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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

�.

·c ommentary

'·

111 Cout ltleet

,_erGJ, Olaio
DBVO'I'BD TO 11IE Jlii"''UaT8 or 11IE IIEICI8-IIA80K AIUtA

•

.,
l

ROBER'l' L. WINGEtT

'

Publll..r

PAT Wlll1'Fm:AD
Alslstmt Publlmer/CoalnJIIer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Genenl M~mqer

LBTI'BRS OP OPINION ue welcome. They abould be len lban 300
words. All !ellen are aubjoet to editio&amp; and muat be .signed wilb name,
llldleu and relepbone nlllDber; No unaiped !ellen will be published. Lctttn
abould be in good.ture, odchuing ilauea, not penonaliliea.

·S'tat~ tax boost may
be ·tougher to sell
By JOHN CHALFANT
Alsoc:lated Press Writer

• I

COLUMBUS - Gov. George Voinovich may have a tougher time
than expected persuading legislators and the public of the need 10 raise
taxes now lha1 theze has been a Sl!'l'rise surge in Slate revenue.
While Voinovich vacationed 10 Florida last week, budget experts
found the state collected $65.5 million more than anticipated in tax
receipts during November. . .
.
.
No one was sure why revenue grew, or whether it wpuld continue 10
grow. But the boost erased what had been a $55 million, four-month Jag
in state tax receipts.
State Budget Director Gregory Browning, the governor's 1ep fiDBDCial
omcer, acted quickly 10 make sure the good news did not take some of the
urgency away from the need 10 raise taxes this month.
· Browning said Vainovich would have no choice butro impose another
round of spending cuts, perhaps as much as 9 petcent, on schools and
other agencies 10 offset a ddicit that could be $2SO million by June'30.
· Voinovich, Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, and House
Speaker Wrn Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, have before them a smorgasbord of
possible taxes tbal could be levied 10 deal with the current problem. ·
They meet again Tuesday 10 talk things over.
Imposing permanent tax increases would not only solve a short-term
problem. It also would generate more cash for the next two-year budget
staning July I.
.
.
But Riffe said be does not know how much extra money will be need·
ed in the next two-year cycle.
·
·
.· ''We won't be geUing our estimated revenue figures for the next year's
budget until probably ~e in the spring," Riffe said.
· "There has been no official fi~ that's been given to me ot.,.~J cerlain amount of ~jetted shonfaD 10 the next budget period,'' he ·
Most of the unoffiCial estimates are in the $1 billion-plus range.
. Aronoff said tbal even if revenues wac increased by that 'amount, the
.state would have essentially a conlinuation-level budget.
There would not be any new programs because of cost increases
alteady buill inlo the budget, Aronoff said. .
.
. Those built-in boosts stem.from Medicaid. other entitlement programs,
prisons, local property tax relief; and cost of state constructioo ~jects.
' BlowDiaa tOJd Jt&lt;giele&amp;nn ·lalt week dill "a CIUtioul optimist" could
conclude th6 clellett bad decreased from $325 million to $250 million
based on November receipts. But be said that still was a majci problem
with the fiscal year about half over.
_
·
All the talk of a tax increase ro erase a budget deficit is separa.Je from
another possible Voinovich recommendation to ask votets 10 coniider an
· increase in the state sales tax, Such a plan, if pursued, :would earmark the
money raised for schools, and would be linked to reform of the education

system.

Letters to the·editor
Politics not the only issue

I realize President Bush leaves
much to be desired, but considering
'the hostile congress bent on
ilestroying him and his efforts
along with an extreme liberal left
·;;,oing slanted media with the same
goal in mind, be has done a reason·
ibly good job. Four years with
Clinton will prove how good he
ill:tually was during his four years
as president.
_ I'm reminded of bible teachings
' 'lltat before the end comes things
:·Will get WOOC, calamities, wars and
• rumors of wars, the falling away
: from God, moral decay, lovers of
• their own kind, lying, stealing, etc.
: Few dare 10 tell it as it is, and at the
··risk of being branded a fanatic I am

:iloin' so.
: :: Ball Clinton and Gore embrace

: ao many thinp lhatl as. a Christian

• cannot support. Prochoace (munler

: your baby if you want to), homo·

· sexuality and allowing them to
.~and in~~ others and even
thear becomang s10gle parents (by
adoption of course). Sodom and
~ was destroyed primarily
· bec•se of homosexualil}', a sin in
· Goda sight. Can you vasualize a
:Child would receive such an inllu·
: ence 10 become one also?
·: Clinton bas flip flopped on the
)egaliza~on of na~cotics f~om
rpeech 10 speech, has moral 10fi.

delity is also questionable, and in
times past he would have been
branded traitorous in his leading
demonsttations against his country.
The fact that be used influential
avenues to keep him oot of the war
positively identifies him as a draft
dodger. Can you possibly imagine
him as. military commander in
chiel7 A 4raft dodger.
There's not much doubt in my
mind that be wiD become president
sift!lll)' because the majority places
pOhllCS before principles and
Jl\orals, and as usual, Christian vot·
ers are the minority, and if so, this
may be figured in Gods time table
for the returning of Ouist.
America as a nation is mentioned no where in Gods word, and
every great nation that has faDen,
• its falling has been due 10 moral
decay, and we know lha1 will happen when God is left out. Bill Clin·
ton and AI gore are doin~ just that.
l'!'J not a peacher. I·m just OfK1
of has followers who is excited
about our Lord's return, it may be
sooner than you think, and the out·
come of this election could tie a
real factor.
Sincerely,
Raymond F'aelds
:ill 4th Street'
.
New Haven, WV 2526S

to think about
.·.-: ......._....,,_ Something
.
advertised by radio and on the front
I~

~ l!;lU.AUI'

.
: : I would likt to bring something page of the Sentinel.
The only people that showed up
~ important to the aitentioo of
was the Jaw enfon:cment from van)our lelders.
.. On Saturd~, Nov. 28, the ous villages, Swe Highway patrol
emergency and ftre per:Meifs County '-!IF of Mothers officers,
;Apinll Drunk Drivers (MADD) sonnel and mayon from several
w • IIPOcial Red Ribbon kick-off villages along with MADD mem·
Cauecl "T'ae One On For Safety" • ben.
I was really sUlJI!iscc\ that the
laeaning tie a red ribbon on your
citizens
of Meigs County don't
~· ~ to show that you want
take the lives of their loved ones
a afe holiday IBIIOII.
·
·
: Ruas F'uher, vice president, of more seriously.
If there bad only been onedie local dMj.., fA MADD made a
eighth
the people at the red ribbon ·
itay c:ffectiwc lplllli:h. The reuon.it
kickoff
that were at the Olrillmas
)VII 10 rpeclal iJ
be toot
time frum Ilia vay buly IMednle to pande, the next clay, It would have
ilo thil lor the· citizeu of Meiga ahowecl at lean aomeone cared
eo-y,llld every 'MIIIIc:.nelmin about their
To gel anything done about
l!le bottom of hi1 heart, becanae
drunk
driving everyone iJ goiJIJ.IO
Jtna ~ly cares about the llfety
have
to
lltow tbeir support. Wbo
of you .Bcl your C.OIIlel, not only
kuow1,
the
next time your loved
Over die bollda)'t; but a t1me1.
oae
lillY
be
the victim. Something
: The lid thin&amp; aboul thiJ iJ, no
10
think
about,
huh?
.
oae Cll'ed enouglllbout die llfety
Blrbllm
Stahl,
of their own famil)' to even come
show their support.
I know tlifs kickoff was w~Il

••n"'

loved-

an

.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Sev- res~t wu lbal in many instaDC'=I!
eral nhilolopllleal cleblles are cur- C~anet ,secretariea 1IICI'O paahin&amp;
rendf flllna within the Clinton !hear own aaendll. and bi....level
tranaidon team, IIIII bow they are appointee• owed their pnncipal
resolved will great! shape the initial direction of
new adminis-

tJJ.

Since well before the election,
the Clinron transition Slaff has been
carefully dissecting past presiden·
tial transitions, minutely examining
the farst months in office of every
modem president. Ther would likt
10 get the kind of nmrung stan lha1
Franklin Roosewclt pin 1932 and
Ronald Reagan got m 1980. Above
all else, they want 10 avoid the
early problems suffered by Jimmy
Carter in 1976.
The Clinton ~pie have spent
days talking wath former Carter
administration officialS. They
believe the Carter administration
got in trouble initially by losing
central control of the appointment
process, Basically, Carter allowed
his cabinet secretaries to chose
their own deputy and assistant secretaries, and they in tum chose
their own chief subordinates. The

Robert}. Wagman

loyalty not to the president but to
the penon who appointed them. ·
Clinton's personnel maiaagcn
say they will not fon:e deputy and
assisWlt secretaries on their new
cabinet members, but they will take
a · ~pro-actiwc" role.10 get sub&lt;abinet appointeeS who are acceptable
10 the White Houae. To tbe presi·
dent-elect's S\aff .t his means
8P)Kiintees who arc .directly commatted to Bill Clinton.
· · ·
Another reCommendation of the
pre-transition Cll8lllinatlon was lha1
the new Clinton administration
should not waste time trying to
remake the federal government.
Most new presidents arrive at the
Oval Office with grand plans for
restructuring the bureauaacy. They
then get bogged down implementing these plans, and their presideD.

.Jal't'ad, k baa been xu [lied to
Clinton that be aauin CC'IIL'\Imly
focDJOd on im)ilementinJ _his le&amp;·
Wative JllogJlllll by wortin&amp; with

Congress to get his proposals
llld .........
-:.......1 ~
· .11110 Iaw.
. as as wl!at Ronal Reapn did
dnrina his first 100 days, IIIII it is
why Reap~'s lint tmn is considered so ·successful. Government
JCOrpnization Clll wait,.
.
Reportedly, Clinton and those
clolest 10 him a:cept this • IOWld
advice. But they come beck with a
C&lt;llllll«-argument On at least three
IIIJiior and critical fronts ftancWiaen.
tal governmental renrnnization
will )li'OYide the nndcrpiiiJiings for
Clinton's whole progn1111.
Although he downplayecl the
topic during his cam ·gn, ClinfQn
would like 10 ~restructure
the relationship between federal
and state.governments.
Clinton is said to be enalilored
with two RICCIIt books: "Reinvent·
ing Government" by consolWIU
David Osborne and Ted Gaebler,
and "Reviving the American

Accu-W~ fOICCIII

IToledo I 34" I

and die Federal Government" by

r Ill:.. ..

former Congressional Budget
Office Direaor Alice Rivlin, who
is the odds-a! favorite 10 bead the
Office of Maneiement and Budget
in lbe new admjnjsfiation.
·
Both books argue for a mucti
gra1« uc IIIII local role in govCI'IIIIICIIl with the f~ government doc:entralized through a shift.
ing of JapOIISibilities 10 local
units of government. At the same
time - IIIII this is where the new
proposals pan company with the ·
localization efforts of the Nixon
and Reagan years - · the funding
sources to pay for these programs
would be shifted to the stalea.
The )liOblcm with this, say those
in the traDSition looking at the bud·
get deficit, Is that shifting mvenile
to the sta1ea - even to JIIY for protmlliiS that will be shifted - will

IND.

C::,

•lcolumbusl38" I

•

liiiiiiuy worsen ibe deficit

C1gg2 AcCIJoWeetller, lnc.

------Weather----Sotalll Cotral Ohio
· Tonight; mostly clear. Low 2025: Weclnesday, considerable sunshine 8lld warmer. High 45-50.
• Ennded forecast:

•

l

Service, the Census, Telecommuni·
cations and the Pleat Department:
- would be transferred out, while,
the trade functions from other ·
agencies would be shifted in.
lloMrt WIIJUII Ia al)'lldlcaled writer ror Newspaper Eater-'
prile AIIOCialkle.

Joseph Spear
laws 8IC equally well treated. Millionaire George Bush is pulling
down $200,000 a year. Wealthy
Dan Quayle is ntaking $166.200 a
year. Memben of the Cabinetseveral of whom are millionaires
-make $143,800 a year.
.
We also retire them as royaDy •
we pay them. According 10 the
Nauonal Taxpayc;rs Union, 3~ of.
the congreasionaiiiiCumbents leav·
ing office this year will immedillc· ·
ly stan drawing pensions in excess
of $50,000 annually. Rep. Lcs
AuCoin, D-Ore., who lost a race
for the senate; stands to receive
$2,898,360 in benefits 'during his
lifetime. Re~iring Sen. Steve
Symms, R-ldaho, will receive an ·
estimated $2,742,802. Sen. Timothy Wirth, D-Colo., stands .to
receive $2,456,205;
And guess why the bennies are
so hid~? It's because cOngressional

•

1.1artin Sch•n-

;:!J!

'

disCarte'

: • Conlluued rrom page 1
:~allia County district. Other Icians:
:S237,000 for Lakota schools, San:Ousky County; $167,000 for New
:\-Cxinaton schools, Perry County;
•and $110,000 for Barnesville
·:ichools, Belmont County.
:
Rrlealed $5.8 million in child
·pppon enforcement aid to coun.ties, the last installment of $17.4
lililllon approved by the Legisla-

ture.

.; __ __Approved a new, $53,126
!C8SII of commercial space for the
Ohio Lottery Commission from
Frontier Construetion Co., Mariet·

IL .
' -Rejected a request from the
Ohio Consumers' Counsel to spend

.S39.9SO to hire a consultant to help
pursue an aDegation of excess profliS filed against the Wt:; .~rn
Reserve Telephone Co. of Hudson.
'l'lic request to hire Riverbend Con·
jolting of Columl!us was turned
f own 4-3 after a company representative contended 'the proposal

r:::::.'

commaalicate as a leader, using • a of his lint victory in Iowa, and be·
springboard a description of a celelnled while ;~ pajamas.&gt;
blackboard calendar thai White · Caner had crossed out plljamas"
House SJ)Cechwriters used for and written ''underwear." Your i
assignments; November entries ~ queried beck: "Boxer 01' :
filled just two squ~: a dollar JOCkey?'' Carter replied: ''Jock- .
sign, drawn on pay day, and a ey."
:
turkey, draw.n on Thanksgiving.
. No doubt today there are advice- :
The arJicle an Newsday landed IJVCII ~ who will tell Clintoli ·
chief spoa bwnter James Fallows this is JUSt the sor1 of detail work ,
in hot water with ICDior advisen; • that Clll doom the besl of presiden- ,
but Carter didn't - iL However, cies.
I
The Wesbington Paat reprinted the
Marlial Sdaram Is a IYDdkaeed '
story the nlll!t mornlliJ, when wriler r... Newspaper r..ter)ll'lle '
Clrter was leaving at dawn 10 fly AllllclatioL
:
oveneas. Ia an act of aelf·Jll lrY·
ii!J skullclllf&amp;.!'!Y. 1 figure-- ;=""·"·-'---..;..:;;.-----.,.,
"'
,:
blina the chitf IJII'IIChwriter oo.dBerry's. World
,
ed Air Force One at the c:nck of
,
dawn -IIIII fllcbed die I* ·Mit's
Polll Caner arrived, but:uwed inro
'
his briefing boot ..:.. lftd nevu read
the critique.
·
1
Leaaon·lfk'abrote,fixiL
.
r
3. About Advice on Avoiding
i
. l
Presidential PreoccUDation With
Delall. (1lncon likt Carter debea
deeplY into pciliciea. But he's no
ervm 10 be'• unlikely 10 wailow in
I brJ111r this up out
of gnliL For 1 bad the lira evidence .
of Caner'J preaidimu.J penchant
for detail, but blew the 110ry. Sixteen years qo, 1 _. tboa-Presi·
dent-elect Carter proof1 ol my
boot on the 1976 campolgn, aying
if he aaw any errora of fact (11
oppoleclto opinion), I'd cOrrect
them. He cited several. Among
themi·Aides awoke him with neYII

.

jControlling...

.

Dear Mr. Clinton:.Takerity advice
A~vice alloun!lS· And Washing- Califano was ~~~~ White House ·
ton. as a~ash w1th both the free requests for a plan limited 10 catas-.:anety (giv~n by seekers of a~n- trophic illnesses. becaaw: the secreU~ aDd/Or JO~) !"'«~the other lcind tary favored the grander, compre(given~ advace-industry pros such
~ lobbyasts, PR persons, n pun·
dits}. It all gets shoveled down to
H'.l4
• ""'•
the grateful powers-elect in Little hensive plan of Carter's DemoCnd·
Roci.
.
.
~latest adVIce heaped upon ic rival, Sen. Edward Kennedy.
President-elecl Clinllln &amp; Co. is to ~al
· ly,
deniedasked'
loyalrtyro.
go to school on the Carter preaiden.
~"'181 .
cy, learn f11J!D· its under-achieve- .. wnte 9hfano . a . fum memo,
ments and faalurea. So the Clinton .. demll'!ding the hmated P~· But
team has COI)sulted ex-Caner offi· ~ ~ memo, more ~ than
c~. and then slaiRd their wiJdom cnsp, IID,IP,Y requested a II!DII'I' of
.wath that slice fA America repre· opllons. The Carter pre~adency
sented ~Y The Washington Post.
never got al'!l~nd 10 solvang our
But It's not clear they are get. health&lt;are aJSII.
ting all salient facu. To lave our
Lesson: Sometimes, presidents
president-elect from leirning must be their own cnforccn.
wrong lealons, here are the untold
2.: About Advice to Continue
Carter cpiJodea that never made·it Non-stop Campalgniag. After his
toUttleltock: .
populls1.1976 cam,::. Carter
1.. About Advice lo Bnllft Sub- !ao~ hiJuelffor
- .eiiiCIII·
Cabanet Loyalty. Clinton aides ang with aJIIMiiwc energy package
beard Stuart Eizennat Carter's tblclt enoulh to clog a Congreu
donwtic poUcy chief, wiaeJy Watll (which I~ did). Now Clinton &amp;!de
them to llelclc;t sub-Cabinet olBcialli David Wilhelm iJ quoted • Slylllg
J'IIIber lhla lee Cabinet IOCI'OIIIiea Clinton's White Houle will "Dillinplc:lt them - 10 enaure loyalty 10 lain a campaiJn menlllity'' for
tbe presldeat'a.,.,..,
·
four yean - town meeting1, an
But Ebenalat lalows that even 1 "800" ~ number, etc. - to
prelidentlal seal of approval auuro Clinton holds his grasi·
dneln't gunntee fealty - 10 wit, 1'0011.
bil own rnaning battle• willl
BPI campaigns can themselves
Carter's ..-..y of Health, Bdu- become cocoons of iJOiation. So
cation and Welfare, J01eph Cali- the Iliff mast be tile president' a
fano, .especiallt::_national cyealllll, em. Ia 1977, a Newlday
~th ansnrance..
believed reporter wrote of C.W's failwe to

I

t

·sso.ooo

.

' MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)
- Hours before the expected land·
,~g of the
Somalia's chief
today urged his followers
:to keep dleir gun-mounted vehicles
;a~y from the~ and airport to
«wid cllilhea wath U.S. forces.
: Mohamed Farrah Aidid,
[rciPondina 10 an appeal from U.S.
;envoy Robert Oakley, said his
forces welcomed the U.S. troops
:that were to begin arriving at dawn
:Wednesday to hasten a relief mis~on to feed starving Somalis. .
• Oakley later met with Aidid's

~=-;!::eN~!:;·

turned our cherished democracy
into a pluiOcrllcy. ":f{e are governed
by wealthy people with wealthy
people's agendas. The Common
Folli: can't buy a break because
thoae who make and enforc~ the
rules have forgotten what it's likt
10 be Common Folk.
·Maybe it's just one of those
quirky things that columnists stew
over, but I believe there's something 10 it. Conaider:
T'llree years ago, Congress
granted itself a 40 percent pay ~
with automatic cost-of-living
adjustme!lts - a misde.ed for
which every last yeacsayer should
have been summarily recalled and will be pulling down an annual
salary of $133,644 when the latest
COLA kicks in this January. Put
another way, the people who write
the laws are now entrenched at the
very top of the top incOme bracket,
making nearly six times more than
the average American.
Think about it: Every tailor,
teacher.and I!UCker you just elected
10 Congress is now - ipso facto dch. How long will it be before

Was JR11181Ure.

