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Poster contest
Businesses join ;·

Consider tills
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winners~named

The Meigs County LitteJ Con- ,

trol l'rop'am receody coaduciCd a
recycle poster COIIt.eat rot all sixth
~ Sllldcnis in Meigs County.
Cult awards wae pre~~~~~ICd for
the lOP three postm at each school.
Awards were also presented 10 the
top three. winne~s in each school
districL
Twelve elernenuuy schools par. ticipaiCd with a total of 187 posters
being received. Winnen are listed
inorderoffltS!,secondandthird. .
At Chester Elementary awards
went to Jacque Hall; Melody
Lawrence; Valerie Iqtrr.
At Riverview winners were
Daniel Murphy; Brenda Williams;
and Juli Hayman and Jessica Baruam.
The Eastern Local district
awards went 10 J.T. White; Daniel
Murphy; and Iacque Hall . The.
tcachcr award was won by Cindy
Chadwell at Tuppers Plains.
Portland Elementary ·winners
were Billie J o Sellers; Leslie
Richards; Patty Lawrence.
Racine awards went to Mitchell
Walker; 1ody'Hupp; Joshua Ervin.
Top awards at Syracuse were
SOUTIIERN WINNER • J.mie B~ sixth grader at Syra·
• Jamie Buskirk; Ashli Davis; Chris
cuse Elementary, the wiDer the rec:yde poster contest in
Reitmire.
the Southera Loclll School Distrid. Tbe cooleSt was sponsored by
· Southern Local district awards
the Meigs COIIDty Liller Coatrol l'ltJC181B. .
.
went to Jamie Buskirk; Mitchell
Walker; Billie Jo Sellers. James
Lawrence, Syracuse Elementary,
won the u~cher award.
At Bradbury Elementary the
winners were Jessica Evans and
Becky Johnson; Qumdra Moon and
Jessica Calc; and Jenni Howerton
and Jason Harris.
Harrisonville awards went 10
Franco Roniuno; Megan Dru.mmer;
Lindsey Lyons.
Pomeroy ElemenJary winners
were Missy Darnell and Michelle
Watkins; Jonathan Wyatt . and
Tonya LitChfield; and Misty Han,
Sonya Litchfield and Brandy
Snider.
.
Salem Center top awards were
Bridget Vaughan; Lori Kinnison;
and Brilm Bass.
At Salisbury, awards were given
to Tricia Davis; Tanya Dill; and
Tamra O'DeU and Lacy Banks.
Winning pOsterS in Meigs Local
district were by Bridget Vaughan;
Missy DarneD; Michelle Watki'ils.
The .teacher award went 10 Sandra
Walker, Salem Center.
AI Rejoicing Life School; winning posters were l)y Brandan
I.,ar~ins; Shannon Enright and
Rachel Forbes; and Rachel Pangio.
The teacher award went 10 Patty
Asbeck.
· The posters were judged by
members of the Meigs County 'Lit·
1er Control Advisory Board and lhe
EASTERN WINNER- J. T. Mite, T•ppen Plalu, was the
winning posters will be ,displayed
Loea1 Sdlool Disbid
reqcle poster
win•er for . at the litter control booth in the
contest spo s • ul by . - Meip Couty Utter Coatrol Program.
grange annex during the 1993
· Tile cantnl _lae.. ror dlill$ pwlers • Melp (:OUIIIy.
Meigs County Fair in August.

or

Fa....,.

...,

Some Christmas light displays
in our community bear mentioning.
The home of Mr . .and Mrs. Walt
Manley on State Rpute 681 near
Tuppers-Plains seems to be greater
each year and is worthy of placementon a Christmas card.
On State Route 144 between
Coolville and Hockingport, a
houseboat on the Hocking River
decked out with blue and white
lights (and a Christmas tree!) is a
sight to behold.
The homes of Ernie and Maxine
Whitehead and Denver and Grace
Weber in Reedsville are a nice weicome 10 that community, and I suspect that some folks make a special
trip to ReedsviUe just to enjoy their
displays. Reedsville is also one of
the few communities which boast a
cotnmunity tree and Christmas display, sponsored by the VFD auxil·
iary and the Riverview Garden
Club.

News notes
•
The leading franchise for 1992
is McDonald's, with a minimum
start-up cost of $547.SOO.
In August 1992, the Congres·
sional Budget Office estimated that
handling losses in failed sa.vings
and loan institutions would cost
$135 billion from 1989 through
1998.
The United States Mint was created by Act of. COngress April ~,
1792, which established the U.S .
national coinage system.
Venus, slightly smaller than lhe
Earth, moves about' the sun at a
mean distance of 67 million miles
in 22S Eanh days.
Alfred B. Nobel, inventor of
dynamite, bequeathed $9 million
for the Nobel Prize award, given to
those who had most benefited
mankind in physics. chemistry,
medicine-psychology, literature
and peace.

Halmuth H. Schaefer .of Atas·
cadero, California, is searching for
information about Denton L.
Geyer, who grew up in Pomeroy
about 100 years ago before moving
to Chicago:
·
Schaefer's letter, in part, reads:
"During the 1950's I moved into a
house where I foUnd a few canops

MEIGS WINNER. Brid(ld Vaupu, Sale• Cnter, was the
winllfl' in the Mel~ Local Sdlool District ror the recycle poster
clllltcsts
Meip Com~ty Litln' Clllltrol J&gt;ro&amp;ram be lei recently
in the couuty.

or.-

People in the

•

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) · Kathy ~ is ~ving ~"' ~can­
ing to f00l·$1.0111plll8 MUSIC Wit!' Ill
aerobics video for horne exeR:JSCrS
called ••Hot Country Aerobics..
.that made i1s debut Tuesday. .
· The video features the award·
·winning country singer ~ing
' off th~ excess 10 tunes like ..Put
Some Drive In Your CountrY by
·singer Travis TrilL
Mattea. 33;. won the Country
Music Associatioo·s female vocal·
ist of the year in 1989 and 1990
and won a Grarnmy for ··~
You •ve Been... Her latest h1t 11

.

~ews

Dinner held

A Christmas dinner for the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
LONDON (AP) - Fashion Sigma Phi . Sorority, was held
dtsigner· Vivienne Westwood, Thursday at the home of Donna
known 10 some as the queen of Jones. The dinner party was prepunt. went to the palace·Tuesday pared by the social committee. .
Attendina were Joan Corder,
10 tollc:ct her Order ol the British
Jane
Walton, Rosie Sisson, Velma
Empire from Queen Elizabeth II,
Rue, Reva ' Vaughan, Betty
-~·diaL
Ms. WeiiWOOd. S I, received the · Ohlinger, Maida Mora, Norma
honor m;op+r i.ng civil IIUYice for Custer.!.. Clarice Krauuer, Ann
her success as a designer and Rupe, \,;narloue Elberfeld. Lillian
Moore, Mary Morris, Eleanor
exporllr.
J
'
Thorn•
and Roberta O'Brien.
The two-time Briush fashion
The IICitl meeting will be Jan. 14
designer of the year said she was
at the liome of Maida Mora.
.
ovaWllclmed by the encounter.
••Lonesome Standard Time."

By NANCY NUSSBAUM ::
AJtoclaled Prea Writ«
i'
.CHARLESTON. W.Va. -: .
Employers whose finances once
left them too pooped to party at •
Christmas are now eager to sponsor ·
of books with a note from Mr. holiday revelry, caterers say.
"
Geyer to the new tenant to 'sort
"For the itrst time in the la,t.
these out and keep what you find several years\ I sec tbc word JIIO!:
inruesling; lhrow the rest away'."
perity back m our vocabulary, · ·,
"Among tbc lot was a handwrit· said Tina Figaretti, owner of Carer:
ten diary of a study trip to Europe ings by Tina Figaretti in Mor~-\ :
from March, 1928 to January, town.
.
...
1929. As through a window of
Figafetti ·says demand for Iter :
time, I had a glimpse of the lan- food services has j11111ped SO per···
guage of the time, opinions, views cent this holiday season compareid '
on' life and the world in general: with last year.
.
:·
'Above all, I came to knOw Geyer . Musicians. banquet halls an!l,.
was if he had lived next doOr. Here other food services·aJso are flndint ,
·a re S'ome hard data (from the holiday ~es a hit this year.
,~
diary):
·
"We i'e seeing a return to party: .
"Gexer was born in 1884. He ing. I think people have a little .
grew up in Pomeroy. but in 1928, more confidence since the eleche lived 'near the University of · tion" said Judy Petricoff, presi·
Chicago at 5727 Kimbark Avenue deni of Party Planners-Mcetiag '
in Chicago. He was married and Management in Cincin_nati, whicll. .
had at least one child. His father caters corporate and pnvare even~ ;
was sti11 alive then in Pomeroy, nationwide.
:.
because Geyer wrote 10 him from
Doug Fiedler, director of cateri ·
Switzerland."
. jng sales for Marriott,Hote!s frt:
"There is nothing I'J'iuch pef$onal Washington, D.C., satd'-Jlohda)f :
in the diary. He met just about season bookings hav.e never beell!:
everybody who was anybody in better.
., ·
education, but does not mention
"Most hotels are still experienc4;
even once that he misses his wife ing catls from customers wantint •.
and newborn child. The only way to book events even at this verr;"
we know they exist is that he writes tare date," he said. ·
:
in the very last para$foiph thatlhey
· Tom Bililey, president of Local
await him at the rBllroad station. 136 of the American Federation q{:
Did he kiss her? Shake hands? Say Musicians in Charleston, said the.
anything at all? He doesn' t say: He local's 550 members have more
does admit to having arthritic prob- jobs scheduled this season than in
lems and rbeumatism of the shoul- the past several holiday seasons. :
der, but nothing else about his
"When tbc economy's bad, peo-,
weight, height, appearance, pie are going to cut things they can
hairstyle or beard."
get by without," he said. "~en if
"I imagine that his heirs would. comes up. then naturally. your.
like to hear about this discovery, companies loosen up th~ir purse
and this is one of the reasons for strings and they start havmg more
this appeal. Of course, I am also functions for their employees."
dying to know what happened to . Companies are already starting
him between 1928 and 1954, and to to plan for n~t year, he said.
this end, I would like to contact his
The telephone has been ringing
family or anybody else who might steadily at Wellington's of ·Scarlet
know about him."
Oaks m Poca, wllich rents .party
Schaefer's address is 11950 rooms and caters outside events,Viejo Camino, Atascadero, Calif., owner Tom Grant said. ·
93422, and I am sure that he would
"Its been phenomenal. It's the
be interested in hearin$ from you if best year we've had and 'I've been
you have.any informauon,
here for seven ,years," he said.
"We have had· a drop in business,,
as far as indus~$~ business, All of
sudden in the past month I'm see-:
ing an increase.••
Grant, who is catering up to 30
percent more events this holiday,
marshals were expected 10 continue season, said many calls are from
their investigation today.
last-minute planners. Firms that
Most of the building's residents had not budgeted for a party are.
were not at ho'me when the fire finding they ca!l a{ford one •. he
began and those who were home said.
.
escaped, he said.
Jeff Cris~ manager of Cagney' S1
No damage figure was available Old Pl~ce in Charleston, said the:
bqt city police LL Boyd, Carpino restaurant's eight party rooms are·
estimated it to be hundreds of thou- nearly booked for the holiday sea.,'
sands of dollars.
son.
·
:
The Ohio Valley chapter of tbc
Business this season has jumped&gt; '
Red Cross said 13 people were atleast20 Percent. he said.
i
receiving assistance after the fire.
Nonetheless, Petricoff sai.d
Two families stayed at local many fums ate still watching theil
motels, while the others were stay· pennies.
(
ingwithfriendsorfamily.
"Where someone may hav"
Martins Ferry is on the Ohio turned somelhin~ totally over 10 ~
River. aboul'•three miles north of caterer, they're giVIng a little more
Wheeling, W.Va.
thought to how they're spending
their money,'' she wd.
· •
•

Pick 3:

106

Pick 4:

All-

9906
Super Lotto:

9-10.15-17-11-38
Kicker:
381987

Page4

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vo~.o~:~. Ho:.,ee Cc!PI'rlghled 1992
.

~-....

Pomero~Middleport, Ohio, Thurs.day, December 17, 1992

•
MARTINS FERRY, Ohio (AP)
- Thirteen people were left homeless after a rue spread through severa! apartments and .damaged six
adjacent businesseS:, authorities
said.

·

No residents were injured, but a
ftrefighter suffei'Cd a possible broken foot, said John Nagel, a city
fire battalion chief. Howard
Grayson was ht;ld overnight at East
Ohio Regional Hospital, the hospital said.
·
The fire was reported at 2:46
p.m. Tuesday and was brought
undercontrol· about5 p.m., Nagel
said.
Nagel said he didn'.t know
where the fire started in the L·
shaped building or its ·cause. Fire

COLUM!WS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich and legislative leaders have cleared the
first legislative hurdle toward
approval of a $1.04 billion tax
increase that they laboriously negotiated in private earlier Ibis month.
Tbe proposal , which also
includes $1 billiop in bond-issue
financed capital improvements,
cleared the House F1nance Committee late Wednesday night with
only one substantive change, which
was requested by the administration. ·
The bill was expected to be
voted on in the House today. It then
would be sent to the Senate for
floor action Friday.
Voinovich, along with Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, RCiocinnati, House Speaker Vern
Riffe, D·Wheelersburg, and other
leaders negotiaiCd the taxes.
They are designed to help erase
a $250 miUion deficit in lhe fiscal .
year ~nding June 30 and provide an
additiollal $849 million in revenue
in the .next biennium.
In their talks, Riffe and Senate
Minority Leader Robert Boggs, D-

.

HELP CHILDREN. Employees at V~terans
Memorial Hospital t.his year rorticipated in the
· Meigs County Department o Human Services'
Angel ·Tree Program. Througb the program,
chaired ·at the hospital by Sue Stone, Medical
Records Department Supervisor, employees pro-

Sheriff'S department continues
investigation of Tuesday s~ooting
The Tuesday shooting of a 39year.old Wilkesville woman is still
· under investigation, a Gallia County Sherifrs Department spokesman
said this morning.

Chief Deputy John Yates said ·
he planned to travel to CabellHuntington Hospital in Huntingt~?n,
W.Va., this
and talk w1th
the .victim,
.. Snyder. S11yder

Style

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ROSE PRESENTED • Gene Riggs, president 9f' the Middle·
port-Pomeroy Rotary Club, left, presented a rose to Lloyd BIJ!Ck·
wood on· behalf of his wife, Anna Blackwood. The Blackwoods
were recently involved jn a serious car accident near Chester.

GOOD SEUCIIOII OF
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'

Lor-o-wova

was reported in filir condition at lhe
hospital this morning.
Yates said any new information
uncovered from his investigation
will be released this afternoon.
Snyder was shot in the head
with a small caliber handgun Tuesday afternoon at her residence. The
sheriff's department is investigating to 'determine if the shot was
self-inflicted or fLred by someone
'else.
Mrs. Snyder's husband, Clayton
A. Snyder, 58, Wilkesville, was
arrested in Wellston shonly after
the shooting. A sheriff's depart·
ment spokesman said a handgun
that matched the type used in lhe
shooting was found in his possession.
'Mr. ·Snyder is currently being
held in the Gallia County Jail on a
warrant from the Wellston Police
Department on a charge of passing
bad checks.
..

'.

'

. Heard from parent Judy Avis
regarding concerns of detention at
· the high school;
• Approved membersh\P in the
Ohio School Boards AsSOCJal!on;
- Accepted a bid from Nationwide Insurance for fleet insurance
for calendar year 1993;
. - Set January 13. 1993 at 6:30

The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported a
!leer-vehicle accident and a wreck
involving an ambulance Wedllesilay.
' '
A Chesapeake man' s v~hicle
~ sustained heavy, disabling damage
. Wednesday evening when it struck
deer on State Route 7 in Salisbury Township.
.
: A~cording 10 a report from the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Pauol, Paul N. Hart, 22,
.200 Second,Ave., Chesapeake, was
southbound when he struck the
deer killing it. No injuries were .
repaired and lhe vehicle was towed
from the scene.

a

A Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service ambulance sustained light damage in an accident
Wednesday afternoon on State
Route 7 in Addison Township in
Gallia County.
Dri.ven by Michael, R. Van·
Meter, 19, Pomeroy, the ambulance
was northbound when two vehicles
in front of him stopped in traffi~­
VanMeter was unable 10 stop m
time and went off the right side of
the road and strul;k a guard rail.
No injuries were reported and
no citations were issued. The
ambulance was driven from the
scene.

~

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. . . "1- .., ..• ~·.

'

p.m. at Tuppers Plains Elementary
School as the date, time and place
of the board's organizational meeting.Present, m
· add'11ton
· to Sm1t
· h,
were President Ray Karr, Vice ·
President Jim Smith, and members
Ron Eastman. Bill Hannum, 8lld
Mike Martin.
·•

County commission
praised.by MRIDD
The Meigs County Commissioners were praised for their support of programs at the Carleton
School and Meigs l11dustries at the
commissionen' regular meeting on
Wednesday morning.
David Miliken of the Meigs
Industries program presented the
board· members with plaques and
mugs bearing the sl.ogan o.f the
board's recent apprectation dmner,
held at the facility 10 recognize the
achievements of its participants.
"The opportunities that you
have helped to create have been
significant and pro~ided our chen~
with the opportumty to ach1eve ,..
Miliken said. "Through these
achievements, we have been able to
confi110 your faith in the abilities of

obtain a veterinary sciences degree whose only concerns are his stom· ·
The Daily Sentinel will begin
ach and keeping lhe couch free of
·· th e 1oca11 Y· d rawn da•'IY and p·ut it to use in his hometown humans during his nap times.
runnmg
cotnic 'strip Riff, Ohio Valley Pub· ofMuletown.
While studying J·ournalism at
11ege on a
ced recent!
Buck
is
attending
co
. hi
I 1s
ng announ ·
Y·
h
Qh· Un1'versity, Pinson drew R1iff
Drawn bY Ovp reporter Kev 1·n basketball scholarship, and w en for 10the university's daily student
Pl·nson ' Riff follows the ml·sa·dven ' he's not sleept'n~ or eating, his time newspaper, The Post, for 2 1./2
Iures of 1wo college r oommat es • is devoted 10 ei er the books or the years. Jt was the ·tongest runnmg
Buclc Hurley ·and Gene Davidson, hoops.
.
.
student-drawn ·strip in the paper's
and their Australian shepherd Riff,
Stirring this cauldron of ml and history.
and will begin running Jan. 4.
. w
·::.:a:te:r,_
. l:·s.:.R.:i:::ff::_•.:a...:se:l:.:f_:-c..:.e:nt:.:.er:.:ed..:....:d:.:o:g_ _ _-:;;iJ""'IIiiO:----:---,
Gene and Buck llfC two friends ..
so diverse they rri'11ke The Odd
Couple look lilce identical twins,
Pinson said. The only thing they
have in common is their enrollment
at College University.
Gene is king of the devil-maycare attitude. His educational goal
is to stay in college and avoid
working until his heavy metal
band, Roadkill, gets discovered.
Even if it takes 20 years.
When he's not practicing drums,
Gene kill.s time skipJ'ing classes
and chasing "babes. He's never
s,een without his long hair,
cigarette, shades and three-day
beard stubble.
·
BuCk, oil the otbcr hand, is hard
working and goal oriented - a trait.
he developed working on his family's farm m rural Ohio. He's at college for one purpose onl&gt;: .... to
"- •

(•

.

