ~ expect ere to
Cootlnued OD page J
compeuuon 11 domg work !hat's
·
very timely, or prdJapll better than
what the conlraCI rcquinmcnts call
for ... that's what we're siriving
A conttact for performing a ball
for," he said. "='ve got to
bank
study ana curve inventory on
compere wilh som
y else to get _
the bulineu. ••
various routes and sections in
CONTRIBUTION POR TOYS
eollectetl rr- Ra; wood em~ ~ preThe Ohio DqlaibiiMt of Devel- Athens, GaUia, Hocking, Meiga
-ted
by Do Sddltam, left, to
'I'Ucli;er,
and
Vinton
Counties
bas
been
RaftiiiWOOII
Al-'tlWWUn
of
Local
U68,
opment won approval for the
praldent
of
Loeal1857,
UMW.
•
oody
can, ·
Ualted
Steel-ken
or
·Amerlea,
eootrlbated
awarded
10
Master
Mind
Snte~Ps.
Moone~ stody. 1n addition
Inc.
of
Elmore.
The
bid
prize
is
$500
to
die
aaaual
proaram
of
rememberln1
r!Pt,
coordlutor
ror
the
Steelworkers
COil·
to the state grant, the lli!Y of
tr·~·
.
$29,80S.80
and
the
scheduled
com·
eblldren
at
Cltrlltmaa
or
Melcs
Local
1857;
Mjamlsbura and Mo~omery
•
United
Mlae
Workers.
A
elleck
for
the
money_
pletion
date
is
J
unc
30,
1993.
COunty will provide $8S, .
By KEVIN PINSON
OVP News Stiff

Controlling Board approves .
$1.6 million for Medicaid glasses

::1:·

Con,tract awarded

sm.ooo

l

'I,

.,'

•f

.'

•

0

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