I

I

r -Released·$50,000 10 the city
9f Conneaut for resurfacing a road
lo handle increased traffic from
.• xpansion of Bailey Transponation
'Producta, an auromobile parts sup'plier.
: -Approved a $200,000 ~~to
1ihe city of Wooster for haghway
'Work needed 10 establish a Rubber'jpaid Co. retail center and sales
·pining slore downiOwn.
, :-Released $75,000 to th~
1.Uruon
Metal Corp., Canron, for an
'employee parking loL The money
:was pan of an incentive package to
:Persuade the company 10 consoliidate an Oklahoma operation with
lits Canton plant. '

..

,.

,.

moualed at iatenals aloog the
mine walls- daeOIIIy odaa'pmible soun:e of uyga. said Oene

The Daily Sentinel
IVII'IIIl~

Palolioholl ""'7 """'""""· Monda7

lllroolh
~ ll1 Coari St., - · ·
Ohio b)o ... Ohio Yallq - -. .

ec.-.iY/Mal- Inc., l'aaeroy,
CillO M!S1 Ph. lln-31116. lleooail cloM

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Moori1o1J11 llijinMnlad•e, BranbiJJ\
·Now Pl"" S.'-, 781 ThiTd A-ua,
Now'lbiii,N-Yartl10017.

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• -

speaking at his headquarters in
this war-shattered city, Aidid
declined to say whether be would .
disarm his faghters, .who have loose
control over. the southern half of
the city and much of the cOuntryside. But be urged them 10 cooperate with the Marines
"I !Jive given a ~essage to the
Somali peq&gt;le urging thel)l not 10 .
go to the aupon and the pon in
thcir teehnicals,'' Aidid said.
ln what appeared 10 be lll exampie of the tenuous control of the
warlords, clansmen loyal to Aidid
on Monday seized Berberus Delio, .
an Italian water engineer wOI'lcing
for UNICEF.
. Aidid said he knew nothing
about the .arrest but would loo)c inro
iL
Relief coordinarors were talcing
precautions in advance of the
Marines • arrival.
UNICEF pulled its four foreign
workers out of north Mo$adishu,
which is ruled by Aidid's nval, and
sent a memorandum to employees
telling them not 10 come 10 work
Wednesday or Thursday unless
summoned in writing.

Teen gets lz:l'.e
':1
1

in favor of a combative conservative.
"I see confrontation as a 1001,"
said Rep. Richard Atmey, R·Texas.
who was elected chairman of the
House Republican Conference, the
organization of all GOP House
'.members. "When it is necessaay, I
will use that tool.' '
Armey, an economist with an
outspoken belief in Reagan-style
economic theory, defealed incumbent Californian Jerry .Lewis, a
more conciliatory figure. on a vote
of88ro 84.
Both parties caucus again today.
Democrau will elect committee
chairmen and vote on a series of
proposed rules changes, Republi·
cans will consider ctv1ei in tiDr
party's rUles and fall several lower·
ranking leadership posts.
Along with Foley, D-Wasb.,

ERIE, Pa. (AP) - A teen-ager
was sentenced today to life in
prison,with no chance of parole for
s~bbing IJI!d choldng a 5-year-old
neaghbor gar!, hiding her body and ~m~ntsonMondayre-e~
showing it to his friends. ..
Majority Leader Richard GqDai"Sc~tt Schroat, 17, of f:iie. Pleac!· 0-Mo., and Majority Whip David
ed guilty Nov. 9 10 criminal honu- Bonoir, )).Mich. They also ell)lllldcille in ~e death of Lila Ebright,
whose disappearance on April 12
rouched off a citywide search by
dozens of volunteers.
·
Preaching aad sinKing
'"Lila is now one of the littlest
Faith Full Gospel Church iu
angels, and you are one of the Long Bottom will have preaching
biggest monsters,'' Common Pleas and singing Friday at 7 p.m. A l!peJudge Shad Connelly !Old Schroat. cial grouf will be performing.
"I h~ you wake up each day in . There wil also be local .singers.
your Jail cell with the memory of Pastor Steve Reed invites the -·"'little U1a."
lie. Fellowship will follow. .,......
Assistant District Attorney
Program to be J.lre&amp;mled
William Dopierala said Schroat
abducted Lila, sal her on his bed,
"A Family Christmas" will be
choked her and stabbed her with a pre~ented at Hillside Baptist
pocket knife. He returned two more Church Dec. 19 and 20 Ill 7 p.m.
times, stuffmg a sock in her mouth There will also be a special JRSCD·
and choking her before she died, tation by the children.
Dopierala said.
Councilors tn med
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council No. 323, Daup·
ters of America, will have a Oaristmas supper Wednesday at 6 p:m.
served by JoAnn Baum and the
state ins1de sentinel convention
Raeine Star Mill Park will hold a Christmas lighting contesL
committee. A meeting and party
Judging will be held on December 21 from 7 10 10 p.m. Limits will
will follow and there will .be- a $3
be ~ two-mile radius from ~lion signs, and entry forms are
gift exchange.
avaalable al the Home Nauonal Bank. The deadline for entry is
December 18. Questions can be directed to Dale Hart, Box 347
Guest preaclaer
Racine, Ohio 45771, who will also receive entry forms. Hart can~
'-There will be a guest ministel',
reached at949-2926.
James H. Bergh, at SL John and St.
Paul Lutheran Churches on Sunday. A potluck dinner will follow
the 11 a.m. service at St. Paul for
MeiJS EmergeDCy Services units answered the following calls
both
churches. The churches will
for assiStance: MONDAY, 12:06 p.m., Pomeroy units to Hiland
hold
congregational
meetings on
Road, furna.ce far~ at the Raybon WaDace residence; 1:59 p.m;&gt;f,
Dec.
20
to
vote
on
this
ministu to
SyracUIC unat 10 Saxth Street, Corey Reitmire 10 Veterans Memorial
fill
the
pasiOf'
s
vacancy
at both
Hospital; 3:03 p.m., Racine squad 10 Main Street, Alleyne Rees 10
churches.
Veterans; 4:06 1.1.m., Syracuae 10 State Route 124 Claira Krider to
SL J01eph Hospatal; 4:07p.m., Middlepon units ro'Mill Street, WalBreakfast with Salata
lace Lee to Veterans; 6:30p.m., Life Flight IT, Alleyne Rees 10 Ohio
Breakfast with Santa will be feaState University; 7:29 p.m., Racine squad 10 State Route 124, Pearl
tured
at the Meigs County Museum
Proffmro Holzer Medical Cenicr; 7:31 p.m;, Syracuse unit 10 Third ·
in
Pomeroy
on Saturday from g.u
Street, Virginia Sayre 10 Veterans; TIJESDAY, .8:13 a.m., Middlea.m
.
The
cost
is $2 fOI' children
port unit to Overl!roolc Center, Ma-y Rickard 10 Veterans.

ed the I h d aqoiCIIII 10 inciDJ!a: 1
ffi....,...ic, Rep. Bill Itia:llamw. DN.M ., as a fourth cllief deputy
wbip.
B.. they OIISICd ooe cmamiuie
dgingw 112.-yar.«JJd Jamie Whit·
1ea of Mississippi, ud replaced
him • the ladm fA dae Appopa iations o--uiace we Rep. w-alliam
Nalcla. 1&gt;-K:y. WbiDeD bas been
in poor bealda for dae . . . yaw.
Jtcpublica&amp; mained by aa:Ja..
mation Millority Leader Bob
Micbd o( D)jmjs IIJd Whip Newt
Giqricb o( Gecagia.

r---Local briefs·-.-....;.....

~·

·-·1snow from the .low·pra:C
= !::9 ·:':~
R= of
· 1 d'
h
es •.
10

a::..u ang 1 . anc es at Mount: ·
~·Nev.
•

uaJ!:
:i~~:::~a~~eafOCo':'a1
Springs For t Myers Miami ·

Naples, Veio Beach and W Pal '
Beach in Florida.
· · est m

p 0mer011J • • •
· Coiatinued from page 1
from FIJ'C Chief Danny ZiJtle
tlac purchase of fare hose adapters
and flltings and safety J!llds for the
ladder truck . Councalman John
Blaeunar, who also serves on the'
.fire department, abslained from th8

rei

vote.

•

Zirkle's request for three addi;
timal radios was tabled, B!ld coun:
cil requested a legal .opinion
regarding a possible ~hange in tlie
fire depam•ent by-laws pertaining
to junior faremen.
Councilman Bill Young presented a petition from residents on
Pleasant Ridge Hill, who would
likt to be connect¢ to the village
water SIJIIP.Iy. No aclinn was taken.
Council member Betty ~aronick .
noted that loose garbage was a
problem on East Second Street near
Sycamore, and Councilman Scott
Dillon, on behalf of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, requested
additional police patrol on Satur·
day, during the merchants' promotional event. Younjl·noted that a
sign reslricting pariliilg on Pleasant
Ridge was needed.
·
The mayor's repon of fmes collected in November was appr()v~
in the amount of $3,640.
.
. Those present included Young,
Dillon. Blaetlnar, Baronick, Coun·
cil President Larry Wehrung; Clerk
Kathy Hysell and Mayor Bruce
Reed.

Police...
Continued from page 1
.
Ian. 29, 1991, arrest from which he
filed suit, claiming two Gallipolis
~lice and two Gallia County sheriffs deputies arrested him without
cause, handcuffed him and lcicked
him and beat him about the face
head and body with nightsticks:
flashlights, and fists.
·
. Acc~g to the Gallia. 9ounty
. Jail regJSter, Lamm was arreSted in
the incident for disorderly conduct,
driving under the influeace, .resisting - . 8ll!l8dlt, mmacing, reck•
less operatim, fleeing and eluding
and no operaror's license.

Hospital news

--Meigs announcementslllllle£ .,c 10 or S3 iJr llao!a: IF 10

and - 1be igdgdr:s; paDcates.
scra~a•led egs. bacon,
SN J , IPM fe1 ln:8ds11Jd bevCIIJC. 1bere wiD a1so be aa11:s em
the cbildrea.

G.-- Chrdl• e· 1:
i..... potkrt
of Gnce Episcopal Cbnn:b in
Pamctuy will be s..ra, followiug
the regular tiGiSilip seuiia:.. Meal
will be finisflr:d for dae p.turt

Tbe .....

A niEAli.R

WITH A

Christmas contest announced

·

Vetei'IIIIS MeJDOrlal
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
None. ·
· MONDAY DISCHARGES . .
Harry O'Dell.
.·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
J?isellarJes. D.ec. 7 -:- Angela
Wllile, David White, Hallie Nolari
Marlt Norman, Maude Rawlin~·
James Clrlron, Lori Pierce, Jame;
Sands, James Wright, Wayne Rush,
Mrs. George Hoffman and son and

Ashley Coughenour.

·

Nancy 1. Campbell. 45, 28440 Tanners Run Rd., Racine, was
eastbound on Ohio 124 in Sulton Townallip Sunday ~.m.
wben she stnJCk a deer CIOIIingthe toadway, die patrol
Damage to Campbell's 1987 Honda Accord was listed as moda'·
ate.
Minor injuriea were reported after
. a separate accident on Success
ROlli in Olive Township Monday around 7:30a.m.
·.
According to the patrol, Carol A. Collina, 49, 30719 Old Punland Rd., Pnnllnd, wa northbound 011 SutaiSS 1\oad when the 1992
~oyota pickup she was drlvilla slid oft the ice-covmd roadway in a
nght curv~ 1be truek struck a ddch, spun around and slid iniO the
ditch backwards.
.
Collins sustained minor injuries in the acCident, the palrol reponed.
•
.
Damaae 10 the pickup, owned by Jmy L. Collins, also of Portland, was listed as anodcrate.
1
No citationa were issued.
·

THE GREAT
COVERaUP!

..

'

I

~,

!i ••

;(

"'"' t · · ;

By Kinney

Cover Sore Spots Like:
• Sand Finished
Textured Walls ·
· -cracked Walls
. • Grooved Paneling
• Concrete Walls

992-2124

It's easy &amp; they'll be
rovered smoothly
forever ... and can be
painted or papered any
way you want. Just
aize the wall and hang

LINING CANVAS
-us:i ng a ready mix vinyl·
adhesive.

. 2 MEDI

PAll PIZZAS

_, ..! 10''
'

~

.•

.

.

Birtlls, Dec. 7 - Mr. and Mrs
Homer Mullins of Hamden, a son.' ·

LINING
CANVAS
•

CAll US
TODAY!

· Two accidenu wac investigated rccendy by the Gallia· Meigs
Post of the Swe Highway Patrol.

Maalb ......................................... te.l5

'OM Y-................................ .
IIHOL&amp;COPY

AliMahdi.

Patrol investigates wrecks

IVII80BIP110N L\T£8

()ae

chief rival, Ali Mahdi Mohamed,
and said the two leaders had
promised to cooperate with the
Marines and were broadcasting
instructiona 10 their fighters over
WASHING10N (AP) - House
radio swions.
· Speaker Thomas Foley, acknowlBotb warlords, Oak}ey said, edging "heavy responsibility" 10
"acknowledge thai neuher one solve some of America's most dif·
totally controls the situation.''
ficult problems, promised a pro·
Mogadishu is a city in which ductive partnership with President·
bands of teen-age gunrilenroam the elect Clinton over the next two
streeiS in so-called ICChnicals - a
years.
variety of m•Jreshift military vehi·
Foley and his top lieutenants
cles armed with machine guns, were re-elected Monday to lead
rocket launchers and cannons.
. House Democrats in the 103rd
Some arc hired by men:laants 10 Congress; which convenes Jan. 5.
loot aid shipments for resale in But R~blicans signaled they will
Mogadishu's markets and owe no make life diffacult fOI' the majority
special aDegiance 10 either Aidid or party, ousting one moderate leader

•·

~ffect today for ~tern New MexICil, western Wyomang and much o~

EMS units answer calls

I

..:iJwtil

aud faCe:, -said Bill Headrick,
&gt;P+CS"• for St. Mlly"s lbpitil
in lb....
As SIIOW feJI. n:laJiwes Of the
millers kept vip1 iD teats lind
buses.
"I'm optimistic," said Joha
SIUIJ,ill. lS, wllosc ftdler, Oaqfe
StDrlill. 49, pd 11111:lc, Palmer
Sbqill,44, were in the mine, "My
.daddy•s a swrivcw;•~~c said.
Eldl miller carits a mask :U.S
about aa laoar of OllJP. res:ue
wod&amp;as said. UIJc IDYP lllnb

Cooley. a mine CIIJIIIoya:..

nerro~e plan being consid··:;

pensions also come with cost-of- has been on the boards of nearly .
living adjustments. Wben was the two dozen companies and probably
last time you heard o£.a private- · pulls down $2 million· a year. ·
sector pension with a COLA? They Georae Bush listed his holdings ..
are practically non-eiistmL
last year at $1.29 million, and he :
And what of fOIIIIel preaiclents? . ~.19 million beach .house ·
We will have five of them come
Why 1R the pJ.ebeiw Jllying so:
Jan. 20 - the mos1 ex-presidents
alive al once since 1862 - IIIII it m~ to keep the llllliiCyCd men in..·
will cost us more than S20 million luxury? I would not deny a pension ;
next year to keep. them in tbe regal to a retired preaidenl or JaWIIIIker !
style 10 which we have aa:nSiomed who needs it, but if they- ........... .
. - and espec iall:-:::--if/.,.
y .
them. We will couP up an estim•· millionauea
they
arc
exploiting
their
former
·
ed $18.5 million for Secret Service
· · llld another $2.2 million )lOSitions for Jaandsolne returns - 1 .
office space, tranaporta· why should the taxpaJ'!ra be ~'
pinched fOI' ~1 Wby
't we _
lion and pensions.
Ricbard Nixon will receive ton• IIJbject them lOIII AmauaJ Elmiup'
gressional and presidential pen- Test, just like Common Folk sions totaling $183,844. Gerald means-tested for Social Security · .
Ford's.combined pensions will bencfits7 The more they earn, thO'~ .
amount 10 $228,()21. Jimmy Carlicr lea fecbal money they would get. •
Really, it's the principle of the
and Ronald Reagan will . get
$143,800 each. George Bush will thing. Ia a democnlcy, we arc sup- ,
pull down at least tbal amount, plus posed 10 be led by people who Me l
whatever he has coming for his our approximate equals. I don '1 1
years as a member fA congress and suggest starving them, but I do sug- •
gest keeping diem 'hungry enough ,
as'vice president.
· .
Does this not five you pause? IOCIR.
Ronald Reagan gaves speeches at
Joseph Spear II a syadlcaled ·:
a pop and is a miDionaire wriler ror Newspaper EaterpJile ;·
.
severa1 timea OYer. Gerald Ford A..c'.ldoL
charges at least SlS,OOO per talk,

Thursday lllrougb Saturday:
Thursday, rain or snow likely.
Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.
Friday and Satur~y. a chance of
snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs in.
the30s.

NORTON, .Va. (AP) - Res- · Safety and Health Administration.
. cuers trying to reach eighi men
There, they detected smoke,
deep in a coal mine rocked by an heat and an elevated level of
explosion retreated today when methane gas, Snyder said. Fearing
they encountered smoke, heat and another explosion, they turned
dangerous gases.
back, she saad.
The search was suspended
Rescuers were considering other
indefinitely. As mine officials options, including drilling a ventirelayed the news, relatives waiting lation hole inro the section the mine
outside the Appalachian mine cried where the men were believed 10 be,
and hugged.
said MiChael Lawless, a spokesman
Crews working in relays got for the fedelal mine agency.
within 300 feet of where the miners
A ninth miner crawled to safety
were thought 10 be when the blast after the blast in the Soudunounlain
occurred ¥onday, more tban a mile Coal Co.'s No. 3 mine. Robert K.
inside, said Kathy Snyder, a Fleming was in siable condition
spokeswol)lan for the U.S. Mine after surgery for bums on his hands

·Warlord urges supporters
to avoid Marine-held areas Congressional Democrats assume
responsibility
as
GOP
grows
combative
Marines,
1w.tord

completely on industry, competi-;

they arc wc;!I'Tng more about their
stock portfobos than about plant
closings and displaced workers?
· The peop~e who execute the

..

&amp;my Pt Cfo¢¥ Cloudy

During the campaign, Clintoa
promised he would trim the federal
payroll by 100,000 through attrition, and would slash the overall.
cost of operating the federal
bureaucracy by "at leliSt" ~ per·
· cent. Federal personnel experts sa,&gt;:
such cuts will be )IOIISible only if
some degree of fundamental
resuucturing is achieved at almost
every fecre.al depaibuenl and agency.
Finally, there are reports coming
out of Little Rock, Ark., tlaat the
transition's chief economic advisers have come 10 the conclusion
that the only way Clinton will be
able to quickly implement his economic ~s is by "seriously ;
restructunng" the Commerce;

.

Search suspended because
of dangero.us conditions .

W. VA.

ered, the de=t!nt might be,

.

.:':c:

MCH.

renamed the
ent of Trade
and Industry and would'COIICCIIIrale.

.
One of the things wrong with
America is that we have somehow

By The Aalodlled Presa
snow by Friday or Salunlay •
IIIOriJic · rn. 111c
Ohioans Will get a brief glimpse
The record·biab tem~ for SIOnl . . .
wat.. W'llllt:r
of tile sun 011 Wed~y.
~ dale at the Col..,_ " thet IOdaJ
~ ~led few
..F~asters Bald mostly sunny sta~ion was 69 degrees ia 1966 ia&amp;loa..SI)qm
orw&amp;
skies with Win!~ temperatUres in while the record low- 4 below
s- allo
the 40s ~ likely in most parts of zero in 1882. SUIIIet IO!Jigbt will be ia 111e Rockies
•:.:;::;'o1:~
the state.
at 5:06 p.m. and sunnse Wedocs- Nor'
·
But the sunshine won 't last d&amp;y at 7:42a.m.
..._..
•
AroUIId lllnatiaa
~ es &amp;. ~ am.g low
long, according. to the Nation~
W~ther Servic~. Meteorol.ogis
A surge of Arctic air prodaiCed
feet
~'ll...i.~:
saadtha deveUlOP,IOg Sstorm ant e sLnakow acro~s pans of the Great aia-:ai- -NcwiiiLHeavy
so.u w~s 1 nlled tales cou d
es rcgaon early today. The rai11 'Oitnl ........ ad
11a1
b~g raan to Ohio by Wednes!lay Southwest was drenched by rain Calibaia, n-., to 4 ill! fA
!"ghL Sleet BDC:l snow were )lOSSible fro~ a str011g loW·)lleSSII:'C system raiD fe:llaliprnli:nrio•as
10 llOI1hem Ohio.
movang eastward
Wiall:l' sa- WlUilia
The precipitation will ~tinue
. Forecasters predicted strong ..,_r 10r IDdaJ 10r. , ': ;
for the rest of the week, turrung 10 wand and heavy snow in the Pacific nor111en .o\ra-a -.1 soudlweat
Northwest today from a cold front O&gt;li• Mo S...llhisuaies were in

c:ondiliont and high temperatures

•

It's time to stop pampering,ltthe pols

The Dally Sentinel- Page 3

Forecasters say sunshine won't last long

lfednii~IJ1 J&gt;ec. 9

Dream: The Economy, the States; ·

cies suffer.