Sentinel adds 'Riff' to comic page

5 Piece Solid Oak

· 5 Piece Melli

A new bouse bill to benefit local
school boards was discussed when
1he Eastern Local School Board
met on Mooday.
Superintendent Richard Smith
discussed House Bill 264 with lhe
board. This legislation allows
school districts 10 !Jorrow money to
make energy-saving iml,lrove~ents
and repairs. The loan 1s pa1d off
over a period of time through savings realized by the improveme~ts.
Smith indicated lhat a presentauon
would be forthcoming within the
next two months regarding the bill.
Smith informed the board that
six representatives from the dis~ct
had attended lhe Finance L11Igau~n
Conference held on December 9 m
Columbus. The conference was
sponsored by the Ohio Coalition
for Equity &amp; Adequacy of School
Funding.
.
.
Potential state cuts m fundmg
for the fiscal year were discussed.
The estimated cost of a proposed
3.7 percent reduction from the stat.e
would result in a loss of appro:'U·
mately $70,000 this fiscal year.
This is the cut proposed by Governor Voinovich if a new taX plan •s
not adopted by the state legislature.
The board also:
• Approved revisions to several
appropriations;
• EmpJoyed Toni M. Hudson as
a substitute teacher for the 1992-93
school year on an as-needed basis;

vlded
12 llndierli~fVi~eii
children. Pictured with the wrapped
were turned over to hum!ln services per:sarmel
for distribution are Jim Dailey, head the hospital's Purchasing Department, and Carol Ault
of the Meip County Human Services.

\

95

Jefferson , reversed their earlier create a burden on steel companies
opPosition 10 increases in alcohol and other major employers that
and tobacco taxes, proposed by the have increased ou&amp;-of·Jtate purRepublican governor, while chases in nlcent years to cut costs. .
The deletion of the natural gas
Voinovich gave in to their insisprovision reduced the bill's revtence on higher taxes for the rich.
Boggs said those were among enue yie)d by $10 million for the
key agreements that broke an first s,ix months of 1993 and by
impasse on taxes sought by $53.1 million in the state's next
Voinovich since he had to cut tWO-year budget period.
Fifteen Democrats and five
spending by $300 million in ]uly to
reduce what was then a projected Republicans vote&lt;) for tlle· bill,
which is already under study in tile
$600 million deficit
"Everybody has something in ·Senate in anticipation of a Friday
there that they don't like," Boggs •ote. Aronoff indicated Thursday
said.
.
that the bill would pass the Senate.
Other amendments made minor
Despite pressure from numerous
lobbyists who hoped to change or adjustments in the capital improveeliminate parts of the tax package ments bill, which appropriates
Wednesday night, not a singlt; slightly more than $1 billion for a
amendment was offered on their long list of construCtion and renovation projects.
behalf.
At the administration's reqqest, . Most projects are at state-supthe committee deleted a provision ported colleges and universities or
imposing lhe utilil)l taX on purchas- facilities owned by state agencies,
es of natural gas from pipeline bro- although about $124 million is sct
kers or other non-utilities outside aside for community projects, such
as theaters, museums and developth~ Sl&lt;!te.
Tax Commissioner Roger Tracy ment projects in the state's larger
said it was learned· the tax could cities.

Supt. Smith di~cusses HB 264
WttliEastern School Board

Pirie Or Oak

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITES

I .

Voinovich 's tat plan
cleats fitst hurdle

'

Cabinet

2 SectiJ.., 16 "'~~" 25 ......
A MuiUmeclla Inc. -peper,
•

F l.re
' .· z'eaveS 15 hom·ete·ss

Harrisonville
OES hold$ party
The Harrisonville OES held its
Christmas party recently with Worthy Matron Pauline Atkins and
Worth Patron Lilrry Well in charge.
All the past matrons and past
patrons, honored masons, 50-year
members and those having held
grand officers were recognized and
welcomed.
Cards were signed for those
reponed ill:
·
Golda !feed, secretary; Gracie
Wilson, charlain; and Marjorie
Rice, marshal , W'Crc ins~~JUed.
The table blessing was given by
Harold Rice. Refreshments were
~rvcd by Pauline Atkins, Sharon
Jewell, Jill Lipscomb and Norma
Lee.
A Christmas gift exchange followed refreshments. ·

Bartrum
is selected

Irian J• .....

Many great Chrisanas gifts have
been placed under Christmas trees
in our community this year. b'!t
next week, you have the opponumty to donate one of the greatest
gifts of all- a u~it of blood.
:
The Amerteail Red Cross
Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs
County Senior Citi~ns Center on
Wednesday, December 23.frrim I
to 5:30. p.m; Many regular blood
donotS, unfortunately, will not take
the time 10 donate at this busy time
of year..Sadly, the need for blood
will be even greater. Please take
the time to give blood next week.
You could save a life. and what a
great gift that would be for some. one in the area. ·

or •

in holiday eh~eti:

Ohio Lottery

,.. - . .

~

··-~·""· r·-

our clients."
Outgoing
Commissioner
Richard E. Jones conveyed his
thanks to the MR/DD board and lhe
clients of the program saying thah
"it has been a pleasure to serve
you."

The board authorized David
Dowler to examine the cover ·over
the steps at the Meigs County
Home, which is in need of repair,
and give an estimate on tbc repairs.
Tbe commissioners also:
:
- Approved a request for transfer
of funds from Emergency Medical
Services totaling $2,623.09;
:
- Established a new budget liQe
item for the Parks District to reflect
donations for the Sugar Run SchoOl
project;
• Approved a transfer of
$4,952.59 from the county general
fund to tbc Auto License and Gasoline receipts account to reflect
interest earned.
Present, in addition to Jones ,
were County Commissioners Manning 'Roush and Da..,id Koblentz;
County Commissioners -elect
Robert Hartenbach and Janet
Howard; and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

days until

Christm ·

.

····- ---.-·· ...--_. ..... . .--..."----· - -~···- ....

�Commentary
The Daily ·Sentinel
111 Coart ltreet
"-tiOJ', Olllo
DBYOftD TO THE IN'l'Blli8TS OF THE DIOII-IIAIIOK AREA

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
hbUIIier

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
J...ETTI!RS OF OPINION ore welcome. They should he leas than 300
words. All !etten ore lllbject to oditin&amp; llld mUBt he aisned with name,
oddreaa and telepbooe number. No uDiiped !etten will he publilbed. Letten
ahould he in &amp;ood taste, oddrealina isaueo, not periOIII!iliea.

~Railroad
.

owner
turns to
.
tourists
to save dream
..

By JOHN AFFLECK
Associated Press Writer
GREENWICH, N.Y. - Fc:&gt;r about a decade, Ron Crowd has worked
:to mate his business succeed against the odds. Now he's hoping Ameri·
:Ca's obsession with nostalgia will help save iL
• · Crowd is president of Batten Kill Railroad, a short freight serVice
::0ased about 30 miles oonh of Albany. The rwalline uses 35 miles of
,track, once owned by the larger Delaware &amp; Hudson railway, to haul
materials fer local paper mills, a fertilizer plant and an agricultural coop·
.erarlve.
• · But bad breaks and the recession have combined to put the business
:"at a point of despe!"&amp;tion," Crowd said.
: . So the 42-year-old Crowd has come up with a plan to save the railroad
by establishing a tourist line running alon_g the scenic Batten Kill River.
_ The idea isn't unique- just a proven winner,
.
•. The number of U.S. tourist lines has grown at a rilte of about 6 percent
year, to around 225 today, since railroad deregulation began in the
1970s. according to the Tourist Railway Association in Aurora, Colo. The
·group says 4.1 million passengers rode on tourist railroads last year alone.
David Nestle, a histOrian and board member of NE-Rail, a nonprofit
group recently formed to save !he Baaen Kill, said !he line is worth sav·
ing for bolh historical and aesthetic reasons.
.
; ~ portion of the line that would be used for tourist excursions dates
~k to the 1840s, the early boollrfears of the American railroad industry,
Nestle said. It also was an early interest of Jay Gould, a 19th century railroad ~te. he said.
The line crosses the Batten Kill River several times and is perfect for
foliage viewing in !he fall, NeS\)e added.
_ "It's pretty scenic," he said. "You can't get in there.with a car."
- Crowd estimates the line could draw between 15,000 and 30,000
oouristS a year.
.
: However, the project isn't a sure thing yet The state Urban Development Corpc&gt;ration, which owns the actual track o.n which the railroad
operates, must agree to give up ownership. The track also must be updated to meet federal standards for carrying passengers.
· All !hat would take at least $250,000 in private donations and funds
from the state Department ot Transportation, Crowd said.
· Crowd's fBliCination with ll'llins Sl8rled early in life - His 'boyhood
Jiome in Virginia was next to the Pamsylvania Railroad.
: But a childhood case of polio left him unable to walk without crutches,
l(lld Crowd felt he couldn't $el a job in the rail industry. Instead, he studied railroads as a hobby, while pursuing a career as an auto mechanic and
lflter as a bridge designer for the SIBle DOT.
.
· He left the DOT in 1982 to found the Batten Kill Railroad. Crowd,
'w!JO is black, became the first minority owner of a railroad in New York.
The railroad bas meant a lot of hard work for Crowd and his two fulltime employees, who plit in 12-hour days in all kinds of weather.
·
; But dcspiic their efforts, the Batten Kill hasn 'I been profitable.
• Loans from the UDC, the Slate Job Development Authority, and the
tallway's largest customer, Agway Inc., were needed just to get the llqsi· .
riess oft' the ground. Then a strike against the Delaware &amp; Hudson railway
in 1986 disruplal national service to the line, and the Batten JQU never
fl!lly recovaed from the &amp;eSulting loss of business.
. The l1lihmd also has been hurt by the high cost of track maintenance
8nct by the rCicelsion, which has cut the number of loads the Batten KiU
liauls for Agw~y from about30 per month .to 15.

Letters
to the editor
.
Says writer ignorant of religion
which seem to indicate that the
· George R. Plagenz may wish to Watchtower believes the only way
"sign up for.the New Earth" of the to tx: saved is to be a JW and by
Jehovah's Witnesses, but he is good-deeds, and not merely by
woefully ignorant of what they Faith In Christ Jesus. (WT 4/1/47,
really believe and the history of pg. 204 "To get one's name written
m that Book of Life in the· New
this religion.
Mr. Plagenz and anyone else, Order must come into a right relawho considers a commitment of tionship with the organization."
such magnitude should do their (The Watchtower) Mr. Plagenz, do
research. I suggest they first read, you honestly belieYe salvation by
"The Kingdom Of The Cults" by works and The Watchtower is
Walter Martin., ( Bethany House preferable to salvation in the Bibli·
Publishers, 85). Dr. Manin careful- cal way, by Faith in Christ alone
ly documents the hiswry, and rea- (Ephisians 2:8-9)?
sons Bible-Believing Christians
It must also be known that the
should avoid this group. I will JW's do not believe that Jesus Is
brieOy document some of these "Jehovah God" . Instead they
rC&amp;sons below.
believe he is merely an Angel.
• First, The IW's have published (Reed, pg. 85,86,87) but scholarly
their own version of the Bible translations of the Bible make it
called the "New World Transla- clear tha:t Jesus is Jehovah -God.
tion" to support their teaChings that (John 1:1, 20:28), (Isaiah 9:6, comtlicy claim are Biblical. Dr. Manin pare with John 12:37-41) (Just to
writes, " ... the Watchtower transla- name a few Scriptures.) •
tion speaks for itself and shows
Another informative book was
more· clearly than pen can, the written by Raymond Franz,
scholastic dishonesty and lack of nephew of the president of the
scholarship so rampant in it's cov- Watchtower. It is titled, "Crisis of
ers." (pg. 73) Dr. Martin goes on to Conscience" (Commentary Press,
document the major problems of Atlanta, 83). This book is must
this tranSlation of the Bible. Any- reading for anyone who wishes to
one considering the claims of !he be informed about the decision
Jehovah's Witnesses should care- making process of this religion.
fully read this section.
· After reading it myself, I would
David A. Reed is editor of agree with !he end statement on the
another helpful book entitled, book cover. It ".. raises very funda"Index of Wllll:htower Errors" pub- mental questions that are both dislished by Baker Books, 90. In it, turbing and conscience-stirring".
Reed has compiled a section of
Mr. Plagenz, you should avail
dlmlt 9'IOtel from the Watchtower yourself of these source~ before
Mapzine to prove they have falseyou endorse a religion you obv ily JIIOJII'Ielied the second earning of ously are ignorant-of. I would give
Christ in the years 1874, 1910, this advice to anyone else who has
. 1914, 1918, 1925, and 1975. The been approached by this group Qf
quotations are rresented from any group. Do not take their claim
piiCI 96 duouJh I0 Cot an~ooc to
to be "Christian" at face value. Do
ex1111ine 111d mab up the1r own your homework. Do some research.
mind based upon words, "right
.
Sincerely,
from the...._ mouth".
Rev. Peter Tremblay,
In this same book, Reed docuPomeroy
ments these follc:&gt;wing quotes
Dear Editor,

WASHING10N (NEA) -Five
years 1180 any Pen ragan employees
mentioning the National Reconnaissance Office in public would
have found themselves out of.a job.
As recently as a year ago, a Pentagon press briefer still denied its
existence. Recently, however, the
head of the ultra-secret NRO not
only welcomed a New York Times
reporter to his office, but allowed a
picture of himself to be taken to
accompany the anicle.
For 30 years, the NRO - ·which
developed, launched and operated
this country's spy satellite techno!•ogy - was among the Pentagon's
top secrets. Only those with the
highest security clearances knew
what was going on behind the
always-locked blank doors in the
"C" Ring at the Pentagon. ·
Over the last three decades the
NRO was said to have lleen given
virtually a blank check. Its budget
has always been as secret as its
hardware and its mission. Known
to only a few members of the
House and Senate Intelligence
Committees, its multibillion dollar

anitual budget is hidden throughout
the Air Force's budgeL
But those blank-check days are
over. Congress is looking to

Robert
j ur.agman
·
' ' • "c

-,.-------....;;.._ __
sharply cut the amount spent on
intelligence. More than a dozen
intelligence agencies, both civilian
and military, are now engaged in a
fierce battle for their share of this
shrinking pie. That is why the NRO
suddenly went public.
Martin C. Faga, a career satellite
expert with the CIA, is the current
NRO director. He is making the
case that his budget should be
untouched because the Gulf War
proved the continued need for reaitime battlefteld intelligence even in
small regional conflicts, and
becaus~ of the potential civilian
applications of satellite technc:&gt;logy
in agriculture, environmental protection, mineral exploration and
weather forecasting.
For the first time in 20 years,
Congress has already made a cut in

~
~

..

l~ss

cry, his legs slowly, trying -~o
· ktck at the swarm. of fhes on ·lit,;
genitals. A radio repon brings a·
small Croatian hoy talking softly, a

affected by these scenes, yet I have·
stored the memory of that horror
and· I am strongly impressed mentally. I'd like to believe that for
emotional survival !he brain transfers the knowledge 10 a different
storage bin, without a loss of conscience. •
translator saying that the only thing
Then I piclt up a local newspahe wants for Christmas is that his per and read the mao-on-the-street
mother somehow restore the watch comments of people asked what
stolen from him, a watch given to they think of Operation Restore
him by his father who has just been Hope. I am stunned to learn that
killed. She could not buy it back almost all of them say we should
even if she knew where it was; she not be going to Samaha. Sorile say
has no money, no possessions, no we have problems of our own here
home.
at home and we should be talcing
But my increasing ability to care of those; a few talk about how
detach scares me. On one hand, I unfair it is to take soldiers away
know !hat if we hadn't beep born- from their families at Christmas.
barded with the terrible images
The anicle comes up at a busi·
from Somalia our government ness ·meeting I attend.the next day,
would not be responding now, yet and c:&gt;thers say they are just as
there is a tendency to become dazed at the isolationism of those
desensitized at 100 much exposure. interviewed. One woman wonders
I remember the first time I saw if those people would have had the
films of Nazi concenb'Btion camps. same reacuon to details of Nazi
It was a pivotal moment for me, my atroCities against the Jews, had we
first complete realization of the been able to read about !hem at !he
cruelty humans are capab_le· of time. Others ask how we can call
toward each olher. Over the years I ourselves decent people an!i then
have become less emotionally stand'by and watch innocent people
being starved, tortured and killed

Sarah Overstreet

'"

--~--·~~-

•

W. VA.

••. n:.

-----Weather----Soatii-Cntnl Oblo
Tonight, clO!ldy w.ith a cbance
of flurries or driizle.Low 30 to 35.
Light northwest winds. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent. Friday,
decreasing clouds with a high in
!he low~ 40s.
.
·

This time it is Somalia. But the
story remains the same. An African
nation tom asunder by civil war
and man-made famine. Millions of
civilians facing death from either
bullets or starvation.
As American forces descend
upon Mogadishu, bearing food
stuffs and medicines for a suffering
people, back home there are vexing
questions about just how far the
United States should go.
Should our mission end when
Somalian .bellies are full? Or
should we stay until the warring
clans are disarmed, the rule of Jaw
restored and a provisional government established?
If we simply dole out food to
starving Somalis, but leave
unchanged the conditions that precipitated the famine in the first
place, we really will not help the
suffering masses.
,
We merely will give them a
temporary reprieve from hardship.

--

As soon as the last flotilla of · would resemble a bell-shaped
Marines leaves the hom of Africa, · curve.
the bloodletting and famine will
Th6 1960s were a period of ecoresume.
nomic 'growth with living standards
improving for the mass of Africans.
The 19705 were a period of stagnation, with no improvements in
quality of life. The 1980s actually
We can do better than this. In saw a decline of living standards,
this post-Cold War era, with the by as much as 30 pettent in nations
United States no longer preoccu- such as ·somalia.
This seeming aberration may be
pied with containing the Soviet
bear, it seems abundantly possible exJ?lained by steadily growing milifor America to J?laY a leading role tansm in sub-Saharan Africa. The.
in demilitariztng sub-Saharan story of the last 20 years on the
Africa and planting the seeds of continent has been one of civil
wars, coup d'etats, ethnic strife and
democmcy and free enterprise.
Somalia shQuld be the test case general political instability. The
cost of such military destabilization
for this new Africa Doctrine.
Much of sub-Sahara Africa is estimated at as much as 50 perremains as poor today as 30 years cent of gross domestic product for
ago, when most of the nations won nations suCh as Somalia.
independence from their colonial
"s this is written, ~ivil and
rulers. If plotted on a graph, the guerrilla wars. continue in Chad,
change of the African standard of Liberia afld Sudan (the next Somaliving over the last three decades lia). Warring factions in Angola,
Mozambique and Ethiopia have set
down therr arms, but !hey cc:&gt;uld
resume longstanding hc:&gt;stilities at
any time. Elsewhere in sub-SahaIf they want to cut back, why ran Africa, such nations as Ziunbia,
does council get paid for their Kenya, Zaire, Gabon and Ivory
meetings, what if their jobs were in Coast appear ripe fer conflioL And
this siblation, how would they feel. only the most hopeful discount a
If oth~ people fee the same as I do, future civil war m South Africa,
they should Slate !heir opinion.~ . By when whites eventually cede power
the way, where is all' the city tax to the black majority.
Isolationists in- this country view
going?
all
of !his. as a distinctly African
Mrs. Henry (Bill) Durst
problem.
They argue that the Unit440 Pearl Street
ed
States
has no role te-.play there,
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Joseph Perkins

Supports Middleport bonuses

In regards to the Middleport
V!llage workers; I think it is a dirty
tnck taking thetr Christmas bonus
away thiS close to Christmas, Why
not months ago instead of now
when they were expecting it."
'
.Employees work hard to make
thts c_ay look good. In freezing
cold, m hot weather, too. As many
years for relatively low pay. Several JObs dangerous should require
more pay.

EXIelded Forecast:

Satura, t11roua1t Mouday:
Saturday, a clwice of showers.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the
40s. Sunday and Monday, fair.
Lows 25 to 3S. Highs upper 30s to
lower40s.

.

---Area deaths-Dr. David L. Thomas

Dr. David Lee Thomas, 48, Gallipolis, died Wedneaday, 0.:. 16,
I 992, at his residence
He was born Jill. 25, 1944 in
Gallipolis, son of the laic Marvin
W. Thomas and Grace Sisson
Thoma8 of Gallipolis.
He was. owner o( French City
· .. Chiropractic, a 1962 gtacluate of
Kyger Creek High School, P11mer
College of Chiropractic, receiving
a doctorate degree of Qlilopactic:.
He practk:ed In Gallipolis for 25
years and was a member of Gallipolis Elks Lodge tl01, Silo1111
Masonic Lodge c:&gt;f Clleshire,
Moose Lodp. Point Pleasant. ObiO
Chiropracbc Association, VFW
Post 4464, and American Legion
Post 27. He llso served In tlJc medical corps durins the v-.m era. "
Survivors 'include ooe sister,
Mrs.' Merrill (1 udf) Wiltoxelt' of
Gallipolis; ud a friend, Kay Shine
of Gallipolis.
·
· Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday
at Waush-Halley·Wood Furieral
Home, with the Rev. 101CPh Godwin officiating. Burial will be In
Gravel Hill Cemetery. A flaa oresenlation .will be made by "\']:W
Post4464.
Friends may call at !he funml
home on Saturday from 2-5 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. Masonic services will
be conducted by Siloam Masonic
Lodge of Cheshire on SatUJday at
8:30p.m. Services will also be conducted by Gallipolis Elks Lodge
107 on Saturda' at9 p.m.

by grouf.s .of th_ug_s just becausethey don t live wtthin our ~ders.
We talt about hOw 'marry·bf ou/
brothers' tceepers we can afford 10
be, how many times we may be
called upon in the present world •
climate to keep them, and how
much we can interVene in the busi!
n~ of other governments to makesure the tragedies we .cure won 'i
recur. We reach no definite consen'
sus, but· I am reassured by the passion with which at least lhese peo.
pie still regard the well-being of
others all over the werld.
· We are a good and humane soci-·
ety, yet ccrnmon sense requires that
we make our job easier. We must"
stop selling arms to these shaky ·
fiefdoms. We have to rescind the·
insane Bush administration policy
. that makes it illepito fund familyplanning agenctes that sanction
abonion as one of the many methads of birth control they offer Third
World people. These cQ.Untries
need support, a chance at peace,
and a wax of restricting their {amilies to children they can feed.
Sarah Overstreet Is 1 syndicated writer ror Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

Hospital_news

U.S. can't back away from Somalia'

"
That, with the collapse of the for-.
mer Soviet Union, there are no
strategic justifications for a U.S,
presence itt sub-Saharan Africa.
That, at most, the United States '
should contribute food' and other'(
relief to the nations like Somalia'
under the auspices. of the United 1
Nations.
•
But such thinking is morally :
indefensible. The United States bas I
had much 10 do with the militariza- :
tion of Africa. Indeed, America •
furoished arms and other material I
assistance to Somalia in 1982 to 1
fight a proxy war against Soviet- 1
backed Ethiopia.
I
Now that the Cold War is over, .1
!he United SIBteS cannot baclc: away :
from Somalia and other client :
states and leave them to fend for •
themselves. We have an obligation :
to help our former African allies :
beat their swords into plowshares. j
· That is what the U.S.-Ied multi- . I
nation effM in Somalia should be•
about. If, somehow, the warring' l
factions in Somalia can be persuad- l.
ed ~ently or otherwise to lay down · :
their arms, agree to a provisional , :
government and yield to free and - ,
unfettered elections, it would be a• j
welcome development on the conti- _ 1
nenL If ndl, the prospects for peace •
and resultant social and economic ; :
prQgress in sub-Saharan Africa will ' :
be remote. ·
I
Joseph Perkills is a columnist , •
for The Sao Die110 Unlon-Trl· :· :
bune-and a syndicattd writ~ ror ' I
NEA.
.I

••
I

n

/
,~

gence. Reponedly, several different
military mtelligence operations.
on mteruaence was cut by about 8 involved in satellite espionage,:
percent from its $30 billion level in including the NRO, have been,
fiscal year 1992. One of the -merged into one operation. Also,
sharpest cuts was suffered by the steps have been taken to avoid;
NRO, which is said to have lost as duplication of intelligence analysis;
mucb as 10 percent of the about S6 by formation of the Central.
:
billion it received in FY '92. In Imagery Office.
There have bee.n complaints ~
addition, COngress has ordered an
18 percent personnel cut in the the Gates-he;tded ~eorganization:
intelligence community over the has lar~ly spared the civilian intel-·
ligence community, and more•
next four fiscal years.
·
Partially iQ prqJIII'Btion for lean- specifically his own CIA. Even;
er budgets, and paitially in recogni- befcre the election, military intelli-·
tion that a great deal of overlap gence officials were ccrnrlaining to:
exists within the intelligence com-' their friends on Capito Hill that;
munity, the Bush administratic:&gt;n any intelligeJlce reorganization·
has begun a major reorganization should be done by JlCOllle with nO:
of intelligence functions. A 13- direct connection to any of the;
·
member p111el, headed by James competing agencies.
As members of the Clinton tran-:
Woolsey, a longtime arms control
negotiator, bas forwarded a list of sition team are findin' out, the:
recommended cuts and mergers tq president-elect is walkmg into a•
CIA Director Robert Gates. Gates · dispute that is growing more bitter
in tum makes the final decisions by the day. At the stall of the inteland implements the ·recommenda- ligence reorganization the W,hite
House asked all the various civilian
tions.
So far most of the reorganiza- and military inteUigence agencies
tion has involved military intelli- to define what they saw as their
missions in the new world order.
As might have been expected, the
lists came back with priori~y missions ll1al. if fulfilled, would probably call for a doubling of the overall intelligence budget ,and the;
addition of thousands of new
employees:,
.
·
It looks now a5 if it is going to
be left to the incoming adminisb'Btion to chose which of these suggested missions are to be cut buck,
and which are to be ·eliminated
altogether.
.
.
What especi¥lY worries many
in the intelligence community is
!hat with his lack of fcreif! experience, Clinton haS shown hule interest in or appreciation of intelligence. George Bush was, after all,.
a fanner CIA 'directi&gt;r, and Ronald
Reagan was an iniclligem:e groupie
who presided over the greatest.
expansion of the intelligence community in h~tory. .
:
During Jhe campaign, Clinton .
said litde about i,ntelligence except.
to criticize.'!he intelligence eommu-:
nity's failure to' predict Saddam·
, Hussein would invade, Kuwait.
the overall intelliience budget.

R~~y, the IIIIOUIII bein&amp; spent

World tragedies mark the holidays
Christmas has traditionally been
the time of year when we are most
exposed to !he needS of olhers and
generally respond with empathy
and generosity.
.
. But this Christmas my empalhy
lltlllms almc:&gt;st frozen. A radio reading of "The Little Match Girl''
starts to cause its usual tears, but l
feel almost guilty at so much emolion fora piece of fiction, and stop.
For months, CNN has brought
me Somali children starving to
death in eery silence, too weak
even to mewl. I've watched Bosnian adults keen for their dead and
heard their stories of torture, of reiatives herded onto buses and shot
to death; and I've listened to aid
. ~orkers' warnings !hat winter will
kill more people unless !he rest· of
us do somethin$.
My mind dtrects my hands .to
send money to one organization
that feeds the starving and anolher
that sponsors Third World children.
But my heart is largely out of gear.
Only momentarily, from time to
time, does it engage and grab my
throac A piece of videotape shows
a sin~le, tiny Somali bo;Y lying in
the din, his mouth open m a word-

The Dally Sentinel-Page

--Pomeroy Court news--

NRO vies for scarce intelligence dollars i

.,

... "

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thun~day,Dicewnbar17,1892

a

..

'llluiMiy, December 17,1112

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :

I

Vetel'lllll MeliiOI'Ial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Helen Will, Chester.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Betty Imboden, Inez Snyder,
James Milleund Mary Kauff.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Dec. 15 - Floyd
YaleS, Billy Williams, Mary I.athey, Margie Hively, Velma l'lrrish,
Edward Saunders, Juanita Noe,
Lorena Ackerman, Ethel Moses,
Robert Snowden ; William Ring,
Roger Taylor, Elizabeth Hayth,
Willi1111 Mayes, and Ted Wingfield.
Births, Dec. IS - Mr. and Mrs.
Gregory McCarthy, a son, Middle- .
port. Mr. and -Mrs. Matthew
-· Rhodes, a 11011, Gallipolis.

Cash Zimmerman
Other surVivors of Cash Zimmerman, 97, West Main Street,
Rutland, who di¢ Tuesday, Dec.
lS, 1992; include 10 great-greatgrandchildrell ud one great-gteatgreat-grandchild. These survivors
were unintentionally omitted by
family members frc:&gt;m Tuesday's
obituary.
· Services were held today for
Mr. Zimmerman at Birchfield
Funeral Home in Rutland.

Meigs .County units
respond to 8 calls
Units lif tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance on Wednesday and early
Tllursday morillng.
c
On Wednesday at 8:21 a.m. llie
Racine unit was called to Third
Street for Emma Lyons who was
taken to VetenlnS Memorial Hospital.
At 11:53 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Spring Avenue for Audrey
Arnold whQ was transpqrted to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The Syracuse unit, at 12:01
a.m., res~nded to Route 248 for
Helen Will who was taken to Vet-

erans.

The Middlepon unit, If 1:39
p.m., was called to . Mulberry
Avenue in Pomeroy for Ladonna
Mintz. She was taken to Pleasant
Valley.
At 6:29 p.m. the Rutland unit
responded to Happy Hollow Road
fer Kelly Tobia who was taken to
Holzer Medical Ccnltl.
This morning (Thursday) at
12:26 a.m. the Racine unit wtnt to
Route 33$ for Sara MfDowell who
was IIIIISplll'lalto Veterans.
At 6:16 Lm. the Middleport unit
responded to MlU Slreel for Milton
Hood. Hood -taken 10 Veterans.
At 6:38 a.m. the ~ Plains
unit went to Mount Obve Road for
Grace Price who wu II'IIISPDrled to
St. Joseph's Hospital in Patkersburg, W.Va . •

AEP chairman to . retire next year

The following forfeited bonds in failure to comply.
the court r:i Pomaoy Mayer Bruce
, David Parsons, Pomeroy, $27
J. Reed on Monday night: Anthony and costs, speed; Gail Taylor,
Reeves; Pomeroy, disorderly eon- Po'!l~Y, $63 and costs, no operaduct, S80; Llrry Orueser, Racine, tor s bcense, menacing lhreats,
S60, improper backing; Tracy • $313 on each of three counts· JefHein, RaciDe, speed. $65, $42, seat frey King, Rutland, $263 and ~.
belt violation; Jason Hysell, public indecency; Raben Ramsey,
Pomeroy, $80, disorderly manner; Pomeroy, $392, DUI six months ·
Connie Higham, Pomeroy, $80, no license suspension; Fredrick
operator's license; Sheila Brown, Werry, Pomeroy, allowing minors
· Vinton, $80, fictitious plates ; to consume alcohol at his residence
Elaine Matheny, Letart, W.Va., (3 ), $200 and costs; William
$80, failure to display valid regis- Hysell, ~omeroy, $88 and costs;
tration, $60, stop sign violation; c~nsummg alcohol under age;
Arlene Barnes, Racine, $60, R1chard Stewan, Pomeroy resistassured clear distance; Richard ing arrest, $313 and costs, $213
Gaugler, Seville , Ohio, $60, arid costs, petty theft, $113 and
.improper backing; Timothy costs, public intoxication, seven
Thompson, Rutland, $63, speed; days in jail; Shannon Scott, MidDavid Reeves, Rutland, disorderly dleport, $88 and casts, 11nderage
by intoxication, $80; Timothy Fife, consumpuon ; Joseph Roush,
~heshire, $52, speed; John Reit- Pomeroy, trespassing, $213 and
mire, Mason, W.Va., $25, seat belt costs, petty theft, $213 and costs.
violation, $80, traffic light violation; Estella Colburn, Shade, $80, Winners announced ·
failure to control; James Maynard
Winners of the latest Christmas
II, Mason, W.Va., $32, seat belt
Drawing,
conducted by the Middleviolatlon.
.
Community
Association were:
pan
Fined were: Christina Hannon,
Dairy
Queen,
Phyllis
Haye; Added
Pomaoy, $63 and costs, c:&gt;perating
Touch,.JaneBud;
Sears,
Jack Hawunder suspension; Tammy Quillen,
ley;
,Fru~
Pharmacy,
Owen
Kisor;
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, failure to .
Dan
s,
Ltnda
Dunfee;
Prescription
comply; Jasper Bonecutter,
Pomaoy, $63 and costs, operating Shop, Mary Jo Barringer; Mill
under suspension; William Van Street Books, Mary Manin; Valley
Meter, Mason,. W.Va., $113 and Lum~er, Randy Lee; Vaughan's
costs, public intoxication; Lance Cardinal, Katherine Riffie; Locker
Herman, Middleport, $63 and 219/Shoe (Place, Vernon Rizer;
costs, failure to comply; Scott Rus- Bahr Clothiers, Pam Looney; King
sell, Clifton, W.Va., $163 and Servistar, Misty Butcher; Ingel's
costs, gave false information to a Fum1ture~ Elden Walburn; Johnpolice officer; Keith Myers, Jr., son's Vanety, Clarice Erwin; Middleport Department Store Roberta
Long Bottom, $43 and costs, stop O'Brien.
'
sign violation; James R. Mills,
Pomeroy, $375 and costs, DUI;
Aim;~ Queen, Pomeroy, $65 and
cosJS, failure to comply; Michael
Pi=e. Pomeroy, $63 and cnsts, no
operator's license, $63 and costs.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Richard E. Disbrow, chairman of
American Electric Powei ·CO., will
retire next re-. the company said.
Disbrow, 62, said Wednesday
he.would leOre after the shareholders meeting in April. He has
worked at~ for 38 years.
"The company faces a number
of new challenges and opponunities and, In my view, it would be
preferable to step aside now ud let
those who will manage the comp;~­
ny through the 1990s and ~yond
have free rein in esta!llishing the
needed policies and programs,"
Disbrow said.
E. Linn Draper, 50, will be his
successor, the company said. Or;lper, who joined AEP as president on
March 1, was formerly chairman,
president and chief executive officer of Gulf SIBieS Utilities CO.
AEP is the parent company of

~
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CONSENTING ADULTS
ONE EVIJIIIIG SHOW 7:30

STARTING FRIDAY

SHOW TilES:
Fri.·SII.·Sun. 7:30 6 1:30
Mon. llwu Thin. Olio EWfing Show 7:30
Admillllc!n $1.50 • 441-0823

Lottery numbers
Super Lotto
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BOO E_v w ......................... 19 118
Olanning Shop.................. 16 518
City Holding ...................... 19 314
IFederal Moaul.......... ~ ......... l7 118
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Is lOW apia for t..
Qrishlas SeoSOL
9 to 5 MaL·Sat. .
1 ta 5 S11day
featlrllg Paftllettlas ill 1
colors. P"oilsettla H•ailll ·
Baskets, Holly Trees, F~iage
Baskets, Lin .d C1t Trees.
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vases.
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DollY 8elliiMI,
I -PuawQ
OHio 41781.

seven electric utilities providinjf •
service to residents in Ohio, Indi- :
ana, Michigan. Kenmcky, Virginill. :
West Virginia IOd T - .
•

COLONY THEATRE

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MASON,WV

.

••
'.

�-·
...... '

-Sports

Pomoroy-Middlepdrt, Ohio

The Daill.~~~~~~

•

·

.

All-American BartrtiiD, Marshall to
host Youngstown for national grid title .

Page

Bartrum one of four Marshall
1-AA fo.otball All-Americans
.

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

LIMmn - Phil Ratlitf, MAR·

SHALL, 6-2, 265, senior, V•i•.
Ky.; c.ey Cash, The Ciwdel, 6-1,
270, senior, Virginia Bach, Va.;
Steve MtAdoo, Middle Tennes.e
State, 6-4, 282, senior, Murfrea·
boro, Tenn.; Vic Zordan, Nonbeast
Louisian4, 6-3, 265, senior, Tiop,
La.; Lester Holmes. Jackson Swe,
6-4, 280. seniOI', Tylertown, Mi1111.
AII-purpo~e - Kenny Shedd.,
Northern Iowa, 5'9, 1~7, senior; .
Davenport, lowL
. Placeldc:ker - Dennis Durkin,
Dartmouth, 5·9, 155, senior. Port·
land, Ore.

.nermse

MIKE BARTRVM, Marshall
Second-team All-American
· Marshall tight end Mike
· Baruum (Meigs '88), son of Mr.
and Mrs. Weldon Bartrum of
:Pomeroy, was one of four Thunder·
· ing Herd players selected for this
:year's NCAA Division I-AA All·
·American football ream.
The Herd will host Youngstown
State Saturday at noon for the I-AA
title.
. Here's this year's 1-AA All;Americans.
First team
.
Offense
· . Quarterback - Michael Payton, MARSHALL, 6-1, 220, senior,
f.larrisburg, Pa.
_ • Running backs - Keith Elias,
·J&gt;rinccton, 5-11, 190, junior, Lacey
:J'ownship, N.J.; Marlcus Thomas,
: -Eastern Kentucky, 5-10, 192,
· senior, Cincinnati. ,
: : Wide receivers- Yo Murphy,
: lltaho, 5-10, 165, senior, Idaho
: Falls, Idaho; Troy Brown, MAR·:~HALL, 5-9, ISS, senior,
'-Blacksville, S.C.
; · Tight end - Darren Rizzi,
.jl.hode Island, 6-2; 224, senior,
: 'l;merson, N.J.