.

•

'

Pllgt 2 The o.Jiy Sentlnei
Pomeloy llddleport, Ohio:
1\aclay, December 8, 1992 :

Clinton's team studies past pre-sidents
tration.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Woathcr

'

The Daily Sentinel

Tulfdlii, December I, 11182

.

.~,. ~ale$8~~
WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
IIIIIOIIIAL 1111001 '-I'PIIOflCH ON
GAIIPIILD AVI., MaJIJIIIsBURO
IliON.· FRI. H, MT. tl-5:30

428-1065

�'

.,.

\

Sports

'

The Daily . Sentinel~

1

Lady,Buckeyes.defeat Southern 76-40.

1\leedlly, December8,1882: ·

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::~----------------------------------------------------------------~P~eg~e~··:

Lo~kout,

boycott possible at ~

with theii old clubi until May 1 .
and probably will 110 10111ewhere
else.
.
In other news, Stan Belinda
returned to Plttaburgh for a $1.5
million, one-yoar contract, and
Oakland .signed a trio or Jlitchen. ·
Rick Honeycutt got a $72~.000 .
one-year deal while Curt Young
and Rich Gc 1 ge agreed to minor
league conttacts.
The Colorado Rockies got into
it, 100, agreein~ to a minor league
conlr8Ct with pttcher Bruce Rultm
with a major league deal for
$235,000 if he makes the team.
Mike MarsbaU decided to come
back from J8pllll, ~ to a one- .
year contract wtth the Seattle
Mariners. First baseman Orestes
Desttade and the Florida Marlins
were close 10 a conlract, and pitcher Steve Howe and the New Yort:
Yankees were set to announce a
two-yew deal today.
The trade front was quiet, with
no deals Monday, But Los Angeles
was said to be ralking with Toronto
about a trade for third baseman
Kelly Gruber.
There was some intrigue, ·100.
Barry Bonds and the San Francisco Giants got closer toward a
final agreement on their record
$43,75 million, six-year deal. But
why didn't the Pirates offer Bonds
arbitration? Now it appears he'll
leave Pittsburgh without the Pirates
getting two drafts picks in return.
And why did the penny:pinchPirates

Monday's Rule 5 draft? He's guaranll!ed $525,000 next season with a
1994 option at$1.2 million.
1'hole queitions Jaled in imporillnce witli the prospect of base- ·
ball's eighth wort: stoppBge in 22
years.
When the sides signed a fouryear agmement on March 19, 1990,
they gave each other the right to
reopen free agency, salary arbitta- ·•
tion and the mintmum salary by '
Dec. II this year.
Richard Ravitch, management's
chlef negotiator, said he pushed for
a reopener in order to stop the
salary escalation that pushed the
average past $1 million last season.
Jacbon wants tiaseballto move
toward change in its hiring. Seventeen percent of front-office jobs in
baseball are held by minorities, an
increase of 1 percent over 199.1, a
re~ by the commissioner's.office
SBid Monday. But just 21 of 534
executives and departments heads
among the clubs were black.
''Pony-five years after Jackie·
Robinson, it's ume for owners to
grow up and jOin the real Ainerica." Jackson said from a podium in
the press room.
He was denied the chance to
meet tl!e owners, who said they
were too busy, but he did meet with
a smaller delegation led by executive council chairman Bud Selig of
the Milwaukee Brewers and was
promised a meeting with the full
group later. Jackson called the
meeung "congenial but inconclu-

BIG BUCK • Todd -Norton, Tuppers Plainl, downed this 13polnt buck In the Tuppers Plains area last week. Tilt buck wei11bs
abOut 190 pounds.

Ottawa drops.6-5 NHL tilt
By The Asaoc:iated Presa
The Ottawa Senators displayed
that never-give-up attitilde, scored
five soals in for only the second
time m their history, and ... losL
"We fought back," Ottawa
coach Rick Bowness said proudly.
"They're a hell of a hix:key team,
and for us to score five goals is
very encouraging."
But not good enough.
·
Mike Ridley and Kelly Miller
had a goal and two assists each,
and the Washington Capitals withstood a late surge to beat the Senators 6-5 Monday night for their
founh straight victory and seventh
in nine games.
Leading 6-2, the Capitals forgot

sive.''

•

Houston hands Cht·cago
sixth straight loss 24•7

Marshall cagers win
second game 101-86

Qrowns eye playoff spot

Gallia has 3,010, .Meigs 2,880

Hunters kill record .
. ~lumber of deer in Ohio

:.COL~MB US. Ohio (AP) - .then led biologists to revise that
~~~record 96,124 deer PJ'e&lt;iictioilto about 100,000.
during Ohio S sax-day deer firearms
Bad weather on Wednesday and .

s~Asc;m. ~e Ohio division of Saturday,thelastdayoftheseason,

wildlife aaid.
.
:fhat figure, released Monday.
brolic 1aat year's record of 92,823
by.3,301, or 3.5 pen:ent,
·G~tey County recorded the
mOlt kilb, at 3,419, followed by
Jefferaon, 3,398; Tuscarawas
3,31)2; MusJr!ngum, 3,349; Athens:
3,ljl3; Washington, 3,110; Cotboc· ~,057; Gi!lia, 3;010; Meip,
2 . , and Harrison, 2,711.
Wildlife biologists originally
bad expected hunrers to take aboUt
98.000 deer, A recad clplliug day
kill, o( 33,76), an lncrcue of 35
percent over opening day 1991.,
/

••

~~~ht have affected the number of

· , the division said.
There were more deer killed this
L!:':u~ompared with last year
or an lnerease in the deer
herd and IW'a•.. more thaD 59 000
special manaaement llldcrlela d..er
permill were luucd, the dlviiion '
aaid.
.
'l'llale w11o 11114 thcl ...... permit were allowed to tati two deer
during the filesanllltllon.
The deer an:hery season remains
open tllrouP. Jan~ 30 and lncludea
.the statewide primitive-weapons
season J~m, 7-9.
,II

,.

.

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f

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Al') - The
Rev. Jesse Jackson brought a con·
· gregation to its feet with his calls
for mcm) minority hirings in baseball. Teatn owners are sitting on
their hands for now.
Jac~n got the owners' attention at baseball's winter meetings
,Monday by suggesting they'll t'ace
iboycotts and challenges to their
;anti-lrust exemption unless they
.open top-level jobs to minorities,
: "We're not talking about quotas. We're talking about opportuni·
ties," Jackson said before meeting
cfive owners to discuss baseball's
;hiring. practices, "At this point,
.there IS a quota: zero. lt's.an old
:quota, and there's no present plan
"10 break iL
"But we're not going to be satisfied with that quota any longer,"
La!er, Jackson drew a loud, prolonged ovatio~ a.t a~ inner-city
church' with hts mststence that
minorities shouldn't allow them~lves to be shut out of top baseball
JObs.
·
''There are 28 vresidents of
clubs, zero blacks, ' he told the
crowd of about 500 people. "General managers - 28, zero black.
Director of player personnel zero. Chief of scouting - zero.
"Unless there's a plan to change
that, when the stadium opens come
opening day, the number going into
that stadium must be zero.' •
Jackson's appearances brought
baseball's ,latest racial controversy
at the owners full-force. Cincinnati
Reds owner Marge Schott started it
with her admissions that she's used
derogatory terms about blacks,
Jews and other ethnic groups.

While Jackson called for wholesale changes in hiring practiceS,
owners and baseball officials
ducked the Schott conttoversy and
I. released a report showing mmorities made only slight gains in front
offices this year.
Although roughly 17 pereent or
f!unt-office employees are minorilies - up I percent from last year
- there are no black chief execulives or general managers in the
major leagues. Some teatns still lag
in hiring: the Reds 'have just one
black in their 45-person front
OffiCe.
·
Ogly 2 percent of baseball's
front-office employees , were
• minorities in 1987, when former
Los Angeles Dodgers executive AI
Campanis br9u~ht the matter to
attention by saymg blacks ''lack
the necessities" for decision-making roles.
•'The fact is, there has been
progress," deputy commissioner
Steve Greenberg said. "The bully
pulpit has been used by Fay Vin·
cent and other commissioners over
the years with varying degrees of
success."
·
.. ..Schou didn't auend the sessions
Monday, and Reds officials
couldn't say whether she~d make
the two-hour drive from Cincinnati
for rOday' s meeting.
The owners aren't likely to take
any action against Schott during
the meetings, which wrap up
Wednesday. Greenberg said a special four-person committee set up
to investigate Schott's statements
doesn 'I have its repon ready.
"I think in the next week or so

~Baseball currently a

'

POMEROY

~~Chucki.aswtotor ~~U~H·W:~tiiitid
,,

"We knew~coming in our defensive line would have to play well
for us to win the gatne. The line
really stuffed them. We needed a
pass rush and we got one ••
•
The Oilers sacked~ quarterbscts (ive times and kept constant'
pressure on Willis
"The kid (WiiDs) had a lot of
pressure," Ditka said. "I don't ·
care who you are, I don't kllow any .
quarterback who can throw under ·
thatkindo(~ssure."
·
·

. 214 EAST MAIN

i

to play defense. It nearly cost them
thegame.
·
Sylvain Turgeon had two goals
for Ottawa, which !railed 4-0 and
6-2 before scoring three times in
game's final 14 minutes. The loss
'ln.ded the expansion team •·s only
two-game unbeaten slreak and left
the Senators 3-24-2
Elsewhere in the NHL, it was
Quebec 4, Buffalo 3; the New Yort:
Islanders 6, Tampa Bay 1; Calgary
6, Edmonton 3, and Vancouver 4.
SL Louis 3.
'
Sylvain Cote, Peter Bondra,
Kevin Hatcher and Dale Hunter
also had goals for Washington. Jeff
Lazaro, Andrew McBain and
Tomas Jelinek also scored for
Ottawa

LAUSANNE, Switlerland (Al')
-Olympic officials are moving to
head off lawsuits of the type that
won. Butch Reynolds $27.3 million
in damages from ttack and field's
world ruling body.
The International Olympic
Committee said Monday u will
review and perfect all of its drugtesting procedures to discourage
athletes from going tn court to
challenge positive drug findings.
"We are sure we will be in a
position where it will be impossible
to fmd any failure in these rules,"
said Prince Alexandre' de Merode
chairman of the IOC medical com:
mission,
Olympic officials are worried
that the Reynolds case will lead to
a flurty of other lawsuits in the
United States before the 1996 Summer Games in Atlallta.
De Mmxle said athletes should
continue to have legal recourse to
challen11e drug-teSI results, but he
complained that courts often ignore
the key issue.
"Generally, they are not interested iq knowing if somebody has ·
taken !Orne banned drug but only in
finding any kind of mistake in the
proc:edun!," he said.
.

- Reynolds, .the world-record
holder in the 400 meters, claimed
tltere were faulty procedures in the
drug test which led to his suspension In 1990 for alleged lise of the
banned anabolic steroid nandrolone. He filed suit against the
International Amateur Athletic
Federation, and last Thursday a
1federal judge in Columbus, Ohio,
~warded him $20.5 million in punitive damages and $6.8 million in
polentiallost earnings.
The IAAF dismissed the verdict
as "worthless," saying the U.S.
court has no jurisdiction over the
London-based federation . The
1AAF has also threatened to extend
Reynolds' suspension, due to
expire on Dec. 31, and to sue him
for libel
Reynolds was tested after a meet
in Monte Carlo in August 1990.
The test was carried out 11 the roc.

Southern goes io Waterford
Monday..
.
· •
SCORE BY QUARTERS:
•
Southern 6 8 18 8-40
Nelsonville 17 IS :t.S 19'76
•
Box Score:
Soutbem (40)
•
Ohlinger {};1-1, Mills 2-4-2-1t,
Cross 0-1-1, Moore 1.0-2. Stover
1-0-2, Codner 1-1-3, Sisson 3-2-f,
Lisle 1-0-2, Cooper 0-3-3, Totall:
9-4-(10-ZJ)-40.
'
:
l\lel&amp;onvllle (76)
~
Crawford 7·3-5-28, Shaffer 5-1.:0-11, Six 2-0-4, Warren 3-2 · ~·
Blackburn 2-1-5, Shumway 1·3-~
Gail 5-Q;JO, Whille 1-1-3. TOUII
U-4-(t:z-18)-76.
.:

..• .

•

LOUISVILLE, Ky . (AP) There's no commissioner, anj soon
~here may be no labor con1racL
There was no state of the $BI11C
it the start or baseball's wmter
meetings Monday, either.
But then again, why sh·ould
there have been? Because, it's pretty clear, baseball's bumbling
speaks for itself.
Plainly put, the state of the
gune is a big, fat mess. Baseball is
out of conttol, perhaps more than
ever. and there's no one in conttol
to right iL
.
At every turn, something is
going wrong.
There was:
- The incredibly dumb decision by owners to deny the Rev.
Jesse Jackson a chance to talk to
them ~ut Marge Schou and the
whole &amp;sue of racism. .
·
- The bungled Barry Bonds
news conferaJCC, an embarrassing
eJ)iJode in which the San Francisco
Giants SIOPIICd a news conference
to sign bini before it even ~·
- The ruling on Steve Howe,
who was given an eighth chance to
comeback.
- . The free agent frenzy, wilh
owners pleading poverty and then
lining up to throw millions of dollars at Splice Owen and everyone
cliO available.
"
- The whole business or t~e

By Howard Siner

Doe~ the college basketball

&gt;

games," suggests Campanelli, in

sea- the NCAA News. ' 'That way, both

son begm too soon?
football and basketball would be
Yes, it ~. according to Lou single-semester sports."
.
Campanel~. head basketball co&amp;ch
Campanelli believes this would
at the Umversity of California be a real improvement on campus.·
(Berkeley).. He's concerned about
"No basketball player would
the academtc and social life of stu- have to worry about taking final
dent-llhleres, and about graduation ellllllls (in December) and playing
rates.
games at the same time," he
"Let the opening games begin explains.
Jan. 2 or 3, after the football bowl
Delaying the season would also

than iii the coons.
._;
However, Anita DeFrantz, ap
roc·executive member from the
United States and Cooner OlympiC,
rower, said ~ bodies should ~
ready to deal with COillt C~JC\'.:
"An athlete lives in the real-world, and we have laws and couiti
in the real world,'' she. said. "We..
have asked the athletes to cane tp ;
a very high level of skill. We;
administtators should also have a-.
high level of skill to protect th~
athletes and to protect sport."
:
On another doping issue, deMerode reported that progress con-·
tinues to be made in blood testini ·
and the procedure sltonld be ready .
to be introduced at the 1994 Wintq.
Gatnes. Blood tests are designed to:
detect EPO and other banned substances which can't be found in uri..:
nalysis.

delay the NCAA basketball tounll!·:.
menL
· -~
"The Final Four would fie:
pushed back to the ftrst weelamd 'o[
May, instead of April,'' nottif .
Campanelli about the cham pi· ;
onship round. "Everybody would •
then be finished playing before :
sprin'g exams, regardless o£·
whether their schools were on the
semester or the quarter system."
·

R~lr*"~'4'!,~,!$"~lr*4'l.,!iif~,!$~~~~~~,~·!,!iit-~
~~.:·

they''U be ready to give some kind
of repon to the executive council,"
Greenberg said.
Jackson, head of the Rainbow
Coalition, wants to meet with own.ers again to discuss his. plans for an
aggressive minority-hiring program, He said the five owners he
met Monday were cordial but
offered no plan for correcting the
problems.
''They have no plan or their
own to get their house in order,"
J!k;kson'said "We 'Shall wait to see
how they handle Marge, who has
embarrassed them, and how they
handle themselves."

.

1

:.: ~

. .-

..

( "''
)

.,.·•

.. .

..

Jackson said the issue isn't
Schott's offensive statements as
much as the teams' hiring system.
"They have until the spring to .
f.UI forth a plan," Jackson said.
'Each team should have a pipeline
plan where P:C?Pie are on lriiCk ... to
the power posiuons in baseball. ••
Jacbon was joined II Monday's
meeting br Baltimore executive
Frank Rob1nson and former Reds ·
players Dave Parker and Leon
Durham. Schott has been accused
of referring to Parker as ·a "million-dollar nigger," a charge she
denies.
·
Part:er said he undCrstands why
it would take owners a while to
react to Schou's statements and the
call for changes in hiring practices.
"On the other hand, I don't
want it swept under the carpet," he
sai\1; "It's been an issue for a long
time, but it's been in the background, It's oil the front burner
now and we've got to keep it

Christnaas
Greetine
Edition
Thursda~,

Deeenaller 24

there.*'

big, fat m~ss

Giants, and where they'll play in
the future.
· - The power play that sacked
commissioner Fay VincenL
And, just when it seemed like
things couldn 'I fall apart any fur. ther, owners voted Monday -by a
15-13 vote - to reopen the labor
conlract with players, a move that
could lead to a lockout next spring. '
"Throughout the last year; baseball has suffered through a number
of public relations f18SCos," players union chief Donald Fehr said.
What's •oing on here? Has
baseball lost Its way, or what?
"Urn, well, I've been reading a
lot about that latelr," deputy rommissioner Steve Oreen6erg said.
"But I don't think so.."
Still, it made for an odd scene
when Greenberg walked into the
press room Sunday night and had
no idea that the Giants' $43.75 million deal with Bonds bad not been
' done.
Or, in the midst of the whole
controversy about Bonds • contract
bm;aeoing Milwaukee owner
Bud S
-technically basebaU's
man in
ge as chairman or the
executive council - excuse himself to attend a Brewers' orplization meeting.
..
Selig and the other owners met
Monday afternoon to vote on the
labor PICL Nawrally, the starting
•

accredited laboratory in Paris.
On Oct. 4, 1991, The Athletics
Congress, the U.S. lrack and field
ruling body, committee essentially
exonerated Reynolds and recommended that the IAAF lift the suspension because of questions about
the urine testing.
De Merode, however, said he
has no doubts the test was done
properly.
"From our side, we are sure, we
have verified that the Paris laboratory has worked perfectly,'' he
said. "We trust it in this prnce'
d ure. ..
Francois Carrard , the IOC' s
director general, said a ~ossible
solution is to establish an mdependent arbitration cominission to set·
tie doping and other disputes. He
has suggested requiring athletes to
sign· a form promising to resolve
any grievances in arbittation rather

Is it too early.for college basketball? . L

Rev. Jackson calls for more
minority hirings in baseball

n:J.Iay.

Ne!~·v~g:~s::~.play.

Nelsonville coasted to the 76-40
win in the fmal frame.
Southern had 23 rebounds led
)ly Jessita Codner with six and
·Andrea MOore with five. SHS had
11 steals, 23 turnovers, and 1g
fouls. Nelsonville had 35 rebounds
and 22 fouls.
N-Y won the reserve game on a
three-point play to end the gune.
Southern, leading 26-24, fouled in
the waning seconds, allowing the
bucket and the free throw.
Mindy Mingus had eight fc.the
winners, While Jesse Storkin had
seven, and Sarah Ogg six. Jonna
Manuel had eight for Southern and
Bea Lisle six.