Llnemea .- Jeff Robinsoa,
Idaho, 6-5, 260, senior, SpokaM,
Wash.; Avery Hal!, AO::!l:.
State, 6-2, 270, aeruor.
·
Ga.; Rithard Darden, Aus&amp;in Peay
6-3, 252, senior, Charlotte, Tenn.;
Michael .Strahan, 6-.5, 267, Texas
Southern, senior, Manneheim, Germany.
Linebackers ·William
Freeney, Nonbern Iowa, 5-10 195
senior, Chicqo; Cunis
vu:
lanova, 6-0, 22.5, senior, Stratford,
Conn.; Terry Irving, McNeese
State, 6-0, 219, junior Corpus
Christi, reus.
·
Backs - Lester Smith Tho
Citadel, 5-10, 175, senior.'Kan-'
-napolis, N.C.; Dave Roberts,
Youngstown State, 6·0, 199,
senior, Glassport, Pa.; Don
Caparot.ti, Massachusetts, 5-l~.
170, semor, Damasc:us, Md.; Adrian Hardy, Northwestern State, 6-0,
184, seni1r, New Orleans.
Punter - Harold Alexander,
Appalachian State, 6-3, 220, senior,
Pickens, S.C.
Setond team

Eller:

011'-

Quarterback - Steve McNair,'
Alcorn Smr.e.
Running bllcks -Toby Davis,
Illinois State; Kelvin Anderson,
Southeast MisSOIIO Swe.
.
Wide receivers - Vinceat ·
Brisby, Northeast Louisiana; Jason
Crisiino, Lehigh.

•

:.·- ----Sports briefs-&lt;..._......,_ _
of the San Frandaco Gianis, replac:;BASEBALL
• NEW YORK (AP) - Tom ing Roger Craig who was fired
'
,:C.lavine and the Atlanta Braves ~-1.
,:moved, closer to formally announcBaker, 43, was a coach under
: i)lg a deal, agreeing on doUar fig~ ures.
Craig for the final five of his seven
:, : Glavine, a 20-game winner in seasons as manager. The Giants
: ~h of the past two seasons, would also added Bobby Bonds as fii'St·
·:be guaranteed $20.5 million for base and hitting coach and Dick
'.four years. The contraCt calls for an Pole as pitching coath.
1:0jltion year that could make the
PERRY, Okla . (AP) -The
.:pact worth $25 million for five
:j ears.
·
girlfriend of Hall of Fame pitcher
:· - In other moves, free agent Ferguson Jenkins killed herself and
·'catcher Benito.Santiago and the Jenkins' 3-year-old daughter by
: Florida Marlins finalized a two- carbon monoxide poisoninj, Noble
::year, $7.2 million contract and free County sheriff Jerry Coolt said.
:agent reliever John Candelaria
-reached agreement with Pittsburgh
Cook said an oil-field worker
::On a one-year deal for $760,000.
found the bodies of Cynthia
.: The Pirates also agreed with Takielidine, 44, and Samantha
: shortStop Jay Bell, who had been Jenkins in a car on a little-traveled
· eligible for salary arbitration, on a oil lease road Tuesday afternoon.
-pne-year contract for $2:6 million.
He said Takieddine had connectod
a vacuum sweeper hose from the
: SAN FRANCISCO (AP) e~haust to the interior of the car
~usty Baker was named manag~r and !Otked the doors.
'

.

Ci'Whl; LcCorey Harvest. Alaba- sc.; Rodney lbnison. Wr:stenl Uliaois; Rudy Fuller, Ten-

IIAM.

u.e- - Ra •
Gr~a~linJ Sta-.; IC

Lai
M
=
wr at ·
--~-·
VMI: ... "

1

;_
n

I

.Anie,

-s-..
P
-

H.4at,

• Nardi·
"--£
..

c:mArilua
'l'llinla.

-JDjonis
- --

J n

Terry Belden, North·

or

' 411-pua I _: Dmd ,.,.._.,!.
f"'
Silk
' "~....
f'lllcekldler - Scott O~r­

&amp;item KentiiCky.
Linebackers - Marcus Evans,
Youngstown State; Beau Smith,
Northern Arizona; Mike Caldwell,
Middle Tennessee State.
Backs - Warren Mcintire,
Delaware; Marcus Durgin, Sam·
ford; Bri'an· Randall, Delaware
State; Chris Parrott; James Madi·
son.
.
Punter - Rob Sims, PenQsylvania.
·

Todd Harkins, Wcar.em Carolina;
Matt Irvin, Southwest Missouri

Sr.re.

AH-p•rJIOie - Kerry Hayes,

WCIIenl carolina.

Plaeekitktr - Jeff Wilkins,

Y~Srar.e.

.

Qurlerbck -Jay Fiedler,
Dad•Milh.
meilr, Newt • ~ . - .
R
• I '-Is- James John·
- . JxbcW! SIIIC; Carl Tremble,
I t t•ft - 0. Dec, Ealan F - .
llli110is; Ta. Mc:Donltl, Holy
Wille rueinrs. Rod
Cross; L.ao_I Tltmapsoo, Bootlles, Rithmond; Herb
YOUIJI,IIOWD State.
Dclawae S.:-.._, ~ WillTiiM ftll -Sieve Dirt. Mid1
E•teaW a· p• ,
'
n e SlaiC.
.......... -lric.JoM- 6: 1i
1 • am- LMce HaasUJ, The
R;chmaed; Dwa,. GOt.., N~
CiJidd; J faCIIS SpeaS. Norlhwest·
HMiplllire; ltAIIa s.a, Alliin
Tauiw:e ~.The ern Suu:; Jody Schnua, Idaho;

.......

Defense
La-ea - Alex Mash, Georgia Southern;· Matt Morrill,
Delawa'c; Randy Housron. Middle
Tenllessee State; Chad Bratztc,

BAR'I'RVM PULLS IN PASS • Meigs High Scbool.11raduate
Mike Bartnam pulls in ooe or his 60 passes ?his season In a playoff
game against Eastern Kentutky. Mike and tbe Thundering Herd
will battle Youngstown State ror the Division 1-AA Natioanl cbam.
pionship this Saturday iu Huntingtoo. Bartrum was named second
team AH·America Wednesday. (Sentinel Photo by Dave Harris.)

a.u-

Lemie~x

says image
suffers after a"est

'"

Quebec defeats Montreal ·
:S-1, move into second place

"It was cti?llinly • unlortunalc:
for evaybocly involved,"
(miciP said Wcdne""'Y- "It's a
c:lolc!t c;ase. Now da it's over I'm
001 goinc ID talk lilxiUl it.''
Lemieux dncked the news
media for scvaal weeks, making
himself -alable ID .swer even
hockey qi'C 51ions Until Wednesday, be lllld not addR:ssed the incident. He agrec:d his image was
biiiiiCII by die (18111icil)'.
I
. ·s-willllk.....- · "It cenainly didn't belp," he
c.-prt 7
said. "Ewry lime you have some
Aa&amp;horilics lallf cleteraioed alleprinu abollt ,oanelf being
tbere ,_., wiiW • r ev· ' c10 iawhal in a phing lile ?hat, it's
PIII'IUC ctlarpt. Qaiu dieD IIJIID llart , _ repo«e6oo. But I
releued ~ die M'= •a North think we came out pret?y good
Sran for vialatiq nda ..t whea Ill die faas were OIL· ·
remains•! ...
'
,PiiiSIUitGH (AP)- Mlrio
1...e111ieu c filled ... llil iluge
suffced willa die PI' I•ab Pal·
guias 111.,...ee pla,er liDked
pulmtly 10 die ia 1 ipioa of a
rape c:t..p ... m II
Din Qaiaa, a b
Palpins
player, Wll ~ ia M'~
after ..._
sai41dle .... beeo
asuulted ll tile· Peapiu' tam
bore! in BloiRti...... ~ lalec
said tile iKideM oc~ in

sjhJMjcwl

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Many Bargains Throughout The Store.

•

.

CHRISIItJfiS CHECK. UST0

212 EAST Ulll STREET e POMEROY, OH, ·
·OPEN UNTIL 7:00P.M. UNnL DEC. 23rd; SUNDAY 12-5
·•

FOil TMT SPECNIL PERSOtt. ~ •
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CHRISTMAS EVE

"·

SHOES • PURSES •
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SHOE PLACE211 N. Second Ave.

•

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Midcleport. Oh.

with Headlight

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Sugg. ~ u~ l'iico -,o9"

• Total $1J11em
Pe:formonce•• 810
• 4-1-l'ou?omatlc
helgl\t oc!justment
• Deluxe top.lool con-

THANKS MEIGS COUNTY
To All Organizations, Groups And Individuals For Volunteering
Your Help Together.... we Are Making A World Of Difference ·
.

:X ,.. .:..Cocmllllator
·

COtliTY OFPICIALS

Mike Swisher-Dept. Human services
William Wickline • Auditor
James Soulsby - Sheriff
· : . Phil Roberts - Engineer
Ted Warner -Highway Supt.
John Jacoba - Health Dept.
Keith Little • Health Dept.
Bob Byer - B.K.S.•
·

fiffhsOOsOJ&amp;r~mt~fic~

David loblentz - Chairman .
S~ila Curtis - Garden Clubs
Charl.. Barrett Jr. - Truatee
Robert Boven - Education
Victor Brown - Historian
Roy Miller - Agriculture
Pat O'Brien - County Judge
John Riebel - Co. School Supt.
John Rice - Extension (Ret.)
lelth Wood - Wildlife Officer

PROGIAM CONTRIIU'I'OIS

Jay Hall, Jr . (Jayaar)
Gallia/Wellston Landfill
Pepsi Cola Co , (Atheas)
Racine Home National !lank
Farmers Bank &amp;Savina• Co.
Kroaer Company Pleuere' Reetaurat

p_,.,

no, L"o '• !1iua

Powell'• Super vai•
:Fruth Pharmacy
Big l!end POodland
Pizza But
Vaughan's Cardinal
Crow's Family Raetaurant
Ken's Appliance Service
SUDDerfield Reetauraat
Forked Run Coneuli•
Sugar Run Mille

'

OUR PROGIAM T1I1 JUl .

•
•

888 Road Milea Cleaned
6,638 Baa~of Tra•h Collected
53 Illeaal Duapsites cleaned by · pro1r ..
19 Illeaal 'Dumps cleaned by Offenders
11 Litter Citation•
,
• Non-litter Citations
S lfarnina•
1,253 Bra. Coa.unity Service (Offandera)

· FUNDID BY:
Ohio DepartMnt of Natural Resources
.
Division of Litter Prevention and Recyelina
George v. Voinovich, Governor

GilD !IOG'P

• MaJ'Dr/Villap c-c:tls ' of tllddleport,
r-r!'Y, bctae, lntl end end Syracuse
. louU of Te lill' Tta~ ill Iedford,
a..ter, CoJ.J.Ida, 'elw·oa. Letart,

·r::
• '*illel ..
hit '

Ot

. . . .,

tool storage

_.....

.•·---Deg-......
....,.,,.

SUfMIMMS

. J-• Proffitt - 0. D. 0. T.

au.-.

nectiofllor all abo'le-

, ftoor cleaning needs
• Conlf8lltent ottoched
(0081-910)

-fl., f'l2llrrl., 11111111'.IICUIIII .
........ IIIZZII

SPECIAL THANKS:
DIVISION OF LITTER PREVENTION AND R!CYCLING •••• Nulu Pellet- Dhttlet:· I
~ARD OF COUNTY COIIUSSIONERS ••• Ricbari J - - n..u' r+i t&amp;
AGHJHV SOLID Wi,STE DISTRICT. • • Lance Wileen, Dlreetw

Swfwlhole
•-···
j

11"111

• c_,:.nl 1oo1 o1otago

I

• --"Kille"
Nouie wHti headlgnl
I&gt;NIIIe&lt;l edge cleanlng
on both atdea

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GRAPEVINE, Te,xas (AP) · Commissioner Paul Tagliabue may
have gotten over lhe biggest hmdle
to end the NFL' s five-year labor
stalemate' by convincing the 28
owners that a negotiated seutement
is far preferable to one imposed by
a coun.
"! would prefer to negotiate a
- collective bargaining agreement
· without a unilateral plan that we
impose and without it being being
imposed by the court," said Art
Modell, owner of the Cleveland
Browns.
After two days of frustration,
: Tagliabue might have broken a
· · deadlock among the owners
Wednesday by helping convince
· them to accept the basic elements
· of a settlement with the players that
. includes free agency and a salary
cap for the flrst time.
The end of the session capped
tWO days Of meetings where there
seemed at times to be more dispuiC
among the various factions·of own·
ets than between Tagliabue and the
plarers' representatives.
'What I flnd amusing about it
all is that they make progress with
themselves. But they have to make
progress with us," Jim Quinn, the
chief negotiator for the players,
said by telephone from New York.
Quinn left here Tuesday night
along with Gene Upshaw, executive director of the NFL Players
Association, after spending the day
trying to explain the new plan to a
seven-member committee of owners empowered to reach a deal.
But when he lef~ there appeared
to be only three fum votes on tl)e
deal.
So' Tagliabue and the committee

INGElS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
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explained the session to all the
owners on Wednesday, followed
by the owner$_ explaining their
positions. Accordmg to several
accounts, all 28 owners or rheir
,representatives stated their position.
The·consensus: get an agreement with the players rather than
leave it to Judge David Doty, who
presided at the trial at which the
restricted "Plan B" system was
thrown out. Doty has jurisdiction of
the various suits filed in the case
and ::oust approve any settlement.
"I think we all want a negotiated agreement rather than leave.it JD
an outside element," Jerry Jones cif
the Dalt8s Cowboys said.
Tagliabue, who headed back to
New York, said he would be in
touch with Quinn this week to try
to iron out the differences between
the two si4es. According to the
players, all that's needed is fine
tuning; Tagliabue says there are
major changes needed.
But that could be semantics:
what's major to the owners may be
·procedural to the players, 'like the
length of contract and the transition.
" There is nothing more that we
can agree to, but can we work on
mechanics? Yes," Quinn said . ·
· "But I'm not going ro negotiate
with 28 different guys."
Tagliabue said having all 28
owners present may have made .
things eaiser.
"The distussion today was really the first time we've discussed
the labor issue together since
May," he noted. "I think we came
out with a clearer idea of what we
need to do for a consensus."

Se tlnel ~y Davponde
Harrist •
.
n
orres . en .
Marshall Um~erstty . ahd
Youngstown State will meet fer the
second time in two years for the
NCAA I·AA National Cham pionship !II MarshaU University Foot·
ball Stadium.
·
· Youn11stown, State defeated
~I tn the ntle game last year
m Statesboro, Ga. by 11 ~of 2517. HUI)tingtt&gt;n illlthid a couple of
other ~ities last February to be the
host ~1ty of the .game. ¥arsball is
18-1 m the stadium which opened
last year.
Marshall advanced the the title
game ~y aefeating Yankee Confer·
ence Utle holder Delaware by a
storeof28-7.
Youngstown earned it's shot at a
second straight title by defeating
Gateway Conference champion
Northern Iowa.by a 19-7 score.
.
J'he teams have one common
opponent this season, The Ciradel.
Marshall handed rile Bulldog,'l their
ftrst loss of the year 34-13, while
YSU won a 42-17 game in the
playoffs.
,
.
·
Mars~all s ·h1gh powered
offense IS led by Michael Payton
who Monday was named the win·
ner. of ~he Walter Peyton Award
wh1ch IS the 1-AA Player of the
Year. Payton is ihe Southern Conference:s career passing Iei1&lt;ler.
. Mike I\artrum, a. 1988 Meigs
H1gh graduate contmues to be a
. vital part of the Marshall high pow.

v

,..

7

eredSouthernoffensive. Banrwn eariled All· T~jan head coach Jon Robinson noon , with the kickoff set for
Conference honors for the will be the analyst.·Pre-game is at 12:06.
second straight year and for good
•
reason. Bartrum is second in
receiving on a team loaded with
outstandin~ receivers. The 6-4 250
~d seruor co-caplain has ~ed
m 60 passes on the year for 664
yarc!s ~eight touchdowns. He is
also a h1ghly rated blocker. Mike is
second on the team ·in receiving
behind Troy Brown who has pulled
in 91 passes.
The 60 receptions puts Mike in
sixth place for passes caught in a
season behind former Herd stars
Mike Barber, Sean Doctor and
Brian Dowler. For his career Bart
has pulled in 107 passes for 1171
yards and nine touchdowns. The
107 receptions put him sixth on the
all time Marshall list, he undoutedly would be higher on the career
~iving list had he not missed the
ennre 1990 season due to a serious
knee injury . Bartrum who was
llilffied second team All-American
Wednesday, also doubles as the
ream's long snapper.
'
Saturday's game is sold out, but
two thousand standing room only
tickets will go on sale Saturday at
7 a. m. at the Marshall University
ticket offlce. All SRO tickets will
be $15 and no phone orders wiU be
accepted.
From the Employees of
Saturday's contest will be tele·
vi~ national by CBS. Jim Nantz
wdl provide the play-by-play· former Los Angeles Rams and 'usc
'
856 3rd Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.

MERRY
CHRISTMAS
TO ALL
OUR FRIENDS!

'

,} J,J{)
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07
per qt.

limi11 2

....
··=~~~

29!!5
39

110 mo.

·o··
1
....

'Jenkins' gi·rlfriend, daughter
.killed by carbon monoxide
'

I 1

........
. ' ,. .. -

By KEN RAPPOPORT
Hex tall, who made 35 saves. .
AP Hockey Writer
"Hextall played really good for
The "Battle of Quebec?" No us - that was the key," said
contest so far.
Sundin, who had a goal and three
"This was a big victory for us, assists.
but now we'll probably have to· Wba!frs 6, Capitals 3
play evenbetter than that tonight."
Terry Yak:e scbred twice as
· said Quebec forward Mats Sundin · Hartford jutnped tQ a 5•0 lead and
after the Nordiques beat the Mon- held on to beat Washington in the
treat Canadiens 5-1 Wednesday first half of a home-and-home
· night.
' series with the Capirals.
The victory at the Montreal
The loss ended the Capitals'
:Forum continued the Nordiques' seven-game winning streak.
domination over their provincial Oilers 4, Canutks 2
rivals this season. They've won all
Shorthanded goals by Esa
·four games they've played, includ· Tikkanen and Craig MacTavish
ing two in the exhibition season. , against a lax Vancouver ·defense
. They'll shoot for another victory ' led the Oilers over the Canucks.
tonight when they play host to the
Tikkanen beat goaltender Kay
· Canadiens in the second game of Whiunore at 7;59 of the ftrst period
the home-and-home 5eries.
on a two-on-one breal&lt;.
_ . The Nordiques moved into a tie
The Canucks c11me back on a ·
·with the Boston Bruins for seoond goal by Petr Nedved. But Scott
:place in the Adams Division, two Mellahby scored ~ power-play goal
· points behind Montreal. Boston and MacTavish a shorthander at
-holds three games in hand over 17:08, giving the Oilers a 3·1 lead
'both reams.
at the 11nd of one period and their
In other NHL action, it was eventual winning goal.
·
Hartford 6, Washington 3; Edmon- ' Lightning 5, Sharks 4
ton 4, Vancouver 2, and Tampa
John Tutker's second goal of
Bay 5, San Jose 4 in overtime.
the game 'at 2:5.3 of overtime lifted
Martin Rucinsky had two goals the Lightning over San Jose,
while Joe Sakic and Andrei · extending the Sharlcs' losing streak .
Kovalenko also scored for the to nine games.
.
Nordiques._{F-1.0-6), w~o ended a · Tucker capitalized on a give1four-game' mid trip: 6n which l'they
a\vay by defenseman Sandis Ozol- .
earned seven of eight points.
. nish, went in alone and beat Jeff
The Nordiques got a standout Hackett.
performance from goaltender Ron
·

Commissioner Tagl'iabue may
· have broken NFL deadlock

BAGS • SCHOOL JACKETS •
SOCKS • GIFT ITEMS a1d

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The Dally Sentlnel-Page-5

: PERRY, Okla. (AP) - One
:year after a car accident killed his
·wife. the girlfriend of Hall of Fame
:pitther Ferguson Jenkins killed
'herself and Jenkins ' 3' year-old
·daughter with carbon monoxide.
: According to Nobel County
'Sheriff Jerry Cook, Cynthia
Takieddine told Jenkins she was
leaving their ranch near Guthrie to
go Chrisunas shopping, then drove
herself and Samantha Jenkins abour
35 miles to a little-traveled oil·
lease road.near Perry.
.
Takieddine, 44,' ran a vacuum
sweeper hose from the exhaust pipe
!0 the car's interior and locked the
/IOOrs, C0111k said.

StiR

I

"She set the little girl in there
and both of them expired," Cook
said.
Medical examiners say the two
had been dead about three hours
when an oil•field worker found
them Tuesday afternoon. .
Takieddine left a note, but it did
not explain why she wanted to end
her's and the girl's life, the sheriff
said. He refused to reveal the
·
note's contents.
"It's very bad whel) someone
takes their own life,·but when they
rake someone else's life, especially
someone innocent, it's terrible,"
Cook said.

.....
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OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
StOrt hOurt: 1:30 1.m. to I p.m. Mondly through Frldey.
8:30 un. to 7 p.m. Slturdey, Wid I 1.m. to 5 p.m. Sundey

GAWPOUS

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' DlcembM' 23, 1112.

ale·
ill

�•
rhursday.~bet17,1992

-

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

I

Sentinel

December 17 1992

Ohio

···········-······-----------

ilamilton hits 21·as Rio Grande dumps Fairmont State 88-62
A team with a new playing philosophy needs time to develop a
style, and signs that the Univenily
of Rio Grande Redwomen are
about to hit their stride wece seen
Wednesday at Lyne Center.For their 12th outing of lhe season and last home gam~ prior to
Christmas break, Dave Smalley·s
club ovCI'Cim!C a dogged Fairmont
State {JI/.Va.) defense to stop the
Falcons 88-62. Center Lori Hamilton outranked all scorers with 21
points and snatchedl1 of Rio
Grande's 57 rebounds, which
Smalley said proves his team has
found a way to es&amp;ablish its inside
game.

With that goal accomplished given night, they can be scoring Falcons, but Smalley's bellcb came assists, Crouse led w~.;!fllt and
sill for
Ia to finish the job, holding its Amanda Meeks contri
coming first on the agenda, "we well into double tiJ urea."
theviaiiQrl.
.
Backin&amp; up ~am ilion's high tumovers to 17 while the visitors
played one of our better games of
. The Redwomen (10-2) will face
the 1101101110 dare," lhe Ciollch corn· .scorin&amp;o were Ritter, Michelle endured30.
Maacheater
(Ind.) Saturday at a
"I am tickled pink about our
· ~ "WWien the kids came off Crouse and Stephanie Gudorf,
lhe beach to heJp lhe IIIIUn, they whose shooting skills cime into kMpl• our turnOvers in lha 10en11;· ~eutral site - Memorial High
elevued our level ol play. Ginger play as the Redwomen tried to SmaUty said. "It wu a physical 3choolln Sl Maeys, Oudolf's alma
Smith, Kim Sowers llld Stacey Rit- shake off the Falcons in lhe game's game, but I thiU we handled it nwer. Fainnont State (2-6) wUI be
ter all did a llemelldclus job of it. fust 10 minutes. Fairmont State, wen. Fairmont State is not a bad idle for the holidays and resumes
and even tho people who didn't coached by Jim Brinkman, kept the ball club, just a liu!e down on its• IICiion at home Jan. 5 against West
score u much as those three did margin low and trailed by three luck because some of their key Virginia Wesleyan.
BoX score:
(19-16) with 8:09 left in the ftrst ptaxtn have been inJun:cL
malte important contributions .
Gena Norris had four assists and half. thanks to a 12-point. seven'Both teams played extremell , RIO GRANDE (88) - Kim
Tricia Collin&amp; sot six ldlounds.
board r.erformanc~ from Jess.ic_a hard defensively 'in lhe flfSt hal , sowers. 4-1·9: Gena Norris, •142;
"When the game was sealed Abbuh who domtnated the vtst· but our strengths ....:. depth, condi· Stacey Ritter, i\-1-IS; Michelle
away, I looked at the bench and I tors' g~e throughout the period.
tioning and an unselftsh style of Crouse, S-1-0-13; Amy Reynolds,
Consecutive goals by Hamilton play-- helped us 10 bury them," he · 1..0-2; Merriaa Blevins, 0-3-3; Triwas conftdeat our kids could do the
cia Collins, 2-0-4; Stephanie
job," Smalley added. "On any and Ritter helped put Rio Grande added
Overall, the kedwomen were Gudorf, 4-2-0-14; Lori Hamilton,
ahead and Gudorf's three at 4:15
gave ihe Redwomen their biggest 42.9 percent from lhe field, neuing 8-5-21; Ginger Smith, 1-3-5.
lead yet at 31 -22. Empl~ying ~ts . 36 of 84 attempts, .including throe TOTALS 33-3·13-88.
FAJRMONT STATE (61)own defense and outshooting Fau- of 15 from the outside for 20 permont State by more than 6 )lCI'CCnt cent. The Falcons notched 36.5 Shelli Cannon.J 0·1·1; ._,uric Her·for the half (40.9-34.3), Rio Grande percent (27-74) and connected for rington, 7-2·1o; Amanda Meeks, 1led the Fslcons by 17 at the inter- JUSt one of two attempts at the 2-4; Lori Smith, 1-1~3; Frances
Wilson, 3-1-7; Crystal FieldS, 1-1mission.
·
three.
.
WIIJ'I'lon 116, CUppen 114
o-s:
Becky Geisinger, 2-0-4; KelThe
Redwomen
built
on
the
.
Rio
Grande
also
got
the
bi'ealc
at
Golden State swept a home-and· momentum in the remaining half to the free throw line, sinkin~ 13 of ley Longerbeam,
3-0-6; Jessica
home series for lhe first .tiJpe in 17
AbbUhl,
,.
8
-0,16.
TOTALS
26·1·7·
26
for
ent
to
lead
at
11:03
on
a
three
from
Faumont
years, overcoming a five-point Crouse. ·
62.
.
.
Herrington,
who
State's
percent
(7·12).
The
deficit In overtime by scoring had four
in the ftrst half, visitors
47 rebounds, 14 of
.~:::::;,scot·e: Rio Grande
seven of lhe list nine pcimlll at Los
thom
Abbuhl. On
broke
out
another
12
to
lead
the
Angeles.
.
.
·
· Jeff Grayer led the Warriors to
their founh straight victory with 21
points, while Tim Hlrdaway had
19 poinlll and 10 assists. Ron Harper scored 31 points and Qanny
Manning and Mart Jackson each
had 21 for Los.Angeles. .
Tr!lil Blazen 100, Nugets 99
Clyde Drexler scored 25 points
and Terry Porter forced a key
turnover with 3.5 seconds remain·
ing as Portlarid won at Denver and
handed the Nuggets tbcir sillth conseclllive los$.
The Blazers pulled away from a
76-76tie into a 9S·86lead on
Porter's jum_per with 5:30 remaining
Ja~ 93, Hornets 91
Karl Malone scored 21 points,
including five in the fmal two minutcs, and Utah ,improved its road
record to 7-2 by winning !II Charlotte.
·
,·
Malone's five conse~utive
points enabled the Jazz 'to extend ·
an 88-861ead to 9H8 with 1:06 to
play.
.
Jeff Malone scored 18 points for
the Jazz.
Paeen 114, Celtlcs 91
Detlef Scbrempf scored 18
poinlll and Vern Fleming, subbing
for injured point guard Pooh
Richardson, had 15 p0ints and
eight assiSill for Indiana. .
·
Reserve center Alia Aticlclnaby
SCOI'e!l a season-hig!\16 for the visiting Cellicl, who made only 20.9
flm.CIIl of their field goat attempts
m the first half and 33 percent for
· the game. They missed ·19 of their
final 20 shots In lhe first half.
Cavaliers 115, '76en 97
Brad Daugherty scored 26
points and reserve guard Gerald
Wilkins had 19 as Cleveland continued Philadelphia's woes at
home.
.
Hersey Hawkins had 30 points
for the Sixers.
STOPPED SHORT - Denver center Dikemen' 100·99 victory over the Nuggets iD an NBA
Cleveland held a 46-35 advanbe Mutombo, left, pimaced u ,be ru Into Port·
ga~e Wednelday In Denver's ·McNlcbols Sports
tage midway through the second
land center Mark Bryant OD the way to the bas·
Arena. (AP)
quarter and maintained a 54-45
ket durlna the foarth quarttr of the Trall Blaz·
halftime lead behind Wilkins' I 1
points on S-for-6 shooting.
·Pistoas 89, ~wks 88 .
Deuoit beat Atlanta for the sec.ond straight night on BiU Laimbeer's tip-in with 0.8 seconds

Pallas Maveri~ks snap LA Lakers
five-game winni~g streak 102-95
By 'fbe Associated Press

a losing streak like they have and
still play as hard as they did.• tha
. t
.Cilnsec'!'ive ~scs and a four-gll!lle . says a lot for the teJ~m,.'' ~akers
rpad trip commg up, were achmg coach Randy Pfund satd. They
(~a vic!D'Y·
,
o~tworked us and s_eemed ~eter·
·. Rookies Walter Bond and Sean mmed to get over their woes. ·
Rooks came thro~gh wheri the
Mavericks needed them WednesElsewhere in the NBA, it was
day night, carrying Dallas to a 102- Cleveland 115, Philadelphia 97;
95 victory that snapped the Los Utah 93, Charlotte 91; Detroit 89, '
A,ngeles Lakets' five-game win- Atlanta 88; Indiana 114, Boston 91;
~streak.
·
Portland 100, Denver 99; and
• 'We needed this game desper- Golden State 116, the Los Angeles
aiely," coach Richie Adubati&gt; said. Cliwers 114 in ovenime.
: The victory ended a ~iserable
Rooks was 10 of 13 from the
Sll'eldl for the Mavencks smce they field and added nine rebounds for
.~Atlanta 113-1~5 on Nov. 14, the Mavericks.
thetr only other wm thts season.
Los Angeles was on the verge of
Curing the next 12 games, Dallas · blowing the game open, starting the
lbst eve~y game by at least 11 third quarter with a 10-0 run for a
p,;~mts, wtth an ~verage margm of 66,55 lead. Dallas failed to score
Clefell of 20.3 pomts.
over the first 4:25 of the dtird quarBond,a~guard,SCMldall 'ter, committing five turnovers and
of bls 21 oolnts m th': second half, missing all f\llll' shots.
111111 RookS nlatched his career-best
But the Mavericks pulled 10 84fith 22 points, and the ~~ricks 80 after three quarters as Bond
held the Lakers to 11 pomts m the scored 13 points m the period.
~ quarter.
,
Sedate Threatt paced lhe .Lakers
.
Any team. that_ s _gone through with 23 points.
·
: The Dallas Mavericks, with 12

/

'

l)rowns must win Sunday

.to stay alive for playoffs
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -

The

Oeveland BIOWIIS. who must beat
Hou~

on Sunday. to keep alive
playoff hopes, could face
with up to four newcomon defense.
·
back Latin Berry,
the Browns in late
. rb-siJIIIC4 Wednesday.
.
a r~~stcr spot left vacant
Wbell defensive back Alan lialler
• placed on injuml reserve with .
a~ hamstring.

·

.

Added to lhe practice squad on
Wedneaday were Ken Swilling, a
rookie safety and linebac1ter
waived by Tampa Bay in its final
peseuon cut, and cornerback'Herbie Anderson. He was waived by
Kansas City in the preseason after
. ~ndlna most of last year on
Houston's practice squad.
... 'The signings came one day after
the Browns added defensive back
Alfred Jackson to the regular roster
iD place of safety Stevon Moore,
who injured his shoulder in Sunday's loss~ Detroit. .
.
Defens1ve coordmatof'Nlck
Sabin said even the brief experi·
once with the Browns might be
help,ful.
·
'Fonunately, we were able to
bring some guys back wlio know
something about our system, who
were here,for some portion of our
lltll'!l! or preseason," Saban said.
• 'We have to play the hand
thai's dealt us. There's a lot of
MwniiY. to overcome but we have

confidence· in the people we're
playing. Hopefully, we can get
them to do the things they need to
do to win the game.''
Both Swilling and Anderson
could be elevated to the regular
roster by Sunday's game, coach
Bill Beli~hick said, dependiJ!g
upon the health of several othc;s tothe secondary.
Cornerbacks Frank Minnifield
and Terry Taylor are both listed as
questionable for Sunday's game.
.Minnifield has a pulled groin that
forced ·him to miss last Sunday's·
game in Dettoit and Taylor has an
ankle injury sustained in the game.
Safety Eric Turner is also questionable because of a spramed
ankle that has been bothering him
for several
"We'll just have to do the best
we can back there with what we've
got," Belichick said. ·:we don't
have any choice. I don •t think the
game's going to be postponed."
Berry played as a running back
at Oregon but was converted. to
cornerback by. the Los Angeles
Rams after they took him in the
third round of the 1990 draft. The
Browns signed him as a free agent
in 1991 and used him mostly on
special teams last year.
"1 don't know how bad all the
injuries are," Berry said. "I'm sure
if they have to put me in the game,
they'll keep it simple. Some of thC
swff they've gone over was famil·
iar 10 me.''

weeks.

re~wb, who have lost 11 of

12 games to the Pistons, scored .
only 28 points in the secon\1 half, .
tying a franchise low, and 13 in the ·
fourth quarter.
·
Joe Dumars scored 25 points for
Detroit and Dennis Rodman had 21
rebounds, giving him 20 or more
rebounds in nine of I0 games since
returning from a suspension.

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C_ollege scores.

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• FREE DELIVERY
•GOOD. SELECTION

LX· 5 DOOR

"TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) with 17 points. Bill Edwards, ninth ing all sil!. of Rickey Dudley's
Wright State learned the hard way in the country in scoring with a points.
that there's no place like home for 26.8 average coming in, was limit·
Two free throws by Doug Etzler
the holidays- or any other time of ed to 16 points on 7 of 20 shooting gave the Buckeyes the lead for
year.
from the fteld, Edwards scored 45 good at 48-47 with 14:46left. FunThe Raiders beat its last four points in a 28-point blowout of derburke. then tooli a court-long
opponents by an average of 30 Morehead State.
pass from Etzler for an easy layup .
poutts, all at their own Nut.ter Cen"We helped Ohio State's After Woods banked in a runnin•
ter.
defense by quick-shooting some," 10-footer, Dudley scored on a tipBut the Buckeye's Lawrence Underhill said. "He (Edwards) in, two free throws liJid then hit a
Funderburke $COred a career-high missed a couple of shots he usually · shot inside to make it 56-49. Jamie
28 points and Ohio State's ,defense knocks down."
Skelton stole an errant inbounds
held the Raiders 40 points under
Wright State went on a 9-0. run pass for another layup and the lead
their average for a 76-55 victory ear!)' in the second half to take a never dropped below 10 points
Wednesday night.
47-46 lead on Mike Nahar's hook again.
"Jt's ~ to play_at home," shot from the right baseline at the
"1 think it was a matter of us
Wri~h('«. ' -'eoleh ·Ratpli"'Urider- ' 15:03 mark. But Ohio State scored siep~ing things up in the second
hill said with no small degree of 12 of the next 14 ooints - inclpd- ·half, • said Dudley, who added six
sarcasm after Ohio State overcame
·
rebounds and ·did most of the
defensive work on 1!-!wards in the
a one-point defiCit with IS minutes .
left to outscore the Raiders 30·8 to"
Ia$t 20 minutes.
the finish.
- .
"We know what defense is all Wednesday's College scores
about. We practice here every day By The Associated Press
and we know how to play here," EAST
said Funderburke after Ohio State
lona 74, Wagner 67
held the Raiders two only two field .
Long Jsiand U. 80, Boston U. 77
goals over that IS-minute stretch.
Princeton 50, J'lf. Carolina St 41
Wright State (4-2) .had come so&amp;~~ Florida 68 , Florida A&amp;M
into the game ninth in the nation in
scoring, averaging 96 points .a 66
game. But Ohio State, itself 13th in
Georgia Southern 70, Eckerd 59
the country in scoring defense, limGeorgia Tech 75, Georgia 67
.lte d t.he R a1'd ers to 36
LSU
93, Campbell71
. fercent
Louisville
93 • DePaul 88
shooung from · the ftc! - 18
SW Loilisiana 87 • Loyola Mary
. _
points Iinder their average.
"We only took 49 $hots, and ir mount 73
was an up-and-down game," said
Tn.-Chattanooga 98, Sewanee
Ohio State coach Randy ·Ayers. 43
,
I
•'Bu! &lt;!Ur defense was good to us
Winthrop 92, Lynchburg 63
tonight"
·
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MIDWEST
.
Funderburke hit 11 of 15 shots
Ohio St. 76, Wright St 55
from the field and 6 of 10 free
S.lllinois 57, St. Louis 44
throws. He added 10 rebounds ,
Wis.-Green Bay 62, Toledo 50
four bloc!lcd shots, two steals and SOUTHWEST
·
an assist'
~ ~ .·Litde Roc~ 88, Tenn.-MarAiex Davis added p points and
· Jimmy Ratliff had a career-high 10.
Lamar 100, !'Y1cNecse SL 76
Mark Woods led Wright State
SW Texas St..73, Georgta St 62

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Buckeyes finish strong to
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·' INBOUNDS REACH • Wright Sllite's Mike . . in bounds ~ass during first balf action in St.
NahJ!r, right, foul'l Ohio State's Lawrence'Fu~­
John Arena, Columbus, WedDelday night. Obio
,d erburke as Funderburke reaches tor an
State came trom behind to win 76-SS. (AP)

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1993 FORD ESCORT

Credit.terms

lav-a-WOVt

Motterccwd
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The Daily Sentiriel

By The Bend

Thuradly, December 17, 1112
PIQI 8

.Overweight woman says she
:very active; defends others
; Dear Au 1.&amp;"'41'1: I have a
• ....... Cor "Frlllk in Fnldaick.•
S.D~•· wbo c:slled women wbo ~
Cmyiaa Ollila wei&amp;bt "eddicted,
llzJ. indilfCii ll,lelf-inrlulpal, rrick
or jUit pllin "'Pid •
ANN LAJIIDIII
. ' I 1111 aevenl po!IIMII OV71 weiaht
•IJH, IMAillllio
,...,,.. 7 . .
and lind or being Jumped • 111e
lime Cllep)' wilh lazy. IIJICiring
llobs. I Wid 40 bows 1 week, keep
in immaculue haute. • c.e or
two c:hikhn llld I husblnd,llld find
lllile for visiu to 1.gym ro work out. PrW 'a well-deu veri clop in die
lam the only woman on my blodr; cllopl. He Neded it
who c:uiS lhe grass, washes die~.
D'ar A.. I.aaden: I hive
clesns 9111 the garaae, paints the worked it 11w enfOIQ!IJWII Cor 20
house and kDowl how to rlisnulntle yem. 1 niiCI dill •prayer in your
ID llhove-gr11181d swimming pool. · column on April27, 1977, and ha~
.. When I liD doing diny work ~ it in my walla ever. Iince.
around lhe house, I adniit that I look My wife keeps a copy with bc1r It
like a mess, but not many people all ~. 100.
wear an evening gown to wriSh the With so much violence out
car. At wodt, I wear nice outfitS, there, we all need u many payers
rpakeup, jewelry and heels. I can as we can get PI- publish it
....,.. to IDY situation from digging apin. - DANGEROUS DUTY IN
1 hole in the baCkyard to atrenrling a BINGHAMTON, N.Y.
fmnal party.
DEAR liiNG: Here it is. Thanks
~ Not all oYUWeight people are for asking. Many thingi have ·
iiuing in (ront of the television changed Iince 1917. rm addina "and
(eeling sorry for themselves women" to line 16.
and stuffing lheir race with food.
We are vital members · or the
My Prayer For Policemen
community who just happen to
0 Almighty God,
liaYe 10111e atra weipt - "FED"
Whose great power and etema1
.tiP IN LOUISIANA
Wisdom emlncea the imiWII!IC,
DEAR FED: Tbanb for livinl 1 Warch over Ill policemen llld

Ann

Landers

c..-..•,.••""

Law enfOI1liiiiiCUt ofticets eYU)'·

wlaere.
.. l'n*U dian fnlm hlrm

In die paf~~~~Ua ollheir duty

To *Ill crime. rollbecy.
Riots lllld vWenc:e.
We pray, belp them keep. our

.... .