Olympic officials lnove to head off lawsuits ~ --~

~ Top-ranked Duke romps 103-72

wm

ers Croallaa year, utilized a sttong

inside-oullide gatne plan against
Jenni Couch's Tornadoes. The fast
paced tempo resulted in a 17-6 fust
period taUy.
Nelsonville eased up somewhat
~ ~ CJIIr!es vr. Haymarigymin the second, while Southern
DISlum m Rac111e.
Susan Crawford led the winners played better ball itself. The Buckwith 28 points, including three eyes opened up a 32-14 score 11 the
three pointers, and bad a teatn-high half.
Nelsonville, swprisingly picked
ten rebounds. Jill Shaffer had
eleven points, Heather Gail ten . up the pace the second half, pressilnd Christi Wmen eighL
' ing with an already huge lead.
For Southern, Aimee Mills had SHS made some adjustments 11 the
a team-hil!h 18 points, ripping the half and motivated its offense by
nets for lour rong-range three putting 18 points on the board. The
pointers.· Sammi Sisson added thi(d frame ended 57-32.
eighL

How Top 25 Fared
By The Associated Press
How the top 25 teams in The
Associated Press college basketbiiJI
poll
fared Monday:
.. i"
1.
Duke (3.0) beat Northeastern
GEl I lNG DOWN • Emporia State's Andy
MeCallop, Jell, aad Marcllellus Stiede, back,
103-72,
Next: vs. Rutgers at the
Upholf, middle, ud KaiiSIIS center -Eric Pauley,
keep their eyes oli the play. Kansas went oa to
Meadowlands,
~aturday.
pght, lilt the Door durin11 tbtir Monday Dillht
beat Emporia State, 91~56. (AP)
,.
2.
Kansas
(3-0)
beat Empbria
pme Ia Lawrence, KID, Emparia State's · J~mes
State
91-56.
Next
vs,
MississipPi
'
Valley State at Kansas ,City, Friday~
.
3. Kentucky (2.0) did not play. .
Next vs. Eastern Kentucky, Tues.
crushed The Cil8delll6-46.
trouble gettin$ swted and fell day.
~· By CHRIS SHERIDAN
4. Indiana (4·1) did not play.
In Conway, Ark., the longest behind 20-10 With 11:321eft in the ·
~:
AP Sports Writer
II Notre Dame, Tuesday.
:·Duke is Mi;k.la .. r.nw. spot wimina aueak In colle&amp;e basJrtl. fllll half. Bli·Webber scored eight Next
·5,
North
Carolina (3.0) did not
;. atop the AP poD - and back ball came to •an end as Central points in an 18-7 burst that gave
play,
Next:
vs. Virginia Tech at
Arkansas defeated Oklahoma City Michigan its first lead, 28-27.
~g what it does beat - racking
Roanoke,
Va.,
Wedneaday.
up comfortable wins over out- 84-75, ending the Chiefs' 63-~e Webber stayed hot in the sec:ond
6~
Michigan
(2-1) beat Dettnit
unbeaten s!realc. Oldanhoma City is half and the Wolverines began to
~ opponents.
Mercy
92-77.
Next:
vs. Bowling
·• The No, 1 Blue Devils rolled to an NAIA Division I school.
wear the Titan$ down with their
Green, WecJne!day.
an easy 103-72 win over Nonheast- No. l Kansas !11, Emporia State superior height and talenL
7, Seton Hall (5-1) beat Miami
etJI Monday night, giving coach 56
·
Tony Tolbert, who played two
65-56,
Next: vs. lona at White
At Lawrence, Kan., the Jay- vears at Michigan before ttansferMike Krzyzewslti his 300th C8rea'
at the school.
.
hawks stal1ed the second half with '
1 d D tr 01· t (2 1) · th 22 Plains, N.Y., Thuraday.
•
WI
a 41-12 run to lock up the win in pomts.
ID$, e
8. Iowa (3-0) did
Next
~:The Blue Devils haven;t 'lost to
· e
VS, Northern Iowa,
y.
anyone other than an Atlantic the fust game between the schools No, 7 Seton Hall 65, Miami 56
9. Louilville (1-0) did not play.
Coast Conference opponent in 49 in 45 years.
At East Rutherford, NJ ., Seton
Next
at Vanclelbilt, Wcdnesda
.
ay.
Five
Kansas
players
reached
Hall
USCd
a
19.0
run
lale
in
the
secs~ght games.
10. Florida State (3-2) did not
.1t was expected Duke (3-0) double figures: Rex Walters and ond half to defeat Miami, which
play. Next at Duquesne, Dec. 15.
W,buld have ttouble getting ready Eric Pauley had 14 points, Adonis
ade -•
of 1 0na1
Jordan
13,
Greg
Ostertag
12
and
m
uouy
one
IS
10
field
11. Georgetown (2-0) did not
f&lt;r the Huskies just two days after
goal litem~. .
play.
it«al then-No, 1 Michigan 79-68 Danin Hancock 10.
·
Before the Pirates' run, the day, Next vs, PitiSburgh, Wednesm;ooe or the biggest early-season
Emporia Stale, without a player game had the makings of one of the
taller than 6-foot-8, outtebounded b'
IJ1lilchups ever, There wasn't much Kansas
(tie)
Oklahoma
did
not
but committed 30
tggest upsets in Big East history, play.
Next
vs. Idaho(2-0)
State,
Tueso(ll ~lem, however, as the Blue turnovers.42-32
·
Seton HaU (5-1, 1.()) lr8iled 52-40 day.
D,.t¥ils built a 10-pointlead just
with 10:13to go before slalting its
oytr five minutes into the game No. 6 Michigan 97, Detroit game-winning
spun.
~·~ sttetched it to 50-29 at half- Mercy 77
Terry Dehere led Seton Hall ' 14. Arizona ( 1) did not play.
IIQ)e.
.
•
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Chris wilh 25 points and Arturas KarHOUSTON (AP).:.. The Hous· In other games, No. 2 Kansas Webber scored 24 points and . nishovas added 16. Trevor Bunon Next: vs. N~w Mexico, TIJCldiy,
.
15.
Syracuse
(3.0)
did~
play.
ton
Oilers •!most left Chicago
dOwned Emporia State 91-56, No, pulled down 14 rebounds as Michi- had 16to top Miami ((};3, (};1).
Next:
at
Tennessee,
Wednesday.
coach
Mike Ditka speechless.
gan
got
past
Dettoit
Mercy,
6 ~chigan beat Dettoit Mercy 92l(i.
Arkansas
(3-0)
did
not
play,
The
OiJen,llruggling to stay in
The
Wolverines,
apparently
still
71: No. 7 Seton Hall defeated
vs.
Southeast
Missouri
State
the
playoff
picture, turned twq of
Next
Miimi
65-56 and No, 25 NeblliSka reeling from their loss at Duke, had
'•
at
Pine
Bluff,
Ark.,
Thursday.
Chicago's
three turnovers into
•
17. Georgia Tech (1·1) did not touc;hdowns for a 24-7 victory
•
play. Next vs, Georgia State, Sat- Monday night and extended the
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) urda)'.
.
~~· m~ to six strailht losse~..
-Longwood, a Division ninde18. Purdue (3-0) did not play.
. 'flle_re ~.not ,too much to say,
,•
pendent, never stood a chance Next: vs. Loyola, ru., Saturday.
Ditka saul. We ve gor.li:! get some
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Now the playoffs as "the tword."
against Marshall, a Division I
19. Cincinnati (1-0) did not turnovers mstead of giYJng them.
that he's achieved a second sttaight
"Obviously, we re in 'the hunt · Southern Conference teatn, coach play. Next vs. Southeast Missouri You can't win with two, three
sepan or improvement, coach Bill for postseason play," Belichick Ron Carr said.
State, Friday,
turnovers a gatne. We don't just
Belichick is allowing himself to said. "But you know, we can't
20. Tulane (3-1) did not play. give up turnovers; we give up
"They're stronger, bigger and
c&lt;iasider that his Cleveland Browns ~ontrol what. the other teams are quicker. Their playas are so much Next: at No. 21 Memphis State, touchdowns..We're masten II iL"
m!Rht even make the playOffs.
going to do and what their sched- Slroltler than the~ we play on 1 Wednesday.
Bubba McDowell swted the
·l&gt;reviously, the subject was ules•."
21. Memphis State (Q;2) did not Bears' downfall with a 26-yard
regular basis,' be said, "We
taboo with Belichick, who insists
By winning their three remain- would have bad to play a perfect play. Next: vs. No. 20 Tulane, interception retwn for a touchdown
he:never looks beyond tomorrow, ing games .at Detroit, at home game to win, We ·couldn't nm any Wednesday.
,
v,'itb 44 aecondllleft In the half.
Reporters hesitated to mention against HouSton and 11 PitiSburgh~ offense 11 au. It was a big _........ .
22. UNLV (1.0) did not play.
Then, in the third quarter, Sean
"""' Next: 11 San Diego State, Saturday. Jones
jarred~
TOIII Willisrecovfrom
plb'off possibilities to him, know- the Browns would fuiish 10-6 and me~t for our ~layers playing
the baD·
__. Ray Childress
inJ they'd be rebuffed. One who give themselves a reasonable agatnst their size. •
23. Massachusetta (1-1) did not
....
brought it up Monday referred to chance for a wild-card berth.
Marshall
(2-1)
breezed
past
play.
Next:
at
No.
11
Oklahoma,
ered
iL
The
Oilers t:un)ed it into a
•.•
17-0 lead when Cody Carlson,
Longwood (2-4) 101-86 Monday Saturday.
•
night as forward Tyrone Phillips
24. Michigan State (1·1) did not starting his third game for the
his 15 of 19 from the fieltl and play. Next: vs, Stetson at Los in~ Warren Moon, connected
. ·.
wath Webster Slaughter for a 6.
scored a career-high 38 points. Angeles, Friday.
Guard Hatold SimDIOIIS added 27,
B . Nebraska (3-0). beat Citadel yard IOiicbdoWn pill. .
.
including six 3-pointers.
86-46, Next vs. Creighton, Thun"This was a big win for us,''
"Obviously, SimmCllll is quite a day.
Oilen coach Jack Pardee said.
shooter," Carr aald, crediting the
.
·
.
. , . ..

Nelsonville, returning six play- ·

BY SCOIT WOLFE
Setttlllel Cca 1•ljlu.lent
The Nellonvilte-York Lady
Buckeyes defeated the Southern
Tornadoes 76-40 Monday night
during .IIOII-Icague girls' basketball

start of '-93 baseball season ,
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) There may be a Jockootll the Slart
of the BeiiOII, and thc;e may be a
boycott, too. '
.
N. h•_tell owuers voted 15-13
Monday to reopen their labor
qreement, Je~e Jackson was in
another room of the same hotel
threatening a fan bOycott if the
spo_nrt's hiring practices don't
change.
0~ perhaps the JI!OSt unusual
day m the 92-year hastory of the
winra- meetinp, off-the-fiCid news
canplelely ~ business
as Ullial before a flurry of late signings as midnight apprcoched.
In the most surprising d~ of
the day, Paul Molitor left Milwaukee and aareed to a $13 million,
three-year conttact with Toronto.
Hours earlier, the Blue Jays resigned outfielder Jpe Carter for
$19.5 million over three rears,
tying him with Baltimore s Cal
Ri!*en for the second-highest average~ in '"'•eball.
DelrOII re-sigDed second baseman Lou Whitaker for $10 million
over three years and pitcher Bill
Gullickson for $4.6 million over
two years.
Cincinnati, meanwhile, signed
outfielder Roberto Kelly for $10
million over three years.. He would
have been eligible for free agency
liext year.
It was a day of goodbye's, 100.
Teams failed 10 offer arbittation to
66 free agents by the midnight
deadline, a group that includes
Wade Boggs, Andre Dawson and
Benito Santiago. They can't re-sign

.

.

T1le Dally SenUnel Page _ J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Willi wrallls aJ IlDDy and milllel•, 81acldnp llug 1ty
llle fire and scea• bl••kllld willian•, ClulsbiiM
acOIDjiMI• warmlll an.. goad che• ·as we cllerlsllllle ~- ·
biBIIiDp we'n sband illfs past .,..... p._ 81 llme•DI ·_.,

time of the meeting was in doubt
because some owners ·had mistakenly been given two .different
times. ·
·
. At one point during the meeting,
a baseball employee walked past
the room and looked at the closed

saying ..lba•kl" lo JDD, • man, friends, old and aew,
wb-ldnd sapp.a we'D alwaysli.....re. Dolag .
.......... willa yoa Is oar gralnt pleanre!

door.

· ''What are those bumblers up
to?" he asked. mauer offacdy.
a~ the wrong thing, it often

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

Or, as a prominent. agent asked
late Sunday night, "Who was the
bozo who made the decision to tell
Jesse Jackson that he couldn't
come?"
· Not let Jackson speak to all of
the owners? Too busy with other
items on the agenda, like listening
to reports on stadium consttuction
in Cleveland?
How could anyone even think
that?
Selig finally fiaurcd out what to
do and l8fCCd to meet with Jackson
Monday night, along with four

(

other owners.
In the past, a canmiasioner niay
have stepped forward and juat told
all the owners to l.isliiJ up. l&gt;iot that
the owners would've lislaled to a

man they hired. · . .
"After this year, I would be
loathe to p-cdict how far the commillioner's powers extend,"
Greenberg said.

: :.

~ ':

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

'
'

THE 'DAILY SENTINEL
.

~ - :~

:j:~ .•

.»-~. .iliii~*fi- ;t~it~i·HI'tititi
....·it&amp;'iii·M ··
•
•

'I

�•

:Page 6 The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend

BlOB

•

1182-1183
1992·93 GIRU' SCHEDULE

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
DEC. 11-Trhn.le - Away
DEC. 15-Pt. Pleasa•t- Home

hal!lat-

Dear AJIIII.awlera: It 11CC111S die
in 1he wllid to do lbeiC
days is IIM!illhat you a no loa&amp;«
illtRIIcd iD eex. You told "LoacIIOI!Ie in Wis.,• whoie wife of 40
yean didD't want any 1111n a. lllal

NOV. 30-AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 3-FAIRLAND
DEC. 5-UNIOTO -1:00 p.m.
DEC.1G-AT WATERFORD .
DEC. 12-AT,FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 14-AT BELPRE
DEC. 17-.:rRIMBLE
JAN. 4-WARREN LOCAL .
.JAN. 7-RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 9-AT MEIGS- 3:00 p.m.
JAN.11-SOUTHERN
. JAN. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING-1:00 p.m.
JAN. 21 - WATERFORD . ·
JAN, 23-M ILLER -1 :00 p.m. .
JAN. 27-BELPRE
.
JAN. 28-AT RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 1-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 4-AT FAIRLAND
FEB. &amp;-MEIGS - 1:00 p.m.
FEB.15-AT SOUTH POINT

DEC. 5-AT MILLER
DEC. 11-AT TRIMBLE
DEC. 15-PT. PLEASANT
DEC. 18-WATERFORD
DEC. 19-AT FAIRLAND
DEC. 22-AT SOUTH POINT
JAN. 5-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 8-FUVER VALLEY
JAN. 12-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 15-AT HANNAN, WV.
JAN&gt; 19-SOUTH POINT
JAN. 23-AT PT. PLEASANT
JAN. 26-AT RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 29-SOUTHEAN
FEB. 5-AT MILLER
FEB. 12-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 13-HANNAN, WV.
FEB. 16-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 19-FAIRLAND

Ilia wife lhould Ft cou!llding. Wbat
on Clltb for? If she's ~ or it lmll
doe&amp;n"t want
more, why llbould
abe get instructions on how to tum
henelf on again? Have you lost yoiJr
mind?
I agree wilh "Tennesaee,' a reader

any

who said i~s DOl a mortal sin 10 lose
· interest in ICll. $be said she'd had
enough ~ex to last ·a lifetime, that
sex was vudy overrared. IIIII she
wondered why so many people
lhought it was such a big deal.
"Lonesome• is like most men,
who until their dying day, will
want to see if 1hey can do it "one
more time. • Poor "Kay" (his wife)
III!Jnits die problem is hen, so old
"Lonesome" promises he will never
cheat on her no matter whaL Big
deall You can bet your bonom
dollar he won't cheat. He'd be
embarrllssed to let anyone else
know how sloppy his performance
is - .which is probably die n:ason
pooi Kay lost intereSt in die rust
place.
Please, Ann, leave people alone
.when lhey tell you 1bey don't want
any more sroc1t time. Stop CIICOUillg·
ing 70, 80 and 90-year-olds to shape
up and get back in die 81111dle. Tate
the pressure off these senior citizens
and Jet diem know Ibm is no law
lhat says 1hey have to be intm&amp;led

'

. . . . . . . .------.TORNADOES

GIRLS
DEC. ·I 0-Waterford .;, Away
DE~. · 12-Fe~eral Hocki•g - Away .

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
BOYS
DEC. 12-MIIIer - Home
DEC. 18-5ymmes Valley -AWGY

GIRLS .
·DEC. 14-Waterford - Home
DEC. 17-River Valley - Away

M~IGS

MARAUDERS

"·

BOYS .

1992 GIRlS' SCHEDULE

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

NOV. 30-EASTERN
DEC. 7-NELSONVILLE-YORK
DEC. 14-WATERFORD
DEC. 17-AT RIVER VALLEY
DEC. 21-AT FORT FRYE
DEC. 23-AT TRIMBLE
D.EC. 28-AT ALEXANDER "
JAN. 7-AT MEIGS
JAN. 11-AT .EASTERN
JAN. 14-AT WATERFORD
JAN. 2G-MEIGS
'
JAN. 21-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 27-TRIMBl.E
JAN. 28-SYMMES VALLEY
. FEB. 2-RIVER VALLEY
FEB. 4-AT WATERFORD
FEB: 6-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 15-AT SYMMES VALLEY

DEC. 4-SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 12-MILLER
DEG: 18-AT SYMMES VALLEY
DEC.19-UNIOTO
DEC. 26-COAL GROVE-At OUC
DEC. 29-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
DEC. 3G-AT RIO GRANDE TOURNEY
JAN. 5-EASTERN
JAN. 9-AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 15-SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 16-JOHNSON CENT., Ky. at OVC
JAN. 22-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 29-AT EASTERN
JAN. 30-SOUTH POINT
FEB. &amp;-PORTSMOUTH CLAY
FEB. 12-AT MEIGS
FEB. 13-WATERFORD
FEB. 29-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 3o-AT TRIMBLE .

.

1992·93 BOYS' KHEDULE

DEC. 8-Trim•le - ltome ·
DEC. II -Miller - Home

GIRLS
DEC. IO~elso•ville·Y~rk.- Away
DEC. 14-Miller - Away

The-·Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, December 8, 1992
Page 7

Ann
Landers
ANN L.\NDEIS

"IJ92, 1M A I ••

n..s,., ' _.
Cl'eltaftS; •

rt~

in leX until they drop dead.
Your advice 10 give Kay a striOus
jolt by suggesting I biallqiBilltion
wu lhe pits. Aze you still on
v8CIIIioit? People have looked ID you
for ARC CXllllllel for I I(IOd IIIIIIY
yean. Please don't wig 0111 on us
now... ENOUGH IS ENOUGH
AND lOO ,.WCH IS PLENTY, IN
BANGKOK, THAILAND
DEAR ENOUGH: I'm afraid
you read more into my response
than was intended. I recommended
counseling because Kay's indiffer·
ence was creating problems iD the ·
marriage. It is 11111 engraved on 1he
Rosetta stone that people must
remain sexually aetive as long as
there's a pulse. !u far as I'm
concerned. lhey can quit any time
dley want to.
There is a great deal of evidence
that males are eager to keep
romping around long arw die flesh
has weakened. They are willing 10
take shots, use vacuuni devices and
even undugo surgery for penile
implants.
.
This is one time -Mother N~
has given the female a break.
Nolhing is Fe(juiRd of htz except

1hat she be Ibm.
Dar An Lllnders: As an avid
Rader or your column, fd like 10
bring up 1.S!lbject lhat has anooycd
me for a long time.
Hispanics and Latinos are Caucasians or memben of die white race.
To suggest otherwise is gross
iporlnce. Whellever I lind myself
lillillg 0111 an application, I see the
little box to indicate race. The
c!MJices are white. black or Hispl!nic.
This is a grave error; My daughter
"'CC!~ Ibis .-ne mistake on
her college enlrlnCC forms. She is.
·JBl Hunprian. I was born in Cuba.
My
are from 1he aoulh or
France and Spain. Hispanic is not a
race IDY more than American is.
Please SCI the ignocamuses stniight
- WHl11i HISPANIC IN SANTA

,,....IDn

MONICA
DEAR SAm'A MONICA: Thaillc
you for poindng out that Hispmic
is siniply an ethnic disainction and
not a racial one. I sense, however,
that being considered wbill: is of
Clll)miOUS impmtance to you. Pel·
haps you should ~ yOUI'9Cif why.
Gem of 1he Day: Luck invariably
favors the pepued.
Is life passiltg yo11 by? WCIIII to
improvt jour social skills? Write for
AM Llllulers' MW booklet, "How to

A dinner party at Gilmore's in
Pomeroy was the holiday meeting
of Chester Garden Club. Guests
were Jane Aim Aanestad, Charlotte
Elberfeld, Mary .Virginia Kautz,
Rose Mary Keller, Judy Mora and
Mary E..Mora. Table grace was by
MayeMora.
The program opened wilh devotions and scripture. "The Propllecy" by Isaiah and "The Fulfill:
ment" bX Luke. A country editor
column 'Chrisunas Memories" by
Adam Kelly and prayer concluded
lhe devotions by Maye Mora.
.
Maida Mora presided at the
event and welcomed the guests.
Roll call, "A winter gariien
delight," was answered by guests
and 14 members.
The club won six ribbons in
artistic design at 1he Meigs County
Christmas Flower Show. Ribbons
included one blue by Twila Buckley and one red, two yellow and
two white. In lhe horticulture division ribbons .inchided one blue, one
red, lhree yellow and one white.
Eleanor Knight and Jean Frederick
served on the placement commit·

..-Curios &amp; Gun Cabinets·-

Just received for Christmas layaway!

tee.