And b!lmelllfe, day llld night
We commend lhem to your
Jovin&amp;c.e
Jlec:w• lheir duty is dqerous.
Gmnt diem llftlll1h llld
Courqe in lheif daily assign·

mcniS.

. · DelrGod.IJIIlteet lhele brave men
IIIIIWUDIIII.
Grant dian your llmighty protec·
lion,
Unite lhem . safely wilh their

r.muw-. llflt.r duty bu ended.

Gem of the Day: Nlllhins mates ·
you a beaer lislener than hwing
your name mentioned
All alcollolproblem? How can you helP. yourself or SDrMO~ you lov~?
"Alcollolism: How 10 Recoglliu It,
How to DeDI With It, How to
Conquer It" will give you the

aruwers. Selld

tJ

sr:lf-addrr:ssed,

GEORGE'S NEW BOSS • Former heav;r·
weight boxing cbllmplon Georae Foreman; left,
and Tony Danu get ~~etber during rebeanal
of a pilot for a televiSion series. "Georae" at

Col11111bla Stadlos Wedlltldar ia Los All&amp;eles.
Foremu will have tbe lead ·role IBd Dtaua wiD

. execatiYe producer tor the aeries beina devel·
.
oped tor ABC TV. (AP photo) .·

TOPS, KOPS meet

Linnie Aleshire was the best
ll»&gt;f, busiMss-siu envelope 1111!1 a
weekly
KOPS loser and Donna
clleclcor moneyordtrfor $3.65 (this
Jacks
was
best weekly TOPS
includts postoge IJIId Mndling) 10: loser at thethe
Christmas meeting of
Alcoltol, cJo AM Ltzndtrs, P.O. Boll Ohio TOPS Club No. .570.
11562,C:~.IU.606/I.a562. ~n
Elsie King won the gadget gift
CQIIIM/a, und $4.45.)
and Trina Faulk was the fruit bas·
ket winner.
It was announced that Donna
Griggs had a baby boy.
Shirley Tyree, Middlepon, won
the Santa and Mrs. Claus.
Weelcly meetings are held every
Communlly Calendar items Club, annual ChristmaS dance, Sat- beat 7 p.m.
Tuesday with wei~n rrom 5-6
appear two dll)'ll before an event urday, 8-11 p.m., Royal Oak
p.m. and meetings
6-7 p.m. at
MORNING
STAR
•
The
Chrisr.
Resort
Music
by
Doug
Hess
Quarand the dar of that event. Items
must. be received weD Iii advance teL A snack bu((et will be served. . · mas progr~ at the Morning Star · lhe local carpenicr' s hall. Further
United Methodist Church will be information may be obtained by
to assure publication ·in the calHARTFORD,
W.VA.
•
Live
Sunday
at 10 a.m. Pastor Kenny calling Calista Searls at 992-2234
endllr.
or Cindy Faulk at 992-5638.
nativity, Saturday, 6 p.m., Fathc;r's Baker mvites the public.
House
Church,
Hart(ord,
W.Va.
THURSDAY
I
.POMEROY • Calvary Pilgrim
TUPPERS PLAiNS - Tuppers Pastor Clyde Fields invites the pubIn tbe AmeriCID Revolutloa, ConChapel, Route 143, will h.ave its aectlcut mea louabt Ill 11101t major
Plains VFW Post 9053, regular lic.
Christmas program Sunday at 7:30 campaipl and turDed back Britlab
meeting on Thursday, 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • Hope Baptist p.m. Rev, Vic50r Roush invites·the raldl oo Danbury ud otller lowDI, ·
Members urged to attend..
white CoaaecUcut prlvateen cap..
Church will have itS prCl·Schoo1 public.
tured Brltllb merdwlt lblpe;
RPTLAND • Leading Creek deparunept Christmas party SaturCHESHIRE - The annual
Conservancy District will hold its day at 7 p.m. at the church.
Christmas program at Silver Run
regular board meeting on Thursday
at.7 p.m. at lhe bolrd orfiCe.
MIDDLEPORT • Heath United Baptist Church, Cheshire, will be
Melhorlist Church will bold a sweet Suiulay at 7:30p.m. The public is
....
·
MIDDLEPOilT • Members or shop Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 invited
...
Hope Baptist Church wiD be carol· p.m. at lhe Middlepon Arts CounLONG
BOTTOM
•
A
Christmas
ing Thursday. Meet at the church at cil building. Cakes and candy will
program will be presented at the
7 p.m.
· be available,
. Long Bottom United Methodist
HENDERSON, W.VA. • Oallia Church on Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Child Conservation League, annual Twirlers Western Square Dance Everyone welcome.
... ...
Christmas dinner, Thursday, 6:30 Club, Satwday, 8-11 p.m., Render·
REEDSVILLE- Eastern High
p.m. Secret pals will be revealed soil Community Center, Henderand there will be an ornament son, W.Va. Jolm Waugh will be the School Music Depanment. annual
... ...
caller.
Otristmas concert, Sunday, 3 p.m.
exchange.
·
at the hi$h school gymnasium .
_
CHESTER • There will be a Public invrted.
CHESTER ·Junior high choir
or Chester United Methodist special meeting or Shade River
CHESTER - Ken Amsbary
Church will present "Christmas Lodge No. 453 F&amp;A¥. Chester, QR
Comes to Lone'Star Gulch" Thurs- Satwday at 7:30 p.m. with worlc in Chapter, Izaak Walton League,
day at 7:30 p.m. at the church. the E. A. degree. RefreshmentS will muzzle loader shootS, each Sunday
besci'Ved. ·
at 1 p.m. through Jan. l. Prizes are
Everyone welcome.
the same as for the other shoots the
HOCKINGPORT • There will league has. had. .
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Sprinj!S Better Health Club will . be.a round and square dance Satur·
RACINE • Racine First Baptist
have 1ts Christmas potluck Thurs- day from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
day at ihe Rock Springs United Reynolds building in Hockingpon. Church will hold a Christmas canMethodist Church at noon. Christ· Music will be by "Out or the Blue" tata Sunday at 7 p.m.
... ...
mas trays ror lhe shut-ins will be and Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. Santa Claus will be there.
Mll)DLEPORT • Hope Baptist
prepared and delivered.
Everyone welcome.
Church children and youth Christ·
mas program, Sunday, 7 p.m. The
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
...
LOTTRIOOE
•
There
will
be
a
morning
service will feature a
group or AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic Christmas dinner at lhe Lottridge Happy Birthday cake for Jesus and
· Church. Call 992-5763 for inror· Community Center on Saturday at everyone will light a candle.
6 p.m. Bring a covered dish. Everymation.
one welcome. The center is located
on Alhens County Road 53, five
FRIDAY
miles
west of Coolville.
LONG BOTTOM • Failh Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
. KANAUOA • Square dancing
will have preaching and singing
and
clogging at the DAV Building
Friday at 7 p.m. with David Dailey
The ladies of the Adult Sunday
and the Dailey Eamily. Pastor (rom 8-11 p.m. Music by Libeny
School
Class at Victory Baptist
Steve Reed invites the public. Fel- Mountaineers.
Church
recently
enjoyed a day or
lowship will rollow.
shopping
at
the
Orand
Centtal Mall
SUNDAY
in
Jfirluirsburg,
W.Va.
·
...
SYRACUSE • Santa Claus will
TUPPERS PL,'\INS - A round
.
Don
Barkman,
teacher,
provided
and square dance will be held Fri· visit the Syracuse Fire Department
day from 8-11:30 p.m. the Tuppers on Sunday at 2 p.m. to give treats the transportation.
Attending were Verenia Bark·
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 Ladies to the childlen.' The event is spon...
man,
Lois Hawley, Sandy LauderAuxiliilry. Music will be by CJ and sored by the fire department and
m!lt, Phyllis Hudnall, Lucy Hen·
the Country Gentlemen. Public ladies auxiliary.
dricks
and Frances Oldaker.
invited. ·
CHESTER • A Christmas program will be presented at the
SATURDAY
POMEROY • Hillside Baptist Chester United Methodist Church
Church Christmas program, Satur- on Sunday at 9 a.m. From 6-8 p.m.
...
day and Sunday, 7.p.m., "A Family there will be a live nativity at the
ChrislnW." Special presentation by church.
tile children.
... ...
TUPPERS PLAINS - A Christas program will be presented at
KANAUOA ·Liberty Mounthe
Tuppers Plains United
taineers will perrorm Saturday at .
Methodist
Church on Sunday at 6
the DA V Cenrec in Kmwuga.
p.m _ and at the Alfred United
POMEROY • Royal Oak Dance Methodist Church the program will

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Community calendar

H~

D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES
KARL KElLER Ill, C.P.A.
Registered Rtprtllntative

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Mlllllleport

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Almost two thousand years ago
A couple sought shelter for the
night,
But looking so unimponant
No one took heed 50 their plight.
A woman on a donkey, a tired
worried man
Their lodging forced to shift
Little was cared they'd just
turned away
The world's most priceless gift.
T'was Joseph and his wife,
Mary
So cruelly turned away
Ordained 50 bring us a savior
At the closing or the day.
And the little beast of bur(len
That borne his majesty
Our king and savior, Jesus
Christ
Who died ror you and me.

before."

SECOND GRADE READER • Bobbl Hill is pictured as
reads to the second grade ~lass at Racine Elementary during Children's Book Week. The theme was Catch a Book.
I
~:

Racine students observe
Children's Book Week
The children at Racine Elementary observed Children's Book
Week in November.
, . The theme was "Catch a Book"
with activities such as the first and
second graders doing book reports
and diaramas. The first through
sixth grades wrote s50ries and had
reading contests. The sixth graders
also shared books with the first and
second graders. ·

rir~t

In Chapter 1 reading,'
and
second $f8des created a group book
for shanng. Third grade wrote"their
own books while fourth graders
rewrote the First Thanksgiving .
The fifth and sixlh graders wrote
their own manuscript
Each room conducted their .own
activities. Badges were given to
Chapter student.s and pencils and
bookmarks ·were given to all.

A priceless gift of happiness
A gi(t of life eternal.

I~~=~~~!d~~~~b

or Middleport held its annual
Christmas meeting Wednesday
night at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. A turkey dinner was pre·
pared and served by the ladies of
the church.

Oh, precious gi(t, oh, holy gift
That journeyed on the night
Unto a lowly manger
And a star that shone so bright
God put it there to guide men
Their souls to uplift
By the birth of his only son
The world~s most priceless gift.
So listen little children
Upon that day or days
When thankrng others for their
gifts
Give Jesus Christ due praise.
And also please remember
to never cast a doubt
About the greatness or this gift
And what it's all about.

Mrs. David Cumings presided at
the brief business meeting when in
lieu of exchanging Christmas gifts,
members donated $5 to charity.
The program ror the evening
was presented by Mrs. Harry
Moore who frrst read verses from
Luke 2:4-14. She then read three
short, movi~Jg Christmas stories:
"The Fourth Wiseman" and "Do
You Hear What I Hear?" by Nor·
man Vincent Peale, and "Why
Christmas Trees Are Not Perfect"
by Richard H. Schneider.

Attending, in addition 1o those
mentioned, were Mr. and MQ .
The holy Bible tells us
Eddie Burlcett; Mr. and Mrs. FerIf we our God uplift
man Moore; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
H~ will· give to us his precious
Blakeslee; Mrs. Harold Lohse and
son
daughter, Mrs. Jennifer Sheets;
A savior, Jesus Christ.
Mrs. Grace Pratt and daughter,
Mrs . Ruth Powers, Kathryn
The world's most priceless girt
Katlfryl! Hysell, Bernice Darst,
The world's most priceles~ gift.
Mrs. Iva Powell and Mrs. Caron
Swanson.
Written by Mrs. Alpha Douglas
At the close of the meeling,
115
Mulberry
Heighls, Mrs . Cumings P-resented each
1'9mero.y.
members with a g7ft.

·

Costner's current movie is "The
Bodyguard," with singer Whitney
Houston.

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he wants something money can't
buy - a college football national
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•
Brown's desire became known
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last weekend.

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"He must have been walking by
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the rings,'' Caesar said.
His rings - from 1989 and
1991 - are easy to spot because of
their size.

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Poet's corner
The World's Most
Priceless Gill

1

Wednesday into the mouth of a mailbox sculpt·
ed into the shape of a dinosaur. (A.P photo)

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I hear no word of praise
For that. trip to Bethlehem
bring the world's mosl priceTORONTO (AP) - Kevin - lessTo
girt
Costner will star as Wyau Earp in a
To each and every man.
film biography of the legendary
·western lawman, a produ.cer says.
And what a gi(t of peace and joy
Jon Sian, chairman and chief
A girt ~ love supernal _
executive offlcer of Paragon Entertainment, aaid Wednesday the r.Jm
will be produced by Costner's .
company, Tig Productions, and ·
Toronto-based Paragon. Filming is
to begin in May .
Sian said the project could even
wind up as two movies because of
its size.
''The story takes Wyan from his
this Christmas
early beginnings and rollows him
for yean Ia come •••
as he goes wes.t through Kansas
with a camcorder
and Dodge City.and then the gunfrom
Searsl ·
fight at the OK Corral and then the
rest of his li(e," Sian said. "That
really hasn't been told in (ilm

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711 N. S.co114

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PREHISTORIC MAIL • Linda Hanney a
postal carrier in Berryton, Kan., delivers mail

Names in
the news

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Nugent, sporting a grizzly beard . enthralled. ·
and frazzled hair, lived up to his
A little smoke, a few stage
stage set kept
title as the Motor City Madman lights and a
with some dinosaur stomp in' and the show roc
on the music and
Ted Nugent doesn' t live on food v~rtical slithering which carried the energy. If the band members
- · he lives on rock 'n' roll. And htm around the stage while he char- ran on· electricity, Charleston
Tuesday night at tlte Charleston acteriSiicall~ chomped his gum and would have blown a fuse trying to
Civic Center he had a regular feed- played hot,licks o~ his strinj!S.
keep them powered up.
ing frenzy.
. It ~as the schrzophremc waltz
Appreciative ·fans not only
Nugent was in Charfes50n with of a w1ld man raised by wolves and renwned on their feet.Cor lhe entire
fellow Damn Yankees Tommy later socialized enough 50 play gui- performance, but also climbed onto
Shaw, Jack Blades and Michael tar.
.
their chairs or the shoulders•of
Cartellone in support of their
Th~ group covered !'!any ~its rrienas as ir trying to be face-to501ihomore album, Don't Tread .
!ro.m us two ~!bum~: mcl_udmg race with the high altib.Jde show.
The Yanks were the main dish
Hrgh Enough and Commg !J(
The evening closed with
of Tuesday's metal a' troi with Age" (rom ,!he .self_-titled debu,! Nugent's "Cat Scratch Fever,"
Slaughter and Jacky! as the appe- ~lbum and . Thts _SI,de or !!ell,
which Nugent ended in a metallic
tizers.
.. Wh_e~e you Oom, Now and guitar convulsion in the middle of
1
The triple 1&gt;ill provided over
Upnsmg from Don t Tread.
the stage.
lhree hours or grOUI!d·shaking rock
The rours~me also covered
The guitar-wrenching continued
and maybe even moved a couple of !unes Ji;om ~rr pre-Yank~ ~ds, even after his fellow band members
West Virginia's mountains.
rnclud!ng N1g~t Ran~er .~ - Y~u carried him off stage, but the per·
The Yanks is a ,classic rock ~an SuD R~ m Amenca: ~tyx s , sistent axemaster rewmed seconds
,(an's drearil come true. Besides ex·
Renega.~e _ ~d Nugent s Free later to briefly continue his seizure
;soloist Npgent on vocals and gui- For ~11 . _whJCh su,~med up the before diving ofr the back or the
. tar, Shaw is an ex-Styx guitarist ev~?'~g w•th one lync.
,
stage's raised plat(orm, signaling
and vocalist anll Blades is an exIts a Cree-ror-all, baby.
the end of the evening.
Night Ranger bassist and vocalist.
The Yanks !lfe a tr~t 10 see and
Jackyl, the new boys on the rock
CaneD one, a newcomer, keeps the hear h~ . The': am'!Zmg vocals fit block, came across surprisingly
yankees. beat
.
. hiJ!IIIomo.~sly like p1eces or a com- well ror a rreshman act on their
· Taking the srage like a runaway phcated Jigsaw puzzle. The show flrst nationwide tour.
locomotive in a thunderstorm, the was als~ energeuc enough that the
With· songs such as "I Stand
Yanks jumped head rirst into lhe · Xanks did not have to rely on spe- Alone," "Redneck Punk" and
·· title track of Don't Tread.
ctal effects to keep the audrence "Diny Little Mind," vocalist Jesse
Dupree, guitarists Jere Worley and
Jimmy Stifr, drummer Chris Worley and bassist Tom Bettini produced an excellent live sound that
most frrst timers fail to generate.
The most memorable number
was ."The Lumberjack/' in which
Dupree produced a chainsaw and
played a bluesy riff which sounded
like a Clarence Clemens saxophone
solo played by Leatherface or
Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
Slaughter, in support of their
second release, The Wild Life, put
on an impressive show, but seemed
uncomfonably out of place sandwiched between the down and diny
leather and denim boys of Yankees
and Jackyl.
Although 'lllented musicians in
the radio-oriented rock category,
· vocalist/guitarist Mark Slaughter,
bassist Dana 'Strum, guitarist Tim
Kelly and drummer Bias Elias still
receive the br9nze medal on this
tour.
;
FIRST GRADE READER ·Jane Cleland.is pictured here as she
. reads &amp;o tbe rll'st graders at Racine Elementary during Children's
.• Book Week.

...

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..

Music Review
By KEVIN PINSON
- OVP News Sta"

f•

...