Tray favors, made a November
work session, will be delivered to
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Overllrook Center and
lhe Extended Care Unit at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Make Frie11ds a11d Stop B~ing
It was noted with pride that
Loftety. • SDid a self-&lt;ldllrtssed,long, Bette Lou Dean had completed all
busilleu-siu ertW!lope aNl a check · phases of judges school and is now
or money order for $4.15 (tllis an accredited judge for Region 11
illcludes poSiage twlltmtdli/18) 10: of the Ohio Association of Garden
FIVnds, cloAMLa/14ers,P.O. BOJ: Clubs.
-~
Appreciation for sunshine
11562, Clticago,l/1. 60611-0562. (In
remembrance to Bernice Bailey
CIJNJda, sud $5.05 .)
was noted.

Birthday to be observed
Iva Cremeans will celebrate her
85th birthday with a party at the
LangsvHle Sunday School room on
Saturday at 5:30 p.m. Her birthday
is Sunday.

.

The "Save the Earth" lesson, . pinata from Mexico. Mrs. Miller
"Recycle Glass" by Mace! Blll10n, noted that President Calvin
advised sorting glass according to Coolidge, in 1923, lighted die fli'Sl
color: clear, green or brown. All national Christmas tree from his
glass turned in recycling is actually home in Vermont In closin§• she
used to make.new glass. Glass pro- lead the_group in reciting • Twas
duced from recycled glass instead the Night ·Before Christmas" by
of raw material reduces related air Clemente Moore_, who wrote It
pollution by 20 percent and water . Christmas Eve in 1822, for his chilpollution by SO percent
dren.
"ChristmaS Ideas from the Past"
Gift wrappings, all containing
by Maurita Miller ttaeed Christmas some plant material, were jl!ligcd
customs from other countries that by lhe guests. The religious tbeme
have become traditional in the award went to Maida Mora; the
United States. Some·included lhe seculai' award to Dorothy Karr and
creche, first set up with live ani· the recycled award went to Twila
mals and people by SL Francis of Buckley.
Assisi; the Christmas tree and
The Ian. 6 meeting wm be aldie
advent candle from Germany and honre of Maida Mora. The program
Austria; carols and cards from Enl!· will be by guest speaker, Mary
land: Silent Night by Joseph Molir Powell, director of the Meigs
and Franz Gruber; and later, the County Park J)istricL
/"

Gun Cabinets
From

Was $327.00
NOW
1
259.00

239'.$648

1

.

Was $670.00
NOW

$499.00

See our windows for the best buys on Curios
and Gun Cabinets. Don't buy until you see ours.

\ill .

1992·93 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC.. 4-AT .ALEXANDER · ~ "-·· - "'\ ••
DEC. 8-TRIMBLE.
•
DEC. 11-MILLER'
'
.,
DEC. 12-At ATHENS
DEC . 1~AT, NELSOI'JIYJJ.J,.E-YOBK _
. ,o
DEC. 18-BELPRE
DEC. 22-WELLSTON
JAN. 5-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 9-ATHENS
JAN. 12-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-ALEXANDER
JAN. 16-HUNTINGTON EAST at OUC
JAN. ~9-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 22-AT MILLER
••
JAN. '26-NELSONVILLE·YORK .
JAN. 29-AT BELPRE
FEB. 2-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 5-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 12-SOUTHERN .
FEB. 16-VINTON COUNTY

.• .

•

Reader says it's all.right for Area gardener completes school; "
seniors to lose interest in sex presentation focuses on recycling

. ...

1992·93 BOYS' SCHEDULE

•

NOV. 30ooAT FEDERAL HOCKING
DEC. 3-ALEXANDER
0EC. 7-)IINTON COUNTY
'
DEC. 1G-AT NELSONVI~LE-YORK
. PEC. 14..AT. MILLER
• ,
DEC. 17-BELPRE
DEC. 21-WELLSTON
JAN. 4-AT TRIMBLE
JAN. 7-SOUTHERN
JAN. 9-EASTERN
JAN. 11-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN.14-AT ALEXANDER
JAN. 2G-AT SOUTHERN
JAN. 21-AT VINTON ·coUNTY
JAN, is-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 28-MILLER
FEB. 1..!AT BELPRE
FEB. 4-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 8-TRIMBLE .L .
FEB. 11-AT EAST~

The first water-powered
plant for generating elel(trlclty
was built In Appleton,
Wisconsin In 1882.

DELIVERY
OPEN DAILY 9TO 5
FRIDAY9T08

CORNER OF 3RD &amp; OLIVE

•z

"

'

Put One Under Your Tree This
·
Christmas

®~·

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

Where America Goes 10 Relax··

BAUM
LUMBEit.
.

255 Mill St.

106 N. 2nd

.·
Middleport, OH.
992·2635

Your Local

---~STIHI.:
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Middleport, Oh.

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985·3301

·INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND RADIO SHACK

Peoples

When The Time Comes.• ·. See Us ·
For Your 1993 Grad.u ation
Announcements.

992·3345

WILL TAKE
OF ALL
YOUR IIIURANCE lEEDS

DOWNING·CHILDS·MULLEN
MUSSER INSURANCE
lpo.EROY

111 SECOND AVE
992·2342
GUARDRAIL

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SECOND STREET JACKSON AVE.
5TH STREET
ltiJ~"" W.Va. Pt. Pleasaet, W.Va. New Have1,)Y, VL
304-67536

· CROW'S
FAMILY REST RANT.
228 WEST ////~
992·5432
MAll;.ST.
POMEROY · KFC.-

SIGN EREOION

(614) 992-6451

STIHL .. -,

FIS·HER FUNEUL HOME
P. 0. Box 683

PC~~~~ero

.BRUCE FISHER • Ow1er/Opemor .
.
992·5141

, Ohio 45769

.

JUST DO IT.

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I

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N. 2nd AVE.

915·3301

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For All Your Prescription and Sundry Needs
See Us

253 N. Seco•tl

•'

'

'

fhis season, contrit;&gt;1.1te
a gift to o1.1rtoy drive

calendar

and make a child':i
holiday brighter.

Community Calendar items
appear two da.JS before Ill event
and tile day or tllat event. Items
must be received weD In ....nee
to assure publkatlo• iD the calendar.

,,

RestauranL There will be a $5 gift
exchange and members are remember to take a gift a local cystic
fibrosis child.

TifURSDAY

•

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at 1he Sacred Heart Calholic
Church. Call 992-5763 for inforPORTLAND • Portland Ele- mation.
menrary P'fO will meet Tuesday at
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
7 p.m. at the schoQL Everyone wel- ·Beta
TUESDAY
Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi
POMEROY • Revival at Hill- come.
Sorority, will meet Thursday at 6
. side Baptist Church, through
at the home of Donna Jones
POMEROY • Drew Webster p.m.
Wednesday, 6 p.m. nightly. Dr.
for
a
Christmas party. Bring $5 to
Kenny McComas, guest preacher. American Legion Unit Auxiliary $10 Christmas items for the
Doug McComas, musil:ll evange- 39 will have 1 Christmas dinner exchange.
list. Special singini nighdy. Rev. Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at Crow's
James R. Acree Sr. m\lites die pub- Steakhouse. There :will be a $5 gift
HEMLOCK GROVE • The
lic.
.
. e:u:hange. The cystic fibrosis child
Meigs
County Women's Fellowand mother will be guests at the
ship
will
hold its monlhly meeting
· POMEROY • Ohio Eta Phi dimer.
Thursday
at 7:30 p.m. at 1he HemChapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
loclc
Grove
Chrisuan Church. Offi.
BRADBURY- Tho Bradbury
will have its Christmas party Tues·
cers
will
be
installed. Public invitday at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Elementary PTO will meet TuesCharlene Hoeflich, sponsor. There day at 7 p.m. The children's Christ· ed.
will be a catered dinner and a gift mas program will also be present·
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
and ornament exchange. Members ed.
Sprinp
Orange will meet Thursday
• WEDNESDAY '
who have not paid dues are entour·
7 p.m. There will be a llOI'uclc
POMEROY • Pomerol Mer· at
.aged to do so.
dinner.
Meat and table serv•ce wm
chants Association wil meet be furnished.
Jbere will be a white
RACINE • Racine Lodge 461 Wednesday at8:30 Lm. in die CCIII· e~t ~ exchange.
nonF&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30 ference room of Bink One. Offi. penSiilb~ 'items for a Brio¥
Chnstmas
cers will be elected. All members
p.m. for installation of offiCCI'S.
project.
attend.
RAVENSWOOD, W.VA.· The
LONG BOTTOM • "The Glory
Christmas party of 1he River Valley
of
The Lord,• a Christmas cantata
RACINE
•
The
'e!l
aNe
growHetbalilll'will be Tuesday at Jan er's winter meeting IIJOIIIIOI'ed by under
of Sue Malhe·
Oerbold's farm. Meet at 6:30 p.m. the Ohio State University and ily, willdiebedirection
pmsentecl niursday at 7
at the shopping plaza in
Colmly Exten· p.m. at lhe Long Bottom United
.RavODIWood, W.Va. Bring fmger MeigsiWasbington
sion Servites will be held on Methodist Church. Everyone wei·
foodl. cookiCII for exchange {three Wednesday from 9:30 un. to 2:30 come.
Jier lllg, four blp) and a wrapped
m. at the Racine America•
herbal ornament wjjb a $S value.
on HaiL There will be a $S fee
STIVERSYU.l£ • Brother Jerry
to elp defray costs of handouts Cotterill will spo'k at the
POMEROY • Awdllary ol Drew
10 IJIOVide I llql lmd ~ Stivc:nvillc Word or Faith Cllurch
Webster Poll39, Amaic:aa1 Lepon, and
lunch.~ by Monday at on 'lbunday and Friday at 7:30
and die Elaflt and Forty wU1 baw I
the M~l County Extension p.m. Pu!Or David Dailey invites
combined Christmas dinner party OffiCC,
-6696.
.
die public.
Tuesday. at 6:30p.m. at C.row's
'.

•

Zacllary Bolio, B,J. Keooedy, Derrick Bolin.
Secoad row, 1-r, AaniD Kn•tter, Matt Stewart,
Zachary Williams aDd James Conley,

Co~unity

3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

PHONE

&amp;

RUTLAND CUB SCOUTS - Bear awards
wen presented when the ·R utland Cub Scout
Pact 240 mel recently. Front row, 1-r, are

•

,,.

.'

As o1.1r way of saying
thanks, we've got
a special cable offer

j liSt for yo1.1!

DONATE A TOY TO OUR HOLIDAY TOY DRIVE AND GET
FREE INSTALLATION OF CABL..E OR PREMIUM SERVICES.
Hurry, offer ends December 15, 1992.

Call·675-3398
1-800-766-0553
Gilt'must be new, unwrapped and valued at $10.00 or more.

.

At less than a dollar a day, cable is a great en;errainmem value.

So ... if you've been toying with rhe.idea of getting cable Of adding premium services,
here's your chance to give a lircle this holiday season ... and get great cable entertainment!
I

Offer good for standard installation in cable seMceab~,areas for alim~ed time on~. Some reslriclions may app~.

•

•

•

�'
1\leedly, Decelnber 8, 1992

.t)

By CAROL DEEGAN

AIIOClated Press Writer
: If you want to give the perfect ·
boliday gift - but all that shOpping
tires you out - cookbook author
Irena Chalmers offers: "Everyone
Will be happy to receive a gift of
food."
: Chalmers. autbor of more than
too cookbooks, offers many sugaestioas on gifts of foocl, decotat·
mg and entertaining in her new
c;ookbocW:, .. An Edible Christmas:
.A Treastre ofReci~ for the HoliSeason" (Wtlliam Morrow,

:;j).

The 230-J!BIC cookbook, fiUed

wilh 12S ra:tpes and 125 Jli!JI':I of

•full-color photographs, is divided
~ two sections: Gifts f&lt;r Sharing
lad The Gift of lbpitality.
- Gifts for Sharing includes
teeipes for homemade sauces and
lll8DIIB1adeS, flavored vinegm and
oils, Cbristmas cookies and candies, and a no-bake Christmas
Cookie House. Many of these
: recipes can be made at tile last
: minute, or you can make several
· lwtcbcs at once.
·
Chalmers ,fills the Christmas

:Winners named
• Winners have been announced
· -from the Christmas open house
: p•...,•k• by lhe MQ!ktlm Com·
manlty Associadon.
· • They are: Wanda Faulk,
· : Pomeroy, Dairy Queen; Christy
Ramsburg, Pomeroy, . Added
. Touch; Emma Mooc!i~. Middleport, Sears; Vugtl Lee,
. Pwiuoy, Fruth Pbannacy; Louise
. Rousb, New Haven, W.Va., Dan's;
: Harty Holter, Prescription Sbop;
· Barbara H~Mason, W.Va.,
: Mill Street
Pam Thompson,
:. New Biven, W.Va., Valley Lum: ber; Madeline Pendleton, Middleport, Vaughans Cardinal; Ruth
- Bobo, Rutland, Wcker 219; Debra
.. ~Iagels, Chester, ~ahr Clothiers;
_. DoonaLaudennilt, Rutland, King's
• ibrdw~re; Tony Hawk, Pomeroy,
: Ingel's Furniture; Gary Lewis,
: New Haven, W.Va., Johnson's
: VUiety Store; and Jalonda Root,
· Middleport, Middleport Depart·
.-s~me.

By FRANCINE PARNES
AIIOdaled frea
Holiday time ia ~ time, and
while IOIIIC bolts like lheir guests
; to rnalte a lpecill effort to dleas for
the ocealioil, others say comfort is
; key. So take note before you
: RSVP.
: For Mary Louise Norton, fash·
1 ion director of Tol)'n &amp; Country
, ~e. lhe holidays are a time
::to 'tate a chance and put on that
•· eldla bauble like bigger earings."
·~Fuhlon deaigner Todd Oldham,
0

lhe Spring RaUy.
•
"Dai!)' Prayer Can Solve ProbDistrict Deputy Bette Biggs read lema.
·
·
. .
a Christmas greeting from Floma · A gift exchange concluded the
E. Pierson, state councilor. She moetina.
·
announced tliat Esther Smith had
Attending from Logan were
_ been appointed to be state treasur· MlJdJcd Lowery, Mary Nell Gano,
!, er.
· Vemie Congrove; Sylvia Bownes,
·
Reported ill were Margaret "Faye Trowbridge and Faye BaUey;
Kistler, Helen Wolfe, Mary K. from Chelle', SSihet Smith, Eliza.
Holter and Don Cotterill.
beth Hayes, ZeldJ Weber, Thelma
. JoAnn Baum, inside state sen- Wbire, Lora DamCWQOCI, Elhel Orr,
tine!, announced a past councilor Jean Welsh, JoAnn -Baum, Doris
dinner for Wednesday at Chester Grueser, Marcia Keller, Betty
and that the state CClllllilittee is seD- Young, Erma Cleland, 'Dorothy
ing brooms.
Ritthie, Opal Hollon; (J'om New
For the program a!.oem was Lexington, Mary Moose and Betty
read by Erma Clelan . Mildred Wolfe; from. Syracuse Guiding
Lowery read the Christmas story Star, Margaret Cotterill, Bette
from Luke. Dorothy Ritchie read · Biggs, Nathan Biggs, Raben Haid·
"A Christmas Thought" Ethel Orr en, Esther Harden, Janice Lawson,
read a poem. Esther Harden. read Eileen Clark and Betty Spencer.

Cookbook news: What should
. z"ve· r Wh'at shou' ld I br·z"ng .?
g
!
cookie jar with spicy Gingerbread
Cookies, Puff Angels and Jewel
Biscotti. A spectacular Chocolate
Yule Log and Candied Caramel
Apples are among her "Fun
Kitchen Projects for the Whole
Family."
II! Tbe Gift of Hospitality ~ ­
tion, Chalmers provides menus and
recipes for 10 holiday parties
including a Tree-Trimming Party
for Twelve (or More), A Romantic
~ for Two and A Sugarplum
Dessert Party for Twenty.
Cbtlstmas lraclitlODs
"From the beginning, I thought
it was impcrtant 10 show how fami·
lies celebrate according to their
interests and traditions, and how
these traditions were rooted in
Ainerican history,", writes Marcia
Adams' in her new cookbook,
"Christmas in the Heartland"
(ClarksOn Potter, $25).
Tllere are four basic themes: a
rustic country Christmas, a Victori·
an-inspired Christmas, Moravian
traditions in Bethlehem, Pa., and
Christmas at hOme with friends,
featuring Adsms an&lt;t her husband,
Dick.
'
The 16I-page book includes
recipes for Scottish Shortbread,
Polenta Stars, Creamy Oyster
Bisque, · Chocolate Noels and
Steamed Apple PuddiM.
Adams, author of iTHeartland"
all "&lt;;ooirin&amp; from Quilt Coun·
try," also includes instructiona for
holiday topiaries, Hydrangea balls
and Victorian hand tree ornaments.
• Celebrating Han.. kklh
"Gounnet's Holidays and Celebrations" (Random House, $25},
from the editors of Gourmet m88azine, is a collection of 23 menus
and recipes, including a Latices
PMty foc Hanukkah.
Latices are 1raditional for
Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of ·
Lifhts, because they are cooked in
oi . This re_llresents the small
amount of otl the Jews l!ad centuries 880 when they were defend·
ing the Temple of Jerusalem. There
was only enough oil roc one night,
but it lasted for eight days,
Gourmet's menu and recipes for
a Latkc Party include Potato Latkes
with Applesauce and Sour Cream,
Hot Cranberry Apple Cider, Mush·

room Barley SoUp, Dilled Cucum·
ber Salad and Hanukkah Jelly
DoughnutS.
•
Tbe 215-page cookbook features
22 other seasonal menus and

~~:rs~~~:~~:~~~. ~:I~~i~~~~

fen

Days

Ann WilfQng

.
:Wilfong places at pageant
.

•

lCatie Ann Wilfong, 21 months.
- , _ fourth pllce In the Liulc ~­
· lanbunt PqeaDt In November at '
:the a-d Centnl Mall in Pakm·
: ~. W.Va. The pageaDI is baed
·in~ Fia.

:

..

Katie also won lhe pretty baby
c:ontesl in August 1992 at the

,

Mela County Falr. .
She is the 'dauabter of Pete and

ir'}j"'uppers.

Wendy She
(Bltins)
Plains.
Is die
ter of
David and Judy lkins, uppers
Plains, and the
·&amp;rlllddlulbrer
of the !ale F:r.: Ora Lance.

•

Words

1

15
15
15
15
15

. 3
6

10
Monthly

GRANGE
REMEMBERS.
Melp
Couaty G~
~emllen llaveShice
ben 1,,
-*·
ing toys for bospltlllzed cWidrell and,CODtrlbut·
ing them to Vetenu Me•orill Hospital 11 a
part of their Chrlstmu &amp;lvlna. Tbll year the
'participating granges are Star, Rock SprJnp,
Racine, Hemloc:k,'llld HarrlloDviUe. Tblrty·two
stufl'ed to)'l were aceepted fl'om tbe Jll'lllle rep·

"I like it if a man puts on a
tweed jacket and a woman wears a
skirt and silk blouse and some ear·
rings," he says. "I'm busy doing
the c;ooking, and I like to see
lhey've made an effort to look nice
for dinner."
And what does a best-dressed
host wear'/
· · "Tbe most polite thing I can do
is to 4ress less formally than my
guests." be says. "These people
who give parties and doll them-

CLOSED SUNDAY

Tim StarnphiU and Richaid. Mrt
Judy Cuomer, Illinois; Mr. and
Mrs John Scott Mansfield· Mr:
·and 'Mrs John Vinson Virginia:
Mr. and ·Mrs. KeMeth 'wood and
family, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Woocl. Mr. and Mrs. Batie
Wood and fatnily Earl Ward and
Bernice Brumfteld Edith Hubard
and·dau,.hter, anl Mr. and Mrs,
David Klftg and family..
,
t.ulabelle Eshelman's daughter',
Nancy Price., had surgery Tuesday
at Portsmouth Hospital.
.
Ruby Diehl and Stella Atkins
were recent dinner guests of Mt
andMrs.PaulKloes,Minersville. ~

POLICIES

:Sd

about mnwiftg .....fessionally.
... ~
..-•
,1

s( pau[ uMW
.· , ·
, program
ofrtcermtboUMW.

ki
1
nor .ng c ass

I

(miiiij~itjf:Tt;;'ll

.

- '.

.

I

7 PASSENGER
·

r

8 cyl. engine, . power
· 1t•rlng, auto. tran1·
mi11Ion, AMIFM eterao
ca11atta, ltyled whMia
with trl111 rlnge, running
boarde, extra clean, local owner, 21,000
rnlle1.

SPECIAL

367-Ciieohlre

992-Mlddleport/
Pomeroy

985-0oeoler
388-Vblloa
24S-Jbo Craade · 843-Portlood
256-G..,.•• Dlot. 247-l.etart Fdo
949-Roclae
643-Anloho Diot742-Rulload
379-Walnul
667-(oolville

$.05/day

AMERICAN GENEUL
LIFE an• ACCIDENT
COMPANY

lllldtlleporl, Ohio 45760
1614) 143·5264 ~

II- W..,led lo Buy

•••IJ
992-5479

The meeting closed with special
prayers by each one present
The next meeting will be Feb. 2.

••

'

992·2269

''

aad UMESTOIIE

DEUYERY SEIVICE
S••ll lo1tr Work

· :=::::;~
992·7553

C•ll 742·2143 or
742·2979

USED RAILROAD

· I'

DRIVEWAY WOO

.......

Bill SLACK
·•

SIWL DOZER
WORK

H'omagrown Carefully Sheared
Scotch &amp; Whit• Pine
4' &amp; Up with • g11111t
selection of larger

•UGHT HAUUNG
•FIREWOOD

POMEROY, 01.

WICK'S .
HAULING SERVICE

••uDEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PUILICIDON

.

Do you IIINid a start
In Hfa?
18 yra and up. Earn •
much u you want, lull ·
or part time from your
home. Nocuh
Investment, be your
own boee, evan H
you're 1tilla etudent.
Thle Ia lneome that
keep• going even
when you don't
. (814) 378-6163
11-12 end 6-10

.ICROWAVE 'OVEN
aad VCR REPIIR
AlLIIIIU
lri.. It hi Or We
PlcltU~

·Quality

.

Stone Co.

'

· 992·5335 or
. 915·3561

· -217L._..It.
· ,,.. ..... Ofllc• .

POMIIOY,OIIO

3t23192Mn :

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUND S
12:00 No n
Factory cho 12
gauge onl
STARTS
OCT. 18th
_s_ _
Ha...;.P..:..PY:..A.;,;d;.;;.s_ _

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 6\4·992~
6637
St. Rt. 7

c••••iN, OH.

------•Vinyl Siding
•Replacemanl
Window
•Roofing
oJnsulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

539 lryan Place

Middleport, Ohio
TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS
992·2549
MERRY CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE
SAT., DEC. 12-10 to 8
SUN. DEC. 13-1 to 6

DIABETIC SUPPORT
MEETING

12-8-112-1

BOB'S MARKET &amp;
GREENHOUSES, INC.
Will be closing at 4 p.m.
·Tuesday, Dec. 8
for an employee
ChristmaS dinner.
We are sorry for any
lncorivenlence this may

AuiDI for Sole
Tl'liCbforS.Ie
v... a 4

u..- for Real

w.

Moton:ycS.

Boa..

'I 1\\ II I '

49- For Loue ·

12- SitllatioDI Waoted

13- lruuraDCe
14-- BUiiMII TrainiDI
15- School. II: IDitructioa
16- RadM., TV II: CB R'l'oir
17- Milcol~aJw....
Ill- Wanled To Do

\II Bt II \\1!1."1
51- Houoohold Good.
52Good.
53-ADtMJ54- MUc. Mo:rcbaadioc
55- Builclill( Suppllco

s,....,.

a Moton for Sale

Aulo Pari! a Aoo•uori•l
77- Aulo Repair
73- C..pias Eq.U-•

8

0

,...

8Z-Piuabiat!aU..Iiiltl
113-E,.,...Iiiltl

Eleo:trical a Rof•ipn•lio~

Geaeral&amp;......
MobUe Bo,.. Repair

Upholotery

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY

EAGLES CLUB
IN .POMEROY
6;45 ,.••

Special Early llrtl
S1000 Payoff
This •• 100111 for 1
fiE car._
Uc. 11o. 0051-12

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING ·
£JII~~n9

~·' .
•319cMI.e•tll•g

CI'HkRotnl ·
Middleport, o•io

614·992·7144

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

614-742-2138

I

D.K.'s '. KEVIN'S UWN
FARM TOYS
MAINTENANCE
SIMIIIIodoii·Collocllbloo
In Stock'
8poclol Ecltlon ·Show PloOM
Boo AI
0Aidn

QUAUTY PRINT SHOP
255110 81., lliddlopo!t, Oh.
1124314 lloyl, 742-3020 EVI.
11111-4 pm Woolollya
1 ....12 pmSnntop un11

.

949•2391 or
1·100·137·1460 .

lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
· and Seeding.
- Shrub end Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
R..-lalac-mon:~ot

F... EOIImoloo

c~

AREWOOD FOR SALE

AottarDoa.

&amp;-2&amp;-'VN!ft

11127

· CONSIRUCIION
Homes ·

eGa~rli

Stop &amp; Compare
ffEE ESTIMATES

. . 985·4473
667·6179

DEER CUT
AND

WRAPPED
MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
RACINE, OH.

949-2734.
12·1·'92·1

. WHALEYf$ AUTO
. PARIS

SpedaltziiJ!i In (IISiom
' Fra1111 Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
All MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013 or ·
99.2·5553 .
or TOll FREE ·
1-101-141·0070'
lARWill, OliO .
713

1/ll

CHRISTMAS·
TREES

MOTHERS AT HOME

5' • 7' TALL

up. Start .. anct
you'll- hiVIIto.
wonyllboul
Ctvlstmu money
again! Income IIIII
kMp8 going when

HAllEY 1111111
IESIDEIICE
15975 flatwoocll R..
Pelltroy,Ohlo
((HBiy Road 26)

REASOIIAIU
11126/1 mo. pel

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER

.u.,e·1:· 1.

Chrhltmulncomal ,
Euy work from .·
homa. No cuh atart

·you Clll't.

.

(114) 378-6153
111m ·12 pen IIICI
6pm·10pm

TEAFORD'S GOLF
. &amp; AWARDS
CHRISTMAS SALE

10"·20" Off

.C. YOUNG
992-6215

'•••roy, Olllo

Puttere, Beginner Sate,
Youth Cuetom Drivers.
Leuon1 Included with
purch....
Lacmd on Scout Camp
Rd.. Chiller, OH.

11m

11

-Public NOllct

LORDV,
LORDYI
BOBBY .D.
IS FORTY!!

EXCAVATING

BULLOOZERJ&lt;HJ~tCIOIOE

•nd liU.C

WORK
AVAILABLE.

SEPTIC IYSTEIIS,

HOlE 1111!1 ad
TRAILER 1111!~

~o ·

992·3138.

K. tlnulrnd,
lM; (12) 1, . . .

'

*7995

~ldenc:e

Rutland, Oh•
742-3051
SR124
RJecly Nov. 26
11·17of2-1 mo

a cum

IUDfOID'S
•..... c.t .....
,., c.t ........

GRANNY'S
CRAFTS
Need a Gift?
Ruga, Plac.-rnats,
. Quilts, 5 Types
Pillows, Animals,
lola of small artk:las. .
soe tlnd up
OPAL HOLLAN
CHESTER
985 4358
11.-.1mo.

'Cii&amp;f • •

611 ...........
1% .........

wac••-

. •.

GRAVE
BLANKETS
For Your Lost ·
Loved One.
Handmade with.
white pine.

$20.00
{614) 949-2058 :
'
. ....

CELLU~&amp;!
.BNnwdilgfr1
... .......... ... ..................
al.'ltir-1
'tOTALLY AURIIIOlM PiiiW'ONIMCI
,

.........
............... -

E.O.E.
.,

CHRISTMAS
TREES ·
Fresh Cut Dally
5'- a· Tall
OPEN 9-7
Bob Snowden'~ ·

CIIISTIIIS lUIS

·overbrook Center has part
time shift openings (7:0CJ-3:00
and 3% hr. shifts) for state
tested nur-..81das. Salary
. baaed on-~. ·
For more Information contact ·
Karla Hunt~r at 992-8472.

..

cause you.

,,

1\ I \ I \I :--

48- EqWpmeal for Real

11- Help w..~eo~-

12/1/92/lfl

LIMEITONE-TRUCICJNQ
FREE ES11JIATES

9'• !Joodp ()p nput!j/1/r k4 kr• hw-

Seed a Ferllliser

R..l Eo.... w..~eo~

Apu,.uu for Real
45- Fur~~ilhed Rooou
46- Space for Real
47- Wanled 1o R..,t

J&amp;L INSULATION . BISSELL &amp; BURKE

Speeial Holiday Houn
Open Until&amp; Mon.·Set.
After Dec. 10

.

+

aAc-

882-New Ha-.en
891&gt;-Loaart
937-Buft'alo

HOLJ.AY SPECIAL!
~.50 ATo•

P.V.H. Commu. Room
Speaker: Marie Gravely, A.D.
(Oiatitian)
Topic: "Diabetes in the .
Holiday Season"
Public Invited to attend. Call
304-675-4340 Ext. 281 or 448
lor infonnation.

AmariDa.n Reel ero.

Livoolock
BayaCraiD

458-Looo
576-Apple Grove
773-Muoa

36970 W R• Road
P-ey,OWo

Thursday, Dec. 8, 7 P.M.

Still wondering
wfiat to give?

41-

Wanted to Buy

671&gt;-1'1. Pl-111

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEniCE

Pomeroy

CHARLIE'S

WEBER$
CHRISTMAS TREES

TRIM and
REMOVAL

JEFF WARNER INSIIRAIICE
113 w. w,

232 2atl St.,
Check with us for
Hot Water Tank
Rantal Program.
12·1·2 mo.

Boll 169

TREE

OHIO VALLEY
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING, INC.
912-2036

Agent

..-

quop

32- Mobile Bo•oo for Sole
33- Farou for S.le
34- B..;_. Buildiap
35-Lo..

;

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U.

took gangrene out of his left leg,
growing his leg four inches and
teaching him how ·to walk again.
Marr is the author of "To Hell
and Back." He has traveled
throughout the United States and
Canada ministering the word of
God Hi: has been guest speaker 81
several Full Gospel Businea~n
Jnteniationll meetings.
"
Paator Gary Hines invites the
public. Further information may be
obtained by cllling 985-41.57.

1988 FORD AEIOSTAR WAGON .

446-Golllpolio

Ute • Medicine • Cancer •
Fire • Hoelth • Accident
•Annuity, IRA • Mortgage ,

J::~ than ?,.7 million people in

Joanna Weavet, Shirley Rockhold,
Missy Harris, ~oAnn Francis, SU5!e
Francis, Elste Culley, Conme
Rankin, Shirley Jones, Judy Jones
and a guest, Faye Copen, district

Gallia Coan1y Melfi- Coanly M11110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

...

'

4--Cl,.eaway
5-BappyAdi
&amp;-Loot ODd Found
7- Loot ODd Found.
3- Public Sale II:
Auction

ad••-••

·nr

....- ...

$ .60

2-laM..ory
3-- Auouace111eat.t

Cla..ijied page• c011er the
follmDing telephone esc:hangea...

ad

Galloway in "A Few Good Men."
was one of the most sought-after m
. HoUywood. Tbe Rob. Reiner film,
_also starring Jack Nicholson and
Tom Cruise, opens Friday·
"I want .to be 1be l~t experj· ·
enced person on the set, not the
most
experiencocl. l .WIIIt to,~m~n and ID"'W," shC Said.
·
_. .--

,..

••t

• Ad, eullide die county J4:'111' ad ~
be prepaid
• Rectlift di.couit for ad. paid ia ad•••f·
• Froo Ado: Gi-way aad F..od ada aoderJS word. will be
rua 3 day. at DO .:M.rp.
• Prloe ol ad f.. oU capitol lel..nlo cloW.Ie price of cool .
• 1 polalU.. lype ooly IINII
• S...il.olio - ..,...u.Jo for ....,.. .c... r.... day (chock
for or"'" r.... day ad """'Ia paper). Call befoow 2:00 P· '"·
day after puLlieation to ..U.e eorne&amp;n
·• Ad. that m111t b11 paid iD ·adY~~~~~:e au:
· Cord of '11omb
Happy Ado
Ia M•orluo
Yard Sal..
• A olMIIIlod
placed Ia doe Callipolil Daily
TribaDe (except Cluolflocl Dloplay, B..ID_ Card or Lepl
Nollceo)willaloo appear Ia tbe Polal l'leuulllep,.r aad
the Daily Sentinel, reaehi111 ower 18,000 bo.. ea .

Her role as naval officer Jane

The Federal-State El!lployment
S .
.
f
S ervtce cons1sts o the United
tates Employment Service and
affiliated state employment ser·
vlcea that make up the nation's .
· pubUc employniCIIt service system,
During program year i990, the
ppblic employment service listed
c7milllonjob-inaoand' ft,.......,

$.30
$ .42

42- Moblle Do•• lor Beat
43- Far-.. for Reat

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. S.turday
1:00 p.m. Moaday
1:00 p.m. Tue!lday
1:00 p.m. Wedfteoday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
· Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

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

'am·e·s z•n the .new·s
some·

M.,.;..Jiu.........,..

FruuaY.,....Ieoo
For s.Je o't "Tn.de
I \I: \I 'I 1'1 'I II '
,\ I I \ I ' I I I ( .I-..

..

Call992-2156

1J\V1

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP}Constantly on the move as a child,
Demi Moore started role-playing
because She needed aaentioo. Now
that the roles are for real, she says;
the attentioo is just for kicks.
"PJiying dress-up is not
~lt~gs ally~OI'~_sc;!iousl~," she !iaicl.
•• ...... 29 oved
~
.._
.Miss u-.;..
....,...~,
, m .. as o,..,n
as twice a year as a child at the
behest of her father, a newspaper
advertising executive.
"I was clespente for a sense of
belongmg
· so 1 ado"'_..
··
,..... d'ff
1 erent
characters wherever 1 went," she
said. "IJ'IIIt wanted to fit in."
The star of "Ghost" and "Mor·
:!Y~~~~~it= 1 ~=~ .

Petlfor Sale

$.20 ~.

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

GET BESlJI..TS • FASTf

llarrzsonvz
.
·zz. e area happenzngs
.
..:
Mr. and MrS. Owen Blackwood
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Huckabee and family Catnbridgc·
Mrs. Hazel Oliver, Mr. and Mrs:
Virgil King.and Mr. and Mrs. Mel
FeliS 11!!'1 chi!~.
Recent guests of Mrs. Lola
Clark were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Mahr, Miss Karen Gilkey and
Raben Blizzanl, Albany. . . .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire VISited
Sunday _with Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Sydenstric:lcer, Mason, W.Va.
. S\(I~Y guests of Mr. and~~·
Virgil King were Mr, and Mrs. Me
Felts and children, Mr. and Mrs.

Over 15 Words

,:J6-

To place _an ad

.

Designer Mary McFadden, like
NOrton, likes her guests ro dress to
tbe nines.

--

___

rtRDtatlt•byiUioDdl
R.N.,dlreetur
1ur~ Pictured litre tbey are
Edu Cllrll:,
Hem
IIWed; left to rlabt. Dorotby lloleB ~
Star ud Hela Q1lvey ol Hellllock, sta•dht&amp; .
·nnt rvw; and Benla Mldkllf ~ Star, Barbin ·
Fry~ Rock Sprlnp. Jellle Wblte ~ Helllllocll:,
llld' DaUey accepted one~ tbe to)'llrom Opal_
Dyer, Star, blcll: row.

Mrs. Alan Blackwood and children,

Rate

selves up are not considering that a
guest doesn't want to be lhe least
dressed-up person in the room.
. "Besides; loolwll! really casual
in your own home u so stylish. I
might not wear a jacket even if all
my guests do. It says I am very at
ease 'in my environment, I enjoy
having you in my house, and it~
everyone at ease, toO.''

retreal in Rhode Island.

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days ~I be
charged for each day as separate ads.
i-:----;Ci::A~iiirijEiiS

will need b,loo during
tfie fiolidnys.
Kat~e

usually wind~ up with his guests nitely-beuer foc spaghelti sauce."
"curled up on the bed watching
S~le arbiter Paul Wilmot likes
bad old movies, and alll;_want is for hts guests to be comfortable,
that they be comfcwble...
.
but he believea as a courtesy they
Although he has minimal sarto- should put some thought into thell'
rial expectations for his guests, he attire:
has some fashion dictates for him"I do most of my enrenaining in
self: red crushed velvet pants - of the country, so it's not about a
his own design - a while Hanes dress-up diMer," says Wilmot, a
T -shirt and cashmere slippers.
member of the International Best"I'm usually in the kitchen Dressed List 11mi public relations
cooking, so I need to wear some- director for Yo$ue magazine in
thing that food will come off of," New York. Typtcally he plans a
he says. "My red pants are defi- holiday gathering for 10 at bis

-~.--~-

Miracle service set Dec. 12-13
Evangelist Ron Marr, Winter
Garden, Fla., will be ministering at
New Life Covenant Church of God
in Chester on Saturday at 7· p.m.
and Sunday 819:30 a.m. and 6 p,m.
He will be giving his testimony
of the miraculous hand of God
touching him after 10 tons of steel
feel on him crushing one-third of
his body. Hi: wiD be sharing how
he believes Jesus walked into the
hospital, Ia~ his nail scared .
bands on his
and ·ving him a
new heart, left ung,
kidney,

however, takes a. relaxed view.
"No one needs another opportunity
to wear black tie," he says. "It's
the most uncomfortable way to
dress. It burts."
When Oldham enterulins, he
likea to give small dinner parties at
his apartment in the Chelsea area of
New York City.
.
"I have never believed in trying
to impase a dress code," he says,
"so people show up in eve~g
from jeans to evening gowns. '
.
Besides, he says, the eyening