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DAILY

•

The Dally Senttnei-Pag&amp;--9

Damn Yankees storn1 Charleston

Seeurties otlered lhiough H. D. Vest lnvestmenr Securities, Inc.
433 East LaS Colinas Blvd., Third Floor •Irving, Texas 75039 • (214) 556-t651

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Thursday, December 17, 199~

.,

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••

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-

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'

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel
The Dati

f3erkeley tries sprucing
Up tie-dyed thoroughfare .
By MICHELLE LOCKE
• Alloclated Press Writer
- BERKELEY, Calif.- The '60s
never went out of style on Telegraph Avenue, Berlceley's tie-dyed
thoroughfare, where
can still
gel love beads, out-o ·pnnt boolcs
and a good political discussion
with your coffee.
• "We 9011 of think of ourselves
a&amp; Rodeo Drive for inteUeetuals,"
says Andy Ross, !!~ .of Cody's
Books, an avenue JDSUtubon.
·
But its anything-goes image has
also brought Tele2nllh Avenue its
share or trouble: fiomeless people,
drug dealen and crowds of young
p:eople who on occasion have
turned violent.
: "For a long time they son of
allowed it 10 be the area where all
the unsolvable proble!liS congregat·
ed," Ross said.
Trouble flared in September,
when youths, man)' from neighboring towns, turned the street into a
combat zone~ tossing bottles ]It

lou.

Officers elected
Officers were elected at the
Christmas dinner meeting of the
Ladies Missionary Fellowship or
Victory Baptist Church. Soup,
salad and dessert were served..Phyllis Hudnall gave the blessing.
Officers are: Tammy Ball, president; Myrtle Quillen, vice~presi­
ilent; Angie McClure, secretary;
and PbyUis Hudnall, treasurer.
.
• In place of a gift exchange a
love offering was taken and given
to the Dave Fetters family, a mis·
sionary family to Micronesia.
Secret prayer pals were revealed
and new ones drawn for next year.
· Games were played wi!JI prizes
won by Verenia Barkman, Phyllis
Hudnall and Shirley Roush.
• Towels were brought in by the
!:idles for the missionary linen clos·
ef. A gift box of linens were sent 10
the Mike Wexler family in Kenya,

Africa.

police and allacking bystandcn.
Now offiCials are fighting back
wilh a 5-year, $38 million plan 10
spruce up Telegraph.
"In me JIISl few years it's had a
number of urban problems and
. some peculiar 10 Berkeley," said
Mayor Loni Hancock. "We have
· develope"d !I real blueprint for
renewal."
On a recent '?right weekend,.lhe
avenue was at 1ts most attracuve.
People crowded its shabby but
vibrant sidewalks. Some stopped 10
poke lhrough tables laden with silver jewelry and rude T·Shirts.
. Psychedelicai!Y deco.rated music
stOres were domg a brisk trade and
tiers of tie-dyed apparel fluttered in
lheo breeze off San Francisco Ba&gt;:.
Alo~g w1th bootslores offenn~
. everylhmg from avant-garde man1festos to secondhand paperback
thrillers are a host of coffee shops,
including the Caffe Mediterraneum, where Dustin Hoffman sat in
the classic ftlm "The Graduate."
As befits a city whose politics
are its passion, the plan for fixing
U)' Telegraph notes that Berlceley's
' well-deserved reputation for tolerance and openness ... have been
inte~reted by some as an attitude
lhat anything goes' here."
The city has budgeted more than
$600,000 for police, most for extra
patrols on Telegraph. Some of that
money is going to chase drug dealers out of nearby People's Parle, a
center of hippie culture in lhe-J60s.
Other proposals for Telegraph

include a mobile ICIJJI of mental
health workers, expanding the
city's homeless outreach program
and creating a daytime dlw-in center for lhe homeless.
" We're taltlag about a more
mana4eable street," said J:ily
Counctlwoman Carla Woodworlh.
wttose district includes Tel~ph.
Mayoral aide Mark Slavm said
budgeti.ng is still in lhe early process. C1ty funds wiU pay for some
improvements, but most of.dle $38
miUion will have to be scrounged
from federal and state sources and
local businesses, he said.
Some improvements are in
pl3ce, or soo·n will be, such as
brighter street li$hls, graffiti
cleanup and a midmght basketball
program to give young people a
place to go.

VBC celebrates
15th anniversary
Victory Baptist Church celebrat-

eil its 15th anniversary on Sunday
with Rev. Bob Hutton, Massillon,
guest speaker. .
Special singing was by the
Higher Praise Singers, also of Massillon.
Following the morning worship
service a dinner was served by the
ladies of the church.
. Rev. James Keesee is pastor of
Victory Baptist Church, Middleport. .

PliCa aJID DIC. 17

4• Pearl St.
Oh.
112-3471

dleport Elementary, wltb aulstance from tbelr Parttters in
SEPTEMBER STINGERS • Mlddle119rt Ele•entary Students
Education, Peoples.Bank, award .
Stingers lor tbe Montl or September were, (I to r), fro•t: Lanren
students ror perfect •ttendance .
SchmoU, Carrie Mlcbad, Myles Frendl, Brook 81')'811, Cllldance
and bonor roU. These award&amp; are:
Casey, and Leiba Laudermlll; back, ~y Taylor, Cbaslty Stew·
given at tbe end or ea&amp;:b arldblg
art, Rebecca Smith, Wlll Kauff, and Betlt Wllfoaa. Absent:
period. Tbere is also an award
Heather Fetty. Student Stiqers are cbosen for tbelr classroom
for Student Stinger ot tbe Montl,
behavior and their citizensbip toward otlten.
a' monthly award. Tbls award II ,
given to a student for thlr .
bebaviiJr toward odleril aud lilelr
display or cltlzensllp. Here, Tam!.
Buck from Peoples Bank, rl..bt,
·presents Brltni B.evan witb a per·
feet •ttendance· award tor tbe
SEATILE (AP)- A room spe- tragedy, loss, sadness or exhaus- · first nine weeka.
cially designed for giving patients tion, a personal space in a sterile
and their families bad news is itself environment. She received
bad news to many surgeons and $10,000, out of which she paid fer
nurses at University Hospital.
materials, lishting and furniture.
The small, windowless room in The room has been open sin¢e
the surgery department is ceiling lit February.
and painted in a muted greenish
"Peoole feel belillled in hcispihue with layers of purple and other tals," she said in a recent inter·
colors. Symbpls OQ the walls v.iew. "I wanted 10 try 10 counter
include a feather, ali egg shape, that."
- .
.
hands claspinll and a knotted cord.
But many on the surgical staff
The furniture tS spare. ·
.
said she missed lhe marlc.
Artist Mary Ann Peters said she
''1 don't lhink it's very uplift·
designed the Quiet Room 10 be a ing," said Donna Cooper, a nurse
private space for dealing with educator. ·
, .

Some hospital staffers shun room
designed for delivery of bad news

GOOD CHRISTMAS VIBRATIONS •
lrolliucllw Alan Rlpp ltolcb ·Lealt HOftU, 7, wbo
Is bliad and m01dy deaf, so tltat site caa bear .
JJ~Ie Bells being pllyed by 1 Hli wood Jnlor

.Civil songs .

Hlab·Scbool tub• player as tbe band performs
Chrislmls musk for handicapped kids at Har·
wood Junior Hip Scbool in BedfOI"d, Texas, this
week. (AP pboto)

~~~~~~~~~~~~

5~£ar

.

=·

;- Jeffrey L. Davis, Brendra J.
Davis, Eue, to Ohio Power Co.,
Suucn.
: Dorolhy V. aka Violet Brewer,
cltc'd, cen. of trans, to Billy Joe
BJewer, LeiJ8norL
· - Ralph E. Hall, Eleanor Sue Hall,
Tracts, 10 Mlrty E. Dusan. Salis-

~~on C . Pierce, Barbara A.
Pien:e, R/W, to So. Qbio Coal Co.,
SJlem.
.
.
• •

SIR

c

"WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL •
742·2211

aD

RUTLAND

1-8011-837-11217

..

La-Z-Boy Gift Certificates make a G~t Christmas Gift!

. &amp; PA tDial~

~r, MARCH

6 MONTHS SAME AS CASH!*
*With epproVIId credit)

0% lnlere81 and no payment until MarCh 1993 on approOJed RSVP account with single·ticket purchuee:
&amp;100or more. Fc*owing 1M or.b intereiC Plftad, any remaln6ng balance ts subject 1o • finance
charge of up to 21% APf\ depending on vour state of resldellCe (SOC minimum monthly finance charg~). Refer to your RSVP Mcount Agreement . ort. 11 valid Dec. 344, 1992.
.
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FINE SELECTION OF GENUINE
LA·Z.BOT

:
CompUed by:
· Emmogeae Holstein Congo
~ecorder, Meigs County, Ohio

Robert R. Harden, Dorothy J .
Harden, Ease, to Ohio Power Co.,
Sillton.
• William R. Stuckey, Saundra S.
Bas&amp;, to Ohio Power Co.,

CBIF Bl¥ 'I·DEE

lftLAID FDRII I DR£

·

.

BOUDAY BOUIU

Doo!'t forget to-~~~ Mel algn . . lor o 441" - T V to be g~v.,­
· .,. .... .....,. ....... llowl.....,l No puiCMM noco...ry.

County land
·ttansfers listed

toil.

LB.

OPEN MONOAY~SATURDAY UNTIL 7 P.M.
THRU DEC. 23RD OR CALL FOR AFTER
HOURS APPOINTMENT.

: Attending were Linda. Keesee,
Pl\yllis Hudnall, Tammy Bi111, Margaret ~unn, Bessie Fisher, Shirley
R'Oush, Sherry Jarvis, Verenja
lfarkman, Myrtle Quillen, Lucy
Hl:ndricts and Angie HalL
.: Linda Keesee gave the closing
P.rayer.

Roy Grueser, Opal M. Grueser,
p8rcels, to Brian Bailey. Chester.
• Eldred K. Grimes, M. Katl)aleen
Grimes, Lots S. S, T-4, R-12, to
Eldred K. Grimes-Trustees, M.
Kathaleeri Grimes, Trustees,
Orange.
·
·
• Southern Ohio Coal Co. 1/2 A.
S~ 36; T-8, R-15, to Wi~field
Hardiman, Evelyn Hard1man.
Salem.
.
Alban:on, Inc., parcel, to Robcn
Wingett, Porn ViU.
• War.u: A. Zurcher, dec;'d, affid.,
te W1lovene W. Bailey fka .
Zllrcher, Porn. ViU.
• Wilovene W. Bailey, Robert C.
a"ailey, Sr., parcels, to John D.
Zurcher, Porn. Viii.
. Wilbur L. Monroe, Eileen
Riebel Monroe, parcel, S. 24, R-12,
T-3. to Tony Dwayne Hendrix,
Sherri L. Hendrix.
: Elizabclh A. Lucas, aka Eliza·
bpth A. Smilh, parcel, S. 12, T-6,
R--14, to William 0. Ramsey, Virginia E. Ramsey, Rutland.
; Virginia E. Hartley, ~cc'd, by
t;:xecutor, parcels, to Dav1d T. Hen·
dfix, Janis L. Hendrix, Rutland.
• Francis: A. Lovclle, II, aka
Frank, parcels, S.3, T -4, R-11 , to
Francis A. Lavelle, II, Jean Ann
LoveUe, Olive.
·
Marty Dugan, Ruth Dugan, parcel F.2, T-6, R-14, 10 Earl Russell
Fi~lds, .Marteena Darlene Fi~.lds,
Rutland.
- Kenneth W. Snyder, Tracts, to
Elaine Wall, Columbus.
• Donna Jean Branham Spears,
1Benny
R. Spears, parcel, S.14, F.
13, R-14, T- 7, to R1chard A. Kikel,
Scipio.
Richard A. Kite!, Starline J .
Kikel, 1/2 A.,S. 14, F.13, R-14, T7-:to Carl Bolt, Scipio.
·! Lorri A. Sm1th, Delbert D .
Sblilh. 1/2 int., to ~rsel R. ~ar­
ringc:r. Mary Lou Barringer, Ohve.
Mary R. Porter, Frank W. Porter
Jr., &amp;se, 10 Ohio Power Co., Sui-

DEC. 24, 1112

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Page 12-The Deily Sentinel

Thuraday, December 17, 1892

Thursday, December 17,1892.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dana Carvey may follow David

••
•

NEW YORK (AP) - CBS
which already is trying to lur~
David Letterman .away from NBC
now is going after the ma'n thai
NBC has said would replace Let·
~~n , a. ne~spaper reported

show that would follow a Letter·
man show if Letterman leaves
NBC for CBS and its $16 million·
a-year offer, The New York Times
reported.
NBC had planned to replace
Letterman with Carvey if Letter·
man departs, and had signed the
actor-comedian-impersonator to
what network executives called an

· .YSaturday Night Live" star
Dana Clll"!ey has begun negotiations with CBS for a Jate.night talk

Let~ertnan

" exclusive long-term deal," the
Times said.
The Times quoted a television
executive it did DOl idenlify as saying CBS had begun ·negotiations to
set Carvey up in a show that w9Uid
follow a Letterman show.
The repon was widely denied.
CBS Broadcast Group President
Howard Suinger said he had not

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13 '

to CBS, says published report '
terni deal," Grey said. " Suffice it

initiated any negotiations to hire
C8rvey. NBC executives ~ they
had Carvey under contract until at
least Nov em be~:. of next year and
maybe six months past that. .
But C8rvey's agent, Brad Grey,
told th.e Times that the contract
expires after January.
'
"It certainly was not a long.

p

to say we're in the middle of the
decisions to decide his future.''
NBC can keep Letterman if it
matches CBS's offer of about $ 16
million a year but it might be
forced to change its late-night lineup if it pays Letterman that much
money.

CBS has told Leue rd!an his
show wOuld start at 11 :30 p.m ..
opposite Jay Lena 's " Tonight
Show" on NBC. NBC executives
chose Leno over Letterman as a
replacement for Johnny Carson on
" Tonight" and have said they have
no intention of changing lhat decision.

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.
.........,.g

OfRJITIIAS·
,,,'30"...,..WA
,. . •.

......

10010. FT.

SANTA
TROLLS

'

PRICE REDUCED!

seuoo

TliO p1tee has.,_, - • ·
.m
owner llnonclnQ &lt;I up to 80% &lt;I ~
ornounl may be ~ lor qUollylng por·
son to buy very nice nome on 3% •cne tn
Racno. 4 BR, 3 bolho, 2 - · · ronled 1
BR lpl. Property lndudol 4,800 sq. ft. lorm

REG.
'

.

NOW

$14.~

sgss

·'

-

· Cal 814·992-7104 lor-..

NOTICE OF .APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Oacamber 11, 1tt2, in
the Melga County Probate
Court, Caoe No. 277ft,
Connie B. Black, 34711 New
lima Rollll, Rl 1, Rutland,
. Ohio 45775 wa appoinlllll
Adminlotratrlx of the •tato
of Robert B. at .. k,
docuood, lata ol34711 New
lima Road, Rl 1, Rutland,
Ohio 45775.
Robor1 E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Len. K. Neaa.. road, Clerk
{12) 11, 24, 31, 3tc

PubliC Notice
PUBUC NOTICE
Public notice ia hereby
given that Roa .. ' Ex·
cav"li119 h• filed with the
Public Utllitieo 'Commiaoion
of Ohio on appllclllion tor a
Certificate of Public Convenionce end N-•lly to
ciporate on ••I of the public .
OYII irr-vular routu to llld
from all points in Ohio.
lntoroated partioa may
obtain further inlormeUon
by lllldreeaing the Public
Utilitiea Commioalon of
Ohio,,Columbua, Ohio.
Roo•' Excavating
P. 0. Box387
Racine, Oh. 45771
(12) 11, 24, 31, 3tc

-

tl-:"._

......

•

#8·8

WE NOW ACCEPT

'!lolollll _ _ , _ _

....
.._.. ___
_
.....,-·-·
·
---·
__........ .,._

EXPRESS
SCRIPTS FOR

I" .. . . . . .. :- - - ,.... ._

... _

Read the

-·

•

'·

f A UI • &lt;-

1

· -~

- ~~- ' -

ALL MEIGS CO.
'

PUBLIC
HUARfCAIIE. WV
WINFI!L.t'IV

·

CHARLE~N, IW
0" . IIIJI!Ilalt

EMPLOYEE

.CLRSSifED RDS
A
OF CASH

IS BEllER
THANA

·.'

I'

•

388-Vlaoon

985-C'-'er

245-Rio Groade
256-Gtoyoa Dial.

843-Poril.ad

643-Ar..Lio Dua.
379-'lfalnul

r.u•

:i47.:.Let...
949-Radae

742-Ru~oad

c-.

458-Looa
576-Apple
773-M-

. 882-NewHo...,
89S-Lelort
937-BafTolo

OF STUFF

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00

15

$1.30/day

667..C,.OI.We

. NEED TO BUY A
PERFECT GIFT?
· A$K ABOUT OUR
GIFT CERTIFICATES

FORRER
BRONZE
lashan Rd., Ricin•

939·2826
ALL SESSIONS GOOD
FOR &amp;MONTHS
1H3-'12·1mo.

Public Notice

DAVIDSON'S

PLUMBING

Mu.ical ... l.rUMCIIII

r ..;.. &amp; v.-t.J.Ieo

$ 30
$ .42
.$ .60

For Sale or Tnde

I \li\1 'l I'I'IIL~
,\ I I\ I ~ I I II .I,

$.05/day

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

33- F.rJIUI for S•le

34- Buoioeu Buildiap
35- Lo.. &amp; Aei'OIIp
r--~----;;r;w&amp;i.i'l;;mimimw-~--l 36- a..t Eo~ao. w...o.~

GET BESIJLTS • J'AST!

~ Aaaouace•enLI
4--Civeaway
5-HappyAda

6-LooooadFouad
7- Lool oad Fouacl

a- PubiM: Sole Ill

Auction

9- Waated to Buy

:;}~~ . .
38904 .......
c....klntl
1'-•"'· o•1o

~-

:·~·NOw·

Pomeroy

675-PI. l'li!uonl

• r!Vl'!Jllng

EVERY DAY PRICE

~'0-AIIIIIawel'l

367-Choohire

2UESSIONS &amp; FlEE
BOrnE OF LOnON
$32.00 .
Maay 1111re specials.

AMERICAN
EXPRESS ,
MONEY ORDERS .

3 "'O ·L PACKAGE

992-Middleporli

56- PeLI (or Sal.

$ .20

15
15
15
15

2-Io Me•ory
~.w,.u.

·992·8&lt;184

Llmlled llc:klts Avaa.bfrl

Monthly

Over 15 Words

G..Wa County Mep County M1110n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL

$15.00 Couple/$10.00 Single

'•

Read the Best Seller.

~·

12 OZ. CANS

pages l!over the
foUowing telephone exchange1 ...

Food· Music •.Ch"!'::'!'SSno

Public Notice

BOW BAG

Clo•~ified

8:00 P.M. 'TIL 1993

bldg

CHRISTMAS

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednl!9day Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

THURSDAY, DEC. 31

MANCHESTER

· WITH BAKELITE HANDLES
PASTELS
.8" Size

DAY BEFoRE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.oi. Monday
· 1:00 p.m. Tuesday
I :00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. ThiUiday
I:OOp.m. Friday

SMITIY'S
·
NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY

12PACK.

EAR PIERCING

COPY DEADLINE ·

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

'

ROBES, ETC.

10

BllLLETJN BOARD

40%

ASSORTED SIZES
INCLUDING SHIRTS,

be prepaid

• Fr_e i Ad.: Giveaway ..d Fouad adl u.dar 15 word. will he
run 3 dayaat DO cbup.
• Price of ad (or aU eapi .... letten i1 double price of M1 c01t
• 7 point.li.oe lype only uod
·

ALYSSA,

$1 1.9

8oz.

MUll

• Receive diacol.lftt for adt paid ia advaac:a . .

•

QUEEN ANNE
CHOCOLATE
COVERED CHERRIES

Words Rate

II- Help Woao.d

Iii.\ I

\I~

41- Ho~MM~ for Real
42- MoltUe Horn• for Renl
43- Far.., for Real
44--.- Apullnent for Rent
45- Fu.!!';.hed Roo.,.
46- SpiCe fo~ Rent

47- w... o.~ .. R...,
4&amp;- Equip,.nt for Real

12- SituaboDI Wanled

13-luu•DCe
14-- BuiDell TraiDiJie;
IS- Sc:hoob A: hutruetion
16- Rod;o, TV Ill CB Repau17-MIIeelloaoouo

IS- Wano.d To Do

52- Sponlac Gooda
53-Aallq...
54- Mile. Morchoaclioe
55- Bullcllioc Suppn6a

q~ p
Wl..ntecl t.o Buy

Li·~totk

H•y 8: Graia
Seocl Ill FertilUer
Auto. for Sale
TrueD for S•le
VUY &amp;: 4 WD'•

�Pomeroy Middleport; Ohio

Sentinel

Pomeroy

SNAFU® by Bruce Beettle

Middleport, Ohio

KIT 'N'.CAIU.YLE®.by Larry Wrtpt

3t Honllllor ....

O lour
RoarrQngo '-""" of
ocrambl.d -rds
PHILLIP
ALDER

......

NORTH
.AI 5

11-11-11

. . 532

•au

EAST
.Q176
.J75

+lot 4

SOUTH
.KIOU2

~,.,. '1111364.

.A

Doge,

9

Wlnlod To • ..,,

~"'*

BARNEY

Auloe

.
• With Or Wllhoul llloC- Col
Indo«
Sole:
31'7
Cont181,
Rio
Gl'lllde, Doc 11-211111, Ck&gt;lhoa,· :LL.Iny~~Lmi~W!;_·I14~~~~~~~~~~~~.,...,.,.,.
C..ta,

Etc.

Pllld: All Old U.l.
Caine, Gold Ringo, U.. Co1na,

m!s7u.

NI&amp;HTH

ALL-NIGHT
CARD-PLAYIN'
~~•-'"''
VARMINT

~

··.--. ·-

II

_1::;:1::::::-:He~lp~W:.:";:m.d:.;;;;_'AVON"ALLAREAII ...... _
AVON I All -

~poara,--.

Gallipolis

tho

I 1i*t.w

I VlclnHy

33 FannliOr Sale'
II ..... .. . , eC" Wlh
....... ~ Collnlll
""'-nair" I J

.:me
......,_,_......,.,..:&amp;.
I

. . . . . . . . .lift.: .. - .
ADIIII8 Me a&amp; W 11111 Din
. . . . 11t- 1110.

WEBER'S .
CHRISTMAS TREES

GARRY'S
IEIEUL
MIIITEIANCE

FRANK AND ERNEST

RUTLAND, OH.
Homegrown.
Ceref~lly Sheered
Scotch &amp; White Pine
4' &amp; Up with a great
selection of larger
trees.
Call742·2143 or
742·2979

742:-3305
AFTER·
7:00P.M.
12-17·'92·1 mo.

It

41

·a lolllr a•

Qlfff,S A
L.ITTL.~ BIT F,OM
YOU~S. M,S. O£.~STAl&gt;,
BUT Ttft/11, 1'M
tiAMP~flEl&gt; JY
TweNTY YEA'S
Of Mfl&gt;"AL

~

for Rent

Qu,..,..,

HOUIII

C...

=. .::O.::::='t.J.ronl

,,__ _ _...;,::;:!,J

·. . . . .

UIEISWOOD
IIYA HALL

JRIM and
REMOVAL.

... a.....
PO.POM,

'AI~WelcDme

BILL SLACK .
992·2269
•

8peolel a.. 3-6
y_.olda
far lllnlnfonmtlon
•CIII304-27H721 •

SC:.ttGO" -

fl&gt;U,ATION.

BORN LOSER
,.

•UGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

IU.UIG,
UTOI IWIIUIG

~

-

SEf. ... ~V€.11 ~
~ 12.~ ... MI~ 8(,7...
AW, NO'T!&gt;! [ OOT 00 Till~!

l'l

USED RAILROAD TIES

E+~~~'::':i.";:

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

ee. A

N6, r .W-""NT

roeeA

WHY CXJE5 'Tl-\1510WN

~T

ALL TH~ NWAAK.ES~ .

CDMPUTE:R.

PIN donal EXTRA

........... a..c..Cinllr1

CA~HPII

L-.:...---------------~ Plu
A.ll. ..,_ I P.ll.
llocll111-f
w..I OIIIICOn
I

Io
Ouollly And l•plrllnel 111111
tt - . . . I'Or , _ Clold'a
eor.. Collie For .. ¥Ill. lnlonl

CELLULAR

IToddiM'I. 11t •••

.

Aulliorlrod ~
TOTALLY AUTOMOTIVE PERFORMANCE

I

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WIN earotor....., In now'-,
114-1182-

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PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

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SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Author • Yokel • Aroma - Civics - CHEMISTRY
I needed an enlargement of a chart so l called the
copy room lind .asked if I could get something blown
up. After a pause the fellow sighed, "I think you need
a CHEMISTRY lab.'
.

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~----~-----------------------·

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle::

-.~~R~O~SS~------------------~------------~.~, ~,...
35 lllldtn lowed
Anowor to Prtvloua Puule
-.
bW Zoua
1 Canine cry
36 Of the noae
4 Wild goat
38 One (Scot.)
8 Construe·
3g Bronch
tlon beam
..0 Sound of
12 wda.)
hesitation
12 ~~~~ame
41 Bofora
42- China
13 Location
43 Exlat
14 Prlncely·ltal·
45 Lellarl
ian family
46 Drawlnga
t5 Sick
47 Ptr- .·
t7 Prickly aeed
48 Oklahoma
city
19 Faeroe
latanda
49 VIgor
whirlwind
52 Wading bird
· 20 Fragment
54 Soli II 21 - Lingua
56 Actreaa
22 Including
Merkel
23 Hotels
57 C!Oth belt
25 Part.of circle 58 Gr..ntand
3 Crime
aolllement
26 nme abbr.
4
Do11n't txllt
27 llonth
59 Showy nowtr
28 Opp of dep
5 Larue
6- tu, Brut•
29 Cold
·
DOWN
7 Salting ehlp
aymptom
8 Comparative
32 At homo
1 Motorilll'
andlng
org.
33 Recelwer ol
9 College dag.
2 Baltbell atat.
propertw
10-- Of

885-4391 01

BISSELl BUILDERS, INC.

New Homes • VInyl Siding · ·
New Garages • Replacement wrndows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101 ~ 949·2160
or915·3139
Clos-layCaUs)

AIIEIICIN GINIUL LIFI ancl
ICCIDINT INIUUNCE
Ute • MldiCire • Cancer • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

'

'

. INOTICII

OliO YALLIY PUILJIIIIIQ CO.
fl =c lftiiWndl lhll ,.. .....

...==r
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... -

....

1111