RATES

_
New Year's Eve.Dinner and An
John and. Ann Williams spent
Elegant Eas~r Dmner. There !"e ~ve days in Somerset, ~Y· with h\11
also suggesttons for seasonal g~fts Sister and husband durmg Thanks- ·
of food such as Challah, Greek . giving. Her nephew and friend
E~ster Bread, Bread:and-Butter came back with them to deer hunt.
P1ckles and Pumpkm Chutney Eachgotaneight-pointbuclt. .
Bread.
Mr. !lnd ~rs. Don C~ttenll
Also available ·
entertamed the followmg as
-"Home for the Holidays" by Thanksgiving dinner guests: James
Ken Haedrich (Bantam Books, Cotterill~ familY., Linda Fln_ley
$cooki25}:esWandith f:!pe.}spmf~~~~es,as and famtly, Cecil and ~loune
Blackwood, Paul Cottenll, Ben
seasonal pies, sweet tarts - and COiterill and Roger Coaerill.
mo~ "Fast &amp; Fabulous Hors
Mr. and Mrs. ~uane Stanley,
by
Mt'chele
Braden
Mr.
and Mrs. Davtd Napper a,nd
'""'uvres"
D '""'
Beverly Napper spent Tbanksgtv(Collier Books, $16}. With party · ing Day atthe home of Mr. and
planning tips and recipes including Mrs. Steven Stanley, Albany.
Asian·Styledipping sauces, friuatas
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
and flans, pates and terrines. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill
- "Christmas Baking: Tradi• were ~enda and Alan Armstrong,
tiona! Recipes Made Easy" by Cincinnati, Dennis Donohue and
Christian Teubner (Barron's, soo,Mattbew,ofFioricla,andSteve
$9.95}. With recipes for honey and Cotterill. Linda and Gary Haynes
molasses cookies, 6utter cookies, and two children were afteraoon
macaroons, marzipan cookies, holi- visitors. Angie' Hollingsl\'orth
day breads and more. Plus full· talked by phone to her father and
page color photographs.
grandparents from Texas.
- "Gfngt:rbread Things to . 'Dennis Donohue and .son,
Make and Bake" by Teresa Lay· MattbOw, fllorida, spent 10 days
and ..,.
-""""•-man aad Barbara .Morgenroth ·"_..._~
• .....,. .........
,._
. -t
-sDelores
__
,_
(Abrams, $29.95}. More than 20 ents,
ylnond
and
DonOprojects, With.detailed instructions h
·
and actual-size patterns and dia·
~eff Lambert, Fl;rida, visited
grams, including 10 gingerbread . her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
hwrealhouses_, Noah's ark and a toy . Lambert,'orsev-"-'day·s.
" Mrs.
''""Jim Rose and
Mr. and
- . "Festive Gingerbreads" by granddaughters, We_st Virginia·,
E e1 H
F
(ASter
v yn owe rya11 ·
r mg- Ardis wa,goner, Albany; and
Tamos Book, $14.95}. M~n than 8 Jessie Moms, toea!, were guests of
do::J~erblead projects, with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mahr. ·
pa _ "What~J:d I Brin ?" by· · · thanks~g glJCSIS of-Mr. and ·
og
·Mrs. Davtd King were Rev. and
Alison Boteler (Barron's Educa· .
tiona! Services, $11.95.) Gifts you
15
• .
imaginative sh~pping trip. With · Shiriey Rockhold and Missy
recipes for Hanukkah Cutout Cook- Harris presented the program "A
ies and Crispy Christmas Trees, T(ue Meaning of Christmas i!l
plus craft proJects.
Today's Changing World" at the
- "Creating Gourmet Gifts" annual Christmas meeting and dinby Barbara Beckett (Allen &amp; ner of the United Methodist·
Unwin, Chicago; $24.95}. Hun- Women of St. Paul United
dreds of recipes foc edible -gifts Methodist Church of Tuppers
from ftuity liqueurs to hand-dipped Plains. There was also a musiw
chocolates. With ideas for packag- gift exchange.
ing. illustrated with more than 45
New date books with the 1993
coloc photographs.
progtalliS were distributed by Joan. - "The-Cliristmas COOkbook" na Weaver.
b)' Marilyn Bright, a new addition
Betty Chevalier led the meeting
to The Little Kitchen (;ollection with reports givr::c~ JoAnn Fran·
published by H8tperCollins ($7}. cis and Shirley R • old.
·
Recipes foc Buche de Noel, Christ- . Plans were made foc the Christmas Plum PUdding, Roast Goose mas sale with proceeds going to the
with Apple, Viennese Christmas church membetship fund.
SI8FS and more.
Attending were Betty Chevalier,

· ¢~sm~~·fa~ ai:mbte"fo~S:

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Holiday party clothes range from stuffy to comfy; designer tips

District deputies, past councilors
·-attend annual Chri.stmas dinner .
· · Tbe annual Christmas dinner
.· and puty of District 13 Deputies
:end Past Councilors was held
m:allly • lhe Quality Inn in Nel·
:...me with 30 members present
"'buffetlln:heon was saved.
Mildral Lowery, Logan Council, presided at the meeting which
fJil c !CXI with the Lord's Prayer in
...;.., Oflic:flls JePOrts were gi~n
by Betty Biggs llllfBetty Spencer.
:. The llllllllBl ~will be held Bl
Wilson.Park m Athens on Route
~- It will be the last Saturday of
.r- at 1 P-;M: The Chrislm~ party
· for 1993 will be at the Quality Inn
IJ!efntSaturdayofDecember.
· · N_ew by-laws for t~e district
1l'lft R8d by Esther Snuth, Chester
Council. She llw announced that
dislrict officers will be installed at

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.' 1 Ooc•tr

.......

.. ~~a ......
. . . 11. .

LIMITED
11ME ONLY"
95

$69

�...•
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

___

KIT 'N'

Aplrtment

31 HomN far Sale

_,__Or_llr

3 Announcements

C~RL YLE® by

1992

Larry Wri&amp;bl

.._

far Rent

=
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-. .....

copo.~llo~

with a

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~HILLIP

. . . . . To Heul T - , 111o
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ALDER .

NORTH
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Pass

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Opening lead:

SNUFF'/ It
LADYBUG
HAD HER
PUPS tl

Hentals

West

••

I

·

..... "00 Do-". 114-44611118, 114-441-1:114d.
.

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IIIIR, Pt. Pit. I ~ bod0&lt;10m1,
2 Ul ......... ldiChen, dining,

Earl

Pass
Pass
Pass

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to hit
the target

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a..-,.
.

Un-

s,-,
lpm.

pondlngFIHI.

~~': ::'!f.:.::':/'"11~

.....,._.

duotry

Public Sale
&amp; Au.ctlon

8

And '

Tool'nlnt

Our

T.-day.oo..mblrt
i P.ll. To eP.M.

Rick PlafiOI' loucllon Company,
tulf tlrM aUCIIonMr, oompllte
1 'c·
auaiDn
Mrvlce.
1

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-~

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Mloo Paull'o DIY

c.no Clnlot I

42 Shreds

W.llled IO Rent

-

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Nai1C&amp;
.
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Ohio I Will VIrgin-, :IOWSJ.
·22111 or 13J.2121.

oftor

MUll haW • • • 011, Nply lo
Box 11-4 OliN ol Point Plonanl
Roglolot, 200 Moln Sl, Point

U.:-'

~':;.:My=

Wilh

Or Wllhoul
1MrJ I.Miy. IM488-1303.

WWool To luy: Junll loutoo
With

lloloro. Cal

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Exoolonl AI.......-. 114llll-1011.
Locol Trutlt d~wor with lonkar
C.D.L 114-zu.tll57

Dl D 6EEHIOVEN

EVER PLAY ·
•'JINGLE 6ELL5" '?

Houl8h01d
Goods

PRO~A6LY T~OUG~T

WAS TOO GOOD TO
''JINGLE 6ELL5 ''

....._And

DOwN
1 Fumblor'a
.uclamlllon

2 Sculptured
place

FRANK AND ERNEST

·,

••

l.' ~ SVF PlliSf'D

•'

S'~E

OIDN'T
MA~f' IT A
POP·IJP

...'

...........

5

32.00
Many more spedals.

742-2UO

II·IS.'II·I mo.

I&amp;C EICIYATIIII5
BULLDOZING
PONDS

StPTIC SYSTEMS

.

NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
ASK ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

FOREVER
BRONZE

LAND CLEARING

WATER A SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS &amp;.
HOME SITES

2-.._,...

Olclor Ell.

HAUUNG: Umeatone,
Dirt, Gntvel and Coal
LICENSED and BONDED

PH. 614·992·5591

•

12·5-tfn
• • • c .o.-

1t-2$-'ll2·1mo.

WIIHt

..

. • '
;

.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replacement Wl'ndows
· . Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL lllld RESIDENTIAL
•

FREE ESTIMATES .

44

Apartment

torRent
ctou-ldo. One bodrwm opt, tumlohod,
S315,000. I bolhot.~_wllh ......... _, - . No polo. 304-171I

lA

tub. Ollllpolo .....,. 36Wll7217.

Fumlohod ~ 2 IR, 1210,
.....
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OIINpotlo.
111 ...
7

=-·. .. .: :. .:· :;. :;
p.aL

Tum your clutter into ctuh,
s.dJ. it the eau way... by Rhone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your clguified ad todqy!
15 word. or lea, 3 dqp,
3Reuera,l6.00
Call OW' oflka for pold iA ad aace l'Gie1/

BUIITI'UL . _ FOR llloL£

ll._ _ _ _ _ l

lot~ I ~ lodioaoow,

131._ _ __
14• _ _ __

Hlotellool ..,_ ecor.. LAol • . .
lllln a Pl.~:: &lt; .. W. VL
CompllloiJ llln--•1111• 2 ~...

Now

15...._...,..__ _

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. . . I liM: ••• Kilt-. 114441 •••• After 7:00 p.m.

Plott Tank, 2411 oleo"-&gt; Avo.
...... - " ' · 304-17WOII3,
lui 1no Tooplcol ~blido,
--·nd•

Improvements

--

0411

A...

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

I liFt- 1

....... Pot Shop.
........., 1n a.c. Murr&gt;IIY eo. 011-

Musical
Instruments

Muolclonl -.ct. Unknown,

Po .......... w ..... Fot ....
Roionllna Ccorolract. lolo
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""""'~.. Cal
TOftl l«&lt;I •t 1110. Free C.IL
Cloy Illig.._ Arnulng A-oct

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Supflllcs

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Conlonlly loNo, Nloo I lod:

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Gallipolis Dally 'Tribune
.

448-2342

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel
H2·2158
Vt. Plea••nt Re&amp;lster
875·1333

••--u,..

"
Allldlnllll

!'!lrlnlo -

or

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

.. _.... ,.

llulir Uooo •• IIIGtrioiiiL
Rldanour llootolcol, ~ ·'
:104-1111.
&lt;

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•

or her Input.· Sagittarius. treat rourself
to a birthday gill. Send. for Sagittarius'
Aatro-Graph predll:llona lor the year
ASTRO·GRAPH
ahead by mailing $1.2.5 plus a long, self·
addressed, stamped envelope to AstraGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be
sure to state your zodiac sign.
BERNICE
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.ton. 11) Handle
your lair share of family responslbllnles
BEDE
today, but make sure that other merii·
bers ot the household do what Is expected of them. Each has a role to play.
AQUARIUS ( ... n. 20-1'._ 11) It mlgh!
be wise tb avoid social Involvements today that lnc:luda a person you've''"""*·
ly argued with. This slluatlon Is n.ot to·
tally resolved aa ot now.
. PISCES (Fob. 20-llllrclt IIO)In order to '
advance your perB9nal Interests today,
there·s a chance you could ottend an
associate In tho proceaa, a peraon who
Dec. I, 1112
does not readily forgive.
ARIEl (Miirch 21·Aprll 11) Timing Is
In the year ahead you might enter Into extremely Important today, and If you
an 8l&lt;tremely Important partnership ar· don't know when to llop selling, you
rangement. II will be for a spec:Hic pur- could lose the sale. Once your prospect
pose and with a person older and/or Is convinced. Ills time to stop the pitch.
more experienced than you.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 110) You should
IAQinAAIUI (Nov. 11-Dea. 21) be fairly good at being able to put deals
Where sertoua 1 - are concerned to- together lor others today, but when It
day bOth you IIIII your mate mtllt not comes to stringing your own beads, you
attemiJ!Io override or veto the other's could tall short.
.
·
!IUQgesllons. Each must be allowed his GEMINI (M8' 21-.tune 20) In an lmpor~

OSOL

... 11181 No Oltflllllon.

Farm

w

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.I

0 1992 TV UltlnQ Inc.

Fl Worth . TX

DECEMBER 81~

·&gt;

-.

..
'

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFINO •
UIMIOfldtllarllll llfllllme ~ ,
~
'
c:.11 1.-217-0571 Or 114-ZSJ. !

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

Q. What's wrong with "Here· comes
the salesman and the owner"? Isn't
that sentence all right as it stands?
A. No, the sentence needs to be corSF M I
R V E P
VI
rected. The verb in that sentence Is • v
P K E ' S
the singular COMES, but the subject is
U K N I,
plural: "the salesman and the owner. • JMUH
W M G J
AH
S K
(Don't be confused by the reverse ~r·
der of verb and subject; the adverb I K
S F V E L U
VESVAMSJ
P K
HERE does not affect the number of
the verb.) Instead of the singular VE
M
XMAJGM . '
K R
R G K E S
COMES, use the plural COME . You'll
always have the right number if you
M o
G M
u s G J v u M E P •
say, "Here come the salesman and the PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The tour stages ol man are Infancy, childhood,
owner."
~, io,dDi&lt;..C.onco and obsolescence." - Art Linkletter.

ITUESDAY

Puppy

57

10. _ _ __

Wrolor , 124011110. No Polo. 111o

/.

Home

81

Npolll.-- oi4-4tl.-.

0111114-f1N711.EIIfl.

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Serv1ces

Dnouor•••od Conorr:

-:

'MilL E!IRIN&lt;&amp;
SACIC:'THE

•

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Ul. .

614-949·2101. 94.9·2160
· or 915·3139 .

/

CA~H?H

HVAC; Now CUJooL Avolloblo
lurt '"' I'IV$7 W

'BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

DRIVE.

"'.00. Col'ag,-y,
FREE
NEW oo1or
1-100-Dto

Deer Heads ....................'19000

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

PIN down EXTRA

Accunrlle. ~lr pa~ent•

ootolg-or tumlohod. Claan. 1
mla lrom town.
fiOO
dopoolt.•...........,,.1.

IF 'ra..J DON'T
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Fish
.........................' 400 per Inch

to:

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GRAY'S TAXIDERMY

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939·2826
ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR 61110NTHS

..
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52 Adjective
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53 Force unit , ,
54 Autltor ···

MORTY MERKLE AND WINTHROP
•n,..... nt

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........... In VInton CouniJ, Ohio. Hoi!'!, Hlghwory 110, Nloo Lol
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lashan Ill., Racine

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11 ea.-m For Yaor Chlld'o 42 Mobile Homes
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46 Thou
47 Curtain
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II

lolllnd Our FREE SEMINAR To

the chuckle quoted
by fil ling in the missing words

l 'l . )
SCRAM-LETS AIIISWERS
Induce - Ripen • Black - Kinf11Y • POUND .
My sisler-ln-law says there IS nolhtng m~re re~ardmg
In life ltlan getting on the balhroom scale and dtscoverlng you have.finally losl a POUND. . _

-IO'IIy.

loll Yord Solei Mull Be Polil In
,...__ Doocllno: 1:IIDpllltho
LNmToDriYa- ·
(Toolnlng Avolllblo)
cloy lllo od lo to oun,
SUildoy odlllon- I:IIOplll Frtdoy,
- y ~ odllen 10:00Lm. USA TRUCK 1o Looldng Fot
Emry Lovol DriVIII For Oior Elh
.

0 ' Complete

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS
FOR ANSWER

with

41" Round 01111 Table I
4 Aouw' h Chlh
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.
Alvot Vdoy 01111 F'umlllft, IM.
LMgo IIINI bodoaoon famo 441-4J11.
houll with FREE hoo~ pootly 'II'Rio PURIIITURE AND AP- i f 1421/month piUI
PUAHCES
1Mt2·2122.
111UI U210RI~II
1Wo bo- ...._ In

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I

couldn 't undersland why. we
lock up tollel ·paper and leave
expensive cars ... In .....

44 Consumed
tood

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~

PRINT NUMBERED lETTER S
IN THESE SQUARES ·

ACROSS

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...... Co11Pili14-44M'IM.

Houlo: IIIIIIHI C!Hk, Ollllpolll,
...... llftlgontar Fumllhod.

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car iot I worked at was In the
coun Iry JUS
· t a short lime. He

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Dealer: South

54 Miscellaneous ·
Merchandise

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4

TUeldey, December 8, 1882 ·

· Po~eroy--Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

I

I

.

•

toni

partnership . arrangement do not
make any moves or decisions today
without first consulting your coho.r t.
There's a chance you and ha or she may
be aiming at different tatgets.
CANCER (June 21-.tutr 22) Be wary ot
lendencles today to do thlnge the hard
way. In the long run, It's better to look
for shortcuts. rather than Impractical
detours.
f"
u;o (Jul, 23-Aug. 221 Try not to become too Involved today with an associate who Is a dictatorial know· ll-all.
There Is a chance that an arguf1111f!t
could ensue ll"" something rather
lnslgnlncant.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 I opt. 22) You're caps·
ble ot great achleYamenta todey, but
you might not know how to properly
capitaliZe on your accomplllh!nents.
Have a plan that covers both victory
andr-da.
LIIIRA (lepl. a-oct. :D) You might
. find yourMif In an awtcwatd pollllon today where you have to mlkoa declolon
attoctlng two friends with two dltterent
vlewpolnta. Don't be blued.
·
SCORI'IO (Oct. M Nor. 22) Don't In·
volve 'Yourwlt In loin! venturetl
with people who are not capable
making contributions equal to youro. In
order for your Idea to succeed , there
must be poJity.
·

�Plgl 12-The o.tty Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

500-channel .T V world could
-bring TV magic, big bi~ls

Marauders
top Trimble
for first win

.

By LYNN ELBER
AP Televllbt Writer
LOS ANGELES Tbe
vaudeville gag goes like lhia: One
reson guest is griping to 1111otber
, ~bout tbe rooms, tbe service, .tbe
· food - tbe lousy food. "Yes,"
replies tbe other guest. "And such
small patioos."
.
Welcome to tbe big-portion
world of SIXk:bannel cable television, coming sooner tban ·you may
realize to a nearby television seL
More channels won't necessarily
mean just more of tbe same. But
will it mean better'l
Aim a newly empowered TV
remote control and you may be
able to choose from hundreds of
pay-per-view movies, dozens of
collegefootball games..
Or switch on a baseball game
and - click - call up a player's

~Cheers'

Slats in 1111 on-screen box. Or click again - get 1111 on-screen list
· of fuhft home pmcs and a stadi·
om sealing chart. Then buy tickels,
all using your remote.
1be8e are among tlic possibili·
. ties of so-called "interactive" tele·
vision, 1111 ourgrowth of mep-TV
technology. It meaas many YJewers
and ~ir sets are likely 10 get a lot
mm: mlimate.
"I think tl)ele will be a substan·
tial fraction of (cable) subscribers
senred by 1995-96,~' said Richard
Green, president of CableLabs, tbe
industry's reselll'Ch and developmentconsortium.
It's TV your way, promoters
say, personal TV- not Ibis coolci~·cutter programming, Ibis justSIIS·there boll tbat doesn't reflect
the"REAL YOU.
But, as. always, buyer beware.

series t~ end after 11

LOS ANGELES (AP) " Cheers" fans have just six more
. months to belly up 10 tbe bar.
The NBC barroom comedy will
.air its final episode in May after
providing solid ratings for 11 seasons, the show's producers.said
Monday.
,
• "We are grateful to our loyal
viewers over tbe years, but we feel
il's better to end tbe series too early
rather than too late," James Bur·rows and Glen and Les Charles,
·who created tbe show, said in a

'statemenL

sea~ons

They didll't say what would
happen in tbe last episode.
Patrons and employees at tbe
Bull &amp;: Finch Pub, the Boston bar
on which "Cheers" was I!Kldeled,
were sorry 10 see the show go.
"Wow, I'm disappointed," said
Ed Doyle, who has tended bar tberc
for 18 years. "I thought tbat show
could run forever."
·
"Cheers" turned the Bull &amp;:
Finch ini.Q a tourist attraction that
an estimated 850,000 people now
visit each year.
..

. MAYBE NEXT YEAR • Katie Marie Ulct,
· 1, BeYer made It to Saatll's lap ID Ashlud, Oblo
during 1 Chrlstmu party held by the 1,._6tb
: Transporlatloa Co., of the Ohio Natloaal

choices;

All those
all" tbat rulftll·
ment, comes at a price, as yet
uncertain, wblch could end ~ bel·
laming ~ 111011tbly cable bill:
The industry moved a big step
closer to Ibis brave new world with
last week's IIIIIIOIIIICCIICIII tbat tbe
nation's largest cable operator,
Tele-Communications Inc., was ·
installing digital technology for I
million customers as early as 1994.•
Digital, as opposed to tbe current analog technology, is what
could allow cable TV to speed
down a SOO-plus lane freeway if, of course, conSumer demand is
·there, and if cable, computer and
other industries move aggressively
tomeetiL
"The image of the (cable)
industry will. change,.. predicted
Green. "Right now 1 tbe image is
entenainment, video provi~r .. .
the same stuff like at the video
store. The image will change 'to
more of a higher-tech, digital
provider of a wide tange.of services." includinr educalion.
Informatioo services now avail·
able through personal computers
also may be offered over cable.
Steering you through tbe mind·
bogglil!g ·array of choices will be
on-screen video TV guides, several
of which are in developmenL One,
InSight Telecast, willl1e tested in
homes next summer and may be
marketed ~itbin two years for tbe
$1-or-so weekly cost of published
..guides.

Guard. BeiD&amp; lalr.o to the cOaloUDganas oilier
J1111ndlather, Spc. Richard Walter, seemed a lot
·safer. (AP photo)

I

128
Pick 4:

7746
BuckeyeS:
11·13·16·21·23

•
Vol. 43, No.I lSO

Copy~ht...

DONATION MADE · Tile Shade River
CooDhuters Assodalioll made a $500 CODtribu·
ti011 to the Bend ~ Jaycees 011 Moaclay. The
funds will be lllied toward the Jazceea' Toys for
Tots progr11111, wbldl belieftiS cbUdftD In Melp

---People in the news---..
.

BALTIMORE (AP)- Nobel
Peace Prize laureate Elie Wiesel
says tecent events in Germany and
the Balkan~ have made him pessimistic about mankind.
Wiesel, an author who has writ·
ten extensively about bis experi·
ence as a Holocaust survivor, said
Sunday he !'Cturned from a peace
mission to Bosnia-Herzegovina last
week discouraged about piospects
for peace. He described the Balka·
ns as an area of nea- hopelessness.
Sarajevo, he said, "is ·a city
which today symbolizes isolation
... and total abandonment," Wiesel
said.
Wiesel also spoke With forCbod·
ing about tbe rise of anti-Semitism
in Germany.- He called for strong,
offiCial statements of concern from
tbe United Srates ~vernmenL
"We are entenng a ·new century
and, the way things are today, I am .
pessimistic about the next century," be said during a talk at Betb
Am synagogue. "Look at what's
happening in Germany. Qnce more,
Germany is assaulted morally by
the Nazis."

I

Research Ine., a charity formed by ..: And tbey go 'Wow, it really is
~l
Bolton's childhood buddy, the late you.' ..
Joel Brander, after he learned he
Stem is directin his first fell~
ba,d leukemia in January 1990. film, "Rookie of ~ Year," about
Brander died in February.
a 12-ycar~~~f. who can throw a'
Bolton, whose songs include 112 mph £
, starring Thorn~
"To Love Somebody" and "When ·Nicholas. He didn't even ask.:;
a Man Loves a Woman," said his Culkin.
~
"I didn't need the beat that .
.dedication 10 tbe cause be81111 as a
favor to his old friend, but has would be generated doing a;
grown beyond that.
.
Macaulay Culkin film," Stem said '
"Everyone has been touched by
'•
HOLLY, Mich. (AP)- Don't~
cancer," said Bolton, who lives in
nearby Westport. "I want to feel ask .Soupy Sales when be ,Plans to~
I'm contribullllg to people who are retire from the comedy busmess. '
•"Ibele's no heavy lifting," be~
making lnaktbro Its.''
. Dangerfield sai':f be fust became said. "I haven't been making can
aware of tbe need to raise more or running cranes. You've got~
money for cancer research about George Bums, Bob Hope, Renny•
sill years ago when his manager Youngman. You keep working, but~
you might not work as much,
died of lymphoma.
· "Then I became aware of it because I find in our business there·'
· ·
when Michael did an impression of is age discrimination."
Sales, in tbe Detroit area last
me on 'The Tonight Show,'" he
said. ' 'He got more laughs than I week for several nightclub appearances, remembers gerting his start,
did.''
.
.
in 19S3 on tbe Detl'Qit children's
RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- What do television show "Lunch with
tbe "Home Alooc" movies have in
common .with "The Wonder , SouJl;~'livCd in New York the past
30 years but at age 66 bas reduced
Years'' on ABC:!
his touring to about two weeks a~
Daniel Stem.
I
. Steln, tbe frizzy-hailed burglar montb. He also likes plilylnJ guest•
who teams with Joe Pesci to get disc jockey across the country&lt;
,.
their lame brains bashed in by when regulars are on vacation.
"Hey, listen, it's caiicd, 'Paying.
Macaulay Culkin on the big screen,
is tbe unseen voice of a grown-up tbe rent,'" be said "And also, the'
Kevin Arnold (pla'Yed by Fred Sav- subtitle is, 'Paying tbe alimony."~ ·
Sales said some clubs only want:
age) on .the television aeries.
18to 49-year-old comedy acts;
"Most people think I'm kidtbese
days.
.
;
din~," Stern SBld in this week's TV
"But that•s where. they're'
Gu1de. "I tell them, 'Close ·your
stupid,
because when it's funny,"
eyes;' and then I say, 'Wben I was
it's
funny,''
he said "Funny has~
11 and .growing up in tbe suburbs

MILFORD, Conn. (AP) - Soul
singer Michael Bolton did his Rod·
ney Dan~eld imitatioo in public
again, but this time tbe comedian
was in the room.
.
"He does .inc better than I do
me," Dangerfield said, cracking up
the formally dressed crowd during
a five-minute routine in the middle
of a benefit for cancer research
Sunday nighL .
· The .dinner was tbe third·ailnual
benefit for This Close For Cancer

limiL"

2 Secllono, 18 POQH 25 -.te
A Multlmedllt Inc..,..._PII*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio;.Wednesday, December 9, 1992

lt$2

Mason Chamber president outlines common goals

Couty and M - County, W.Va. Plehred at
tbe presentation are, l~r, Terry ~tb'riabt and
Doug Swun of the assodatloll, and Tim ROIIIh
and Mitch Roasb or the Bend Area J•rceea,
' based ID ~ Couaty.

no

:

JOE ELLISON

By BRIAN J, REED
SenliDel NCWI·SIIIff
Joe Ellison, CEO at Peoples
Bank of Point Pleasant, W.Va. and
·president of the Mason County
Chamber of Commerce, spoke tQ
· the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce about common goals
when the chamber met in full session on Tuesday.
Ellison. addressed several issues
pertinent 10 economic development
now being targeted by the Mason
County Chamber, and stressed tbe
imponance of cooperation between
the two communities. in light of
tbeir geographic proximity.
.
"The river becomes a barrier·
sometimes because we make it
one," Ellison said, "but it's impor·
tant to remember tbat if it's good
for us, i''s good for you."
Ellison discussed .tbe chamber's
effons to attract a pulp and paper

plant to Mason County, which haS . of tbe power plants in Gallia"and
drawn opposition by some groups Mason Counties. ·
in the community. He said that
Ellison also reponed that the
although publicity about tbe project Mason County Chamber . was
has died down coDSiderably, tbe attempting to attract another power
project is "not a dead issue," and plant in the New Haven area, and
that "plans are moving right said tbat tbe chamber is confident
along."
that tbe plant will be constructed
Ellison said that tbe Alabama tbere in the next few years.
Pulp and Paper Company bas spent .
Development of roads in the
approximately $4 million toward county has also been a goal of tbe
tbe ~ject in Mason County.
chamber iQ.~~t .months, includ'We know that the company
wouldn't spend that kind of money
and tben pull out," Ellison said,
noting that if constructed in Mason
County, ii would be the largest
construction project in tbe United ·
States at the time of COIISII'UCtion.
As for the economic im~ on
tbe community, Ellison comp8red
tbe proposed plant 10 the construe·
lion of the Kaiser Aluminum plant
in Ravenswood. or tbe construction

ing representing tbe interests of
commerce in the selection of the
site of tbe Shadle Bridge replacement in Point Pleasant EDison also
cited support of tbe completion of
U.S. Route 35, botb in Ohio and in
West Virginia.
He com!Dented on the importance of a propased regional airpon
to be located at a midpoint between
Parkersburg, Huntington, and
C!wleston. .

"This project would have a
tremendous impact on all of us,"
Ellison said. "Although the construction is at least 10 rears away.
we all need to get behind iL I am
afraid tbat we're going 10 get hung
up on where it's going 10 go. and
tben we'll lose it. We need to let
the engineers decide where it's
JOing to go, and just say 'we want
It',"
Continued on page 3

Rutland village witl discontinue
r~sidential street light service Ja~. 1
a ste~· backwards for progress in
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tbe village.
.
Sentinel News Slllff
It
was
a
unanimous
vote of
· When the New Year comes in
council
to
turn
off
tbe
lights
on Ian.
tbe street lights in residential areas
1.
Voters
def~ied
a
renewal
levy
of Rudand will go ouL .
of
two
mills
8Jid
a
new
levy
of
an
That was tbe .decision of Rut·
additional
two
mills
in
the
Novcmland. Village Council at Tuesday
night's meeting in council cham- ber general election.
The village is now operating on
bers. '
"
t
wo"
.zenerates $3,288 a
. • :na. five liahts in tlie business year.millW'Mdch
It
costs
·11bout
$3,600 for
district will be left on, primirily for
street
liglit
operation
alone.
Funds
security purposes.
'
Cor
streetlights
can
only
come
from
Mayor Ed Manin and Council
tall
revenue.
expre~ regret that such actioo is
The mayor said that some have
· necessary and credited it to the
credited
defeat of Jbe levies to tbe
defeat of the village's tall levies in
.
sewer
rates.
He e!Dphasized tbat
November.
sewer
revenues
must be rerained
' T h ='ust
is
no money to pay
for
maintenance
of
the system and
for Ibis
'd tbe mayor.
cannot
be
used
for
any other "purMay
· said tbat witb all,
pose.
the improvements, in.tuding the
At last night's meeting tbe viinew sewer sysiem and the recent
lage
si~ned an agreement. on tbe
walllr line Ie)llacem~nt grant, shut·
New
Luna Road 2,200 foot water
ling off the slreet lights seems like

line replacement. The work is
being done with funding under
· Issue 2.
' .Sandy Smith, cleric, advised
Council that an application has
been completed and submitted to
,Jhe Ohio Public Works Commission for a grant of $573.000 from
Issue 2 monies for water line
replaccmmt In Rutland vilhtp.
Also discussed at the meeting
was applying for funding 10 replace
tbe water tank in the DClll round of
Issue 2 projects.
.
A report was given on sewer
'treatment system lllld,it .was reponed lhal everything is op&amp;ating well
and tbat tbere is a daily flow of
about 1800 gallons. It was als_o
reponed lhal Dale Hart. operator IS
now in the process of testing to
determine .that every line in tbe village is appropriately tied into tbe
system.

supplement their Christmas dinaers. Last year,
225 needy famWes were served. Tlie Items, moat.
ly dqnated, will be distributed on Thursday aad::.
Friday, bued on an. application procedure rom- ·:
pleted earlier. Here, some or the volunteers are
pictured as tile food Is bagged.

FOOD BAGGED • About 20 volunteers,
representiag United Methodist churches across
Meigs Couaty, gathered on Monday to bag food
staples ror needy ramllles. Roger Grace, director
or the United Methodist Cooperative Parish estl·
mates that about 250 families will receive a
canned bam, vegetables, and otlier food Items to

Advisory board proposes levy to
Meigs
board
drops
detention
increase funds for senior citizens
The Farmers Bank would like to invite each and every one of
you to help us make.December 9th a very special day of
Holiday Cheer.
We are proud to bring you the First Annual
..
Christm."as Sing-Along and Candle lighting on the Pomeroy
. parking lot stage at]:OO p.m. on December 9th.

Our area High School Choirs·have graciously accepted our
I
inviiationfor
them to share·their time and talents
to present
.
.
to you an evening not soon forgotten.
So come one, come all to help light up the Pomeroy areal

Your Bankpv~...
..

t::

t

Pick 3:

'Page6

No broad hints? Here
is some.holidayhelp
By LARRY BLASKO
dia magazine on a CD-ROM that
. ~ted Press Writer
arrives every four weeks for a
· Personal computin~ addicts year's subscription of $119.40. It's
liave at least one redeemmg virtue: available for Mac or mM.
They're easy to shojJ for.
Software can educate without
Herewith the Annual List of being boring. Knowledge Adven·
Nifty Computer Stuff reviewed ture bas Science Adventure,
during the last year. All are Widely $79.9S. The fascinating interactive
. available at-discounters or by mail· book written by tbe late Isaac Asiorder for less tban tbe list prices mov is suitable for students in midgenerally rePQrted here lind are for die school and high school. The
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otherwise noted:
$59.9S by MECC, is a first-rate
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~omplaints of no disk space, get Zoo Keeper from Davidson &amp;:
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•
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Ohio Lottery

Fo

Member F.D.I.C.

•· '"'--'

Farmers Bank

&amp; 'Savings Company ·
211WMI-IINII

P.O. lox at
,Pounwor. OH. 457•
"114--1112-21M

TIJRcilila7

P.O. Ior:138
PIIIM, Ol( 45713

114-1174111

By CHARL(!:NE HOEFLICH
~.ram would be similar to the
while the second was entitled
Sentiael News Slllff
· UJ!tions for Elders pr&lt;?)ect which ''Taking Care of You." A psycholoGoing for a levy in 1993 to Will end June 30, 1993 , tbe direc· gist did tbe fUSl session, and Oh:io
increase funding for senior citizens tor pointed ouL
'
University slaff person, tbe second.
programs was discussed at length
Local funds will allow the
Accomplishments over tbe past
at Tuesday's meeting of tbe Advi- Meigs County Council on Aging to several mon1hs were .detailed by
sory Board, Meigs County Council serve those folks not cUITently eli- Betb Theiss. She talked about polion Aging.
§ible for service because tbey are · cics and procedures, weekly inserThe )loard voted to have a comover· income by a $1,000 per vice training programs for case
mittec meet witb tbe Meigs County ,,.,yt;a(!, she-ellplained. .
managers, fund raisers, and tbe
Council on Aging next week to fur!--s fo~ t~e financial pi~t~~;re, updated computer system.
tber discuss a levy of one mlll or Ohver d1stnbuted sheets hsung
She also reported that a new
less -u;lle on the May ballot. •One ·'1'0Siible- reduetioas-in- funding in vehicle, a hot-shot truck, has been ·
inill would generate approximately 1993 and cost control measures , ordered and will be used to expand
$2-25,000 dollars.
which have already been put into tbe present home-delivered meal
In asking for levy support, effect.
·
routes. ·
Susan Oiiver, director, said tbat the ·
While the Options for Elders
As f&lt;r in-home services, Friend
money would be used to expand all program will be phased out in ~uly, said the system has been changed·
in-home services and would allow 1993~ . several other alternatives so that one coordinator does the
tbe agency ro "maintain local con- incluaing CllpanSion of the Passpon entire evalustionllndlhen tbe indi·
trol of service.• Oliver said ~~ ill program and a new program called vidual is prioritized for services.
funding tbrough the Older Ameri- Choices are being considered for "Service needs, however, outweigh
cans Act and Block Grants man- . state funding.
. service availability," she reported.
date tbat services be directed to tbe
A 4iscussion was beld on jusi Now chore service is availilble only
very low. income, low income what additional state funding will once every four 10 sill weeks. T)te
minority and the very frail. She be coming into tbe county for pro- center has five persons who worlc
also said several pro~rams now grams, for seniors and how they in tbe homemaker services program
being funded, includmg Mental should be factored into a levy funded through Title 20, Block
Health Case Mana~ement and _requesL
.
Grant monies, Oplions for Elders,
Passpon, are for Med1caid eligible . · Linda Friend rewrted on the and Passpon.
individuals only. '
$500 grant received for Women's
As for home delivered meals,
"We opt to provide in-home ser- Health Month and holed tbat two about 135 are going out each day.
vice to those persons in need of programs/training sessions for care New requests come in frequently
assistance. High income persons givers had been held, with each but unless the refe1T11,1 is from a
would be asked to pay a ponion of being attended by 18 persons. The health agency, assessments have to
the cost. The basic_m-home pr~- firs! dealt wjth stress and coping be m~ by a Siaff member;

Marines take control of
kejpointS in Mogadishu
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP)

- A U.S. Marine landing force, on

a mission of mercy to a starving
land, Q,Uicldy took control today of
. . key points in Moaadishu. wbere the
streets were suddenly free of tbe
tmor of mobile gangs. .
Just hours aft« the Marines hit
tbe beaches, giant Air Force transpons and a food·!IIJ!ef flil)lt were

Tbe youthful gunmen who long
lc:'uchi!Ji down at the crippled
Clly' S airport.
terrorized Mogadishu appareil tly
The Marines and Navy com· had melted away into the city's
mandos, sweepina in before dawn ruins or into the countrySide.
But word of new unrest came
by sea and a1r, met no reported
from the southern Somali port of
resistance.
Insteld, tbousanda of Somalis, Kismayo, w~ a night of lootinJ
some in rap. flocked 10 the shore· .and shootin~d the U.lf,
. 10 evacllt!ll
line to sue in awe • a superpow- . World Food
er's ml&amp;ht- and to shake ita heip- 13 forei"' aid workers by air.
ing hand.
.
. '

policy for grade school pupils
The after-school detention for James Carpenter toolc !he option of
elementary students has been early retirement through the buydropped from the Meigs Local out program offered by tbe Meigs
Board of Education's discipline Local Board when the contract
between tbe Board lind tbe Meigs
policy.
Meeting Tuesday night, the Local Teachers Association was
board voted unanimously to drop ratified earlier this year. He will
the provision for ·elementary stu· retire on July 1.
dents and use other methods of dis·
The dress code amendment for
cipline to include suspension if Meig_s High Schoohdopted ·at aNovember meeting was extended
necessary.
The action was taken foUowing . to include all schools in tbe district
complaints at tbe past·two meetings
Toni Hudson was employed as a
by parents about the policy. ·
substitute teacher and the board
It began when a second grader entered into purchased services
at tbe Pomeroy Elementary School . agreements with Paul Boling to
was given after-school detention in transport a student to the Athens
tbe program which is conducted at County out-of-school se~ere .
Meigs High School from 3:30 to behavior handicapped unit, and
6:30 p.m. The parent objecte"tl" to witb Linda Smitb to tutor a health
putting ber child in witb srudents of handicapped student for up to· five
all ages in a strange school without
transportation home.
Special meetings were set for .
Dec. 16 and 17. Purpose will be to
interview four locaf candidiltes in
executive session for tbe job of
superinteodenl of tbe Meigs Loclil
School District. Superintendent
LOS ANGELES (AP) Charles Keating Jr., responding for
the first time to charges that he
swindled Lincoln Savings
investors, testified that allegedly
fraudulent land sales and payments
were bona fide business deals.
Testi(ying in his fede.ral trial
Tuesday, Keating replied "No,''
"Never" and "Absolutely not" to
questions about14 land and securiues deals that prosecutors describe
as tbe heart of their case.
He repeatedly denied allegations
of fraud by a parade of government
witnesses who have struck plea
bargains.
Keating is accused of billdng
Lincoln investors and livin~ like a
king on loOted funds, leavmg tall·
payers a record $2.6 billion bill
when tb~ Irvine, Calif.·based thrift
collapsed..
·
Keating, chairman of Phoenixbased American Continental, Lin·

•

hours a week.
The board adopted a resolution •
stating that it is impractical to :
transpon Christopher Lamben and reimburse his parents according 10 :
tbe state formula
.:
An application for early gmdua-:
lion from Twaina Cunningham was •
approved.
· · A- mOtioo 1o hire Brent Manley :
as a substitute bus driver died for :
laclc of a second. The board com- •
mended Jeff Wilson for his work as ,
, a mechanic at tbe bus garage.
•
An executive session was held.·
to discuss personnel. Attending·:
were Supt. Carpenter, Treasurer'
Jane Fry, .and Board .members,
Randy Humphreys, Roger Abbott, •
John Hood, Larry Rupe, and Bob ·.
Banon.

Keating tells jury at fraud
trial that deals were legitimate :;.

\ .

I

.

coin's parent company, has becom"e :
tbe symbol of tbe savings and loitn •
debacle. He claims he is being,:
made a ~:oat by government··
officials
· g 10 escape blame. ·:
The U.S. District Court jury has •
not been told that he was convicted •
of securities fraud last year in state :
court and is serving a 10-yeal":
prison senteoce. Keating' s lilwyer
did not put up a defense to tbose. ·
charges.
.
The govcpunent maintains tbat •
as Lincoln faced· huge losses in
1986 and 1987, Keating devised :
bogus land sales to create false •
· profits and engineered a lOoting of :
Lincoln while he and his family •
maintained a lavish lifestyle.
Keating and his son, Charles •
Keating IU, are charged witb fraud .•
racketeering and conspiracy.
ing faces a maximum of S2S years •
in prison and his son faces 4 7S.
:

Kcat: :

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