~~~~~:~~-~Loud
hills.•noises
· Echo reverberate
the proper
of the verb REVER·
: "rih-VER-ber-ate."

-·

who comes from Idaho, was present"?
Is that wron&amp;?
A. Yes, that sentence contains an
error in punctuation. Commas, when
us~ in pairs, may separate less im·
portant information from the main
clause. In this case, the main clause is
"Martha was present," and you need
two commas around the additional in·
formation: "Martha, who comes from
Idaho, was present." In any case, never use only one comma between a subject and its verb.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm convinced that women are the advanced

ge~der. Women's basic instinct is to nurture." -

(Writer) Rick Edelstein.

c 1m by NEA. 1nc:.

© 1992 TV li! lina Inc.

Ft WDI1tl, TX

17

DECEMBER 171

''•

..
'

'

·ASTRO-GRAPH

__

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

10•. _ _ _ __

.

__..;,:_.__,

.

12

Galllpolla •ally Tribune
448-2342 .
Pomeroy Bally Sendnel
. 192-2158
Pt. Plee••nt Beglllter

875-13f_S
L!!~!..!!!!.!

~!!!:.!!!!!!!L.J

II

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llur. ... .,....
11

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Mln:hlndlll

•

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Call o'"' offie'! for poid ill odt&gt;OMe rolet/

E-r.k~-=

'1 I•

"

Thm your clutter in.to cuh,
Sldl. it ehe eau woy... bx Rhone,
no need to lefJve your home.
Place xour cbmjfied pd todqx!
15 wo'rJ.. or leu, 3 dqp,
3 J?'!ller«,l6.00 ·

r---------~----------~~

,•.•,

by fdlmg •n tke m1ssmo words
you de¥elop from step No. 3 below .

Sr.rv1ces

tor Rent

... l 'iid.

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lOx 189
Mhhlleport, o•lo 45760

_

I

Apartment

$69

OH.

.

•••

LIMITED
TIME ONLY
95.

-01101101r

_

REVERBERATE echoes or sounds

ITHURSDAY

az ,.....

The prict C1ristroos Gift fot thor hard ro buy for peiSOn on your /isr.
• CGuniJ lacll

.

Q. Why shouldn't you use "Martha

Fish.........................5400 per inch

I

Young bridge players abound in Europe. International matches, which
provide invaluable experience, can be
arranged with the minimum of expense because of the proximity of the
countries. Also, bridge is encouraged
in high schools, as it is recognized to be
an intellectual exercise.
This year's biennial Junior European Championship, for players under
25 years old, was contested by 23 na.
.mc lud'mg L'th
. Estoma
.
t1ons,
1 uama,
and the Commonwealth of lndepen·
dent States. Italy finished first, ahead
of Germany and Norway.
Claudio Nunes from Italy was one
of only three deciarers to play today's
deal correctly.
.
tbs .
In the g1ven
auc ton, two c1u ts
strong, artificial and forcing.
It is easy to make ~ slam if you
know the trumps are S-2. But what if
they are 4-1? Most declarers won trick
one with the diamond ace, unblocked
the heart ace and played a spade to
dummy's ace. West's jack caused
them to pause. After discarding the diamond six on dummy's heart king,
South would be wrong to fineae !lie
spade 10 if West bad played the jack
from Q.J·x. West would win with the
queen and return his lut trump. Now
South would need to find the clubs
breaking 3-3. !1 was an awkward gueas
that many got wrong, putting .up the
J -·~,.,.~ king,___
__ .
aVOided the pea After un·
I blod:inl the beart ace, be cubed the
before playing a spade to
d~:tJ~ ace. When the 4-1 break was
n
be knew that, after taking
discard, be bad to lead a spade toward the 10 and rely on a S-3 club
break.

1
COMPU;a&lt;. WHISN
I 6POJVUP.

I

-·

Jeffrey McQuala

I W.ANT10

I

demanded
. . genie
"If I could
grant
wishes," the
replied,
"do
you think I'd be ~n that lousy
lm!'Jp _··· thiS ····?
U t:ompl~te _the chuckl.e quoted

..

- ~

LANGUAGE

MORTY MEE'KLE AND WINTHROP

It •

of Europe
By Pllllllp Alder

-;

tlmll . .h ... You'l . , . . . . 1400- ....

P111

Ubiquitous juniors

Employment Serv1c0s

llllla.lo I Weol .............

Yard Sale

Ml LAST

Clolcl ColnL II.T.I. Coin lllop,
'111 lloond Avenue, Ool!lp I MI

Riel! I'll,_ AucUon ComPMJ,
IIIII
lime . · -p1•1
IIUCitlon
..mea.
Llal II d

8

Opening lead: t Q

SHE WAS EXPECTIN'

Towo, Appl-, C..fta, Top -

Public Sale
I Auction

7

6

Pus
Pus
. Pus

Pass
Pass
Pass

Wanted to Buy

... I.,

East

West
Pus

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

NE L T Gy

_ · _

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

A genie popped out of the
old lamp the bum found.
"Grant me a wish," the bum

. I I I' I I
I1
::

.

tAK6
• AKQ4

: 1can't lind my cellular phone. Cell it on the
regular line. I'll find it when it rings."

$.

,

.1016
.... I II at&amp; T8 Good Honw,

I
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B0 T I R I
1·
I'-=·=~·==·
I. I 1~·=:~;~
TILAV

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RIHOAM

1

3Z Mobile Home1

"'*'*'

the
h.
low to form four limp'- -ds.

Plumbing a

DIC.11, 1112
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EEl~~~ii-IICbA
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Ralrlgetlllun

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UJU

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ou're the type of peroon wtoo It gifted
thO , ability to make friondl . .lty.
hla ap~~ndld qulllty will b8 ennanc:ed In
Y-' ah88d and your circle of lntlt• could be enlarged eubatantlally.
AGITTAIIIUI (Nov. IJ-Oic. 21)1
lng more money then you ahoutd
lod•Y Is no aeaurenca that you'll heve11
~ood time. In fact, the vary oppoalte

could be true. Put limits on what you i~­
tend to spend·. Get a jump on life by understanding the Influences which are
governing you In lhe year ahead. Send
for Sagittarius' Astra-Graph predle·
tlons today by mailing $1 .25 plus a long
self-addressed, stamped envelope t~
Astra-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Bit sure to state your zodiac Sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. • 22-.lan. 11) You
ehould do rather well In competitive lit·
uatlons today. but you must be extremetw Nleetlve regarding the types of
tactlca you employ to win.
AQUARIUS (Mil. 21W'e!t. 11) A lrlend
o1 youre might say eomethlng today that
could be mlllnt•preted. Before flying
oil the hal!dle, be certain you under·
stand his or her exact meaning;
PIICI' (,ell, IHI8rcll :10) Try not to
be too demanding ol pals tOday 11 you
get InvOlved In a jOint edventuro. Worry
more about your own contribution to
the problem titan lheire.
ARIII (...... 21·Aprll 11) Compllca·
tiona might ariM today In en arrange.
ment that requires a tearn tllort. BOth
you and your partner will hove to try to
accommodate one MOther through
eompromiM.
TAUIIUI (April....., :10) Move llow·
ly today In making adjustrnen's that dl-

..

•

--.

rectiy affect your career. Taking small
~ale steps is better than making one big
blind 11!8P·
GEMINI (Maw 21-.luno 20) Some risks
could be involved today In matters you
manage or regulale foi others. 11 your
approach Is logical, lhe chance of mis'
haps can be minimized.
•
CANCER (~une 21·~uly 22) You and
your mate will have to watch your tempers loday If you are working on a collective endl!8vor_Neither Is likely to be
sold on the other's input.
LIO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Though you
might find ample ~se to criticize co·
workers today, it could pr.ove unwise to
do so. Instead. look for small r1!8sl!ns to
prliaethem.
.
YIIIGO (AUg. 23-hpt. 22) Your proba·
, bllltlea for personal gain are eneourag·
ing todoy, but there II also a chanca
that you might negate opponunltles
through unwiM action . Be prudent.
LI8IIA (lepl. D-001.23) Your dHire to
gratify your ambltlouellma might cause
you to believe a trifle puehy todoy. Ob·
jeetl- can be~ -ler II you are
leN egg........
ICOII'IO (OOt. M-llov. 12) In order to
lh!Mf your own lnt-ta today. you
might do thlnga that olhers eonllder
aelf·IIIMng. II you want to Insure your
rights. protact thel,..

...•

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••
•

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b81ore Jan. '
.

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1992 METRO
· 4 DR. SEDAN

1992CHEV.

•"' 1992 OLDS
ACHIEVA

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1992 OIEV. CAVAUER

.CONVERnBLE

LUMINA A.P.V.

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vo:. 43, No. 167

1 Secllon, 10 Pageo 25 con to
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. ff"..ail Dlii?il:aubw 18, 1992

Copyr!gh!od 1992

FuiJ loade4.
' ·THIS SALE ONLY

WAS 17990

SALE

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1993 OLDS 98

1992 OLDS CIERA
4 DR.

REGENCY
Slockl213?

Sale .............................£.,,.. )
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GM Reboht ••..........•....~d

SPockmiHI
V-1, air, IIIlO, IIWIOW/-,

1992 CHEV. LUMINA
EUR04 DR.

· 1993 CHEV, LUMINA
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Sat. Ra.d n-, R-Oncinnati. 1old tbe Senate
lhll wbill: BOOIIC litr:s totaise lUeS, "We have tried
to do as load a job as we can, under the circum" •• es We~ llicd to IJc as lair as possible.''
lad!cJJomr.Rep.. Tllomaslllhnson, R-New Conoonl, Slid lhll widlout IPbc biD, more cuts would have
1a:a N "!M ..,. ..,.... IJc devastating 1o education
:IIIII IIIIa wilahtawia:s.. ·
'

Sen. Robert Burch, D-Dover, and others opposed
the bill on grounds ~!tat it hurts ·middle-class taxpay·
ers and small businesses. He said the bill should have
been written to lake more money from wealthy
Ohioans.
Burch called !he bill "a $1 billion present under
Ohioans' Christmas trees" and said the governor and
Legislarure should have taken mo(e time to consider
other solutions.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura, led the fight
against the proposal in the House, accusing the gov- ·
ernor and leaders of both parties of offering "snake
oil" solutions that won't solve Ohio's biggest problems.
·
·
Netzley and others argue41 that the taxes will hurt
the economy and do not a&lt;fdress problems .such as
welfare and crime.

·sheriff plans tofile charges·against
Wilkesville man in Tue~day shooting

WAS $11,995
SALE

Buy Now

••c

b ca11o
lbc sa~es 1111.
. 11 Discs IDCS Oil tobluo and alcohol products
aa4 aca:s a - bntdet under !he.slate income tax
-a wbidldtotl; wltoe2R $200,000 or more a year
- ' 1 pay 7.5 J*ALUl.
or lbc apilll ~owemeDl ~priations in the
biD.IIIonl sm million is a a.1ide for development
I*Qjtas in Ollio•s larF cities, such as Cleveland's
Ga:wai)
L+o pmin:l and an aviation museum in

. · Voinovich, who has implemented $627 million in
spending cuts since taking office in January 1991,
was ready to order more if the bil'l had •1101 been
passed.
Passage "was a team erfort of public oft"Jdals
who worked together to save education cuts of
$164.6 million," he said.
He added, howeva~ !hat the bill does not lcssca
his commitment to guard against waste and "do
more with less in our slate agencies.''
The Senate OK'd the bill 21-12 late ThllrSll&amp;y, a
few hours. after its approval by the House 68-30.
Voinovich is expected to sign it into law in ume 10
let the taxes lake effect Jan. 1,
The bill expands the base of ·!he 5 percent slam
sales tax to include certain Services ihal now lite
exempt. It also reduces a discount retailen ftllleive

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. George
Voinovich says he is pleased that the Legislature
granted his request for higher taxes to ease Ohio•s
budget problems, but he will continue his fight to
curb spending.
. He referred in a statement late Thursday to pas;.sage by the Legislature of a bill raising taxes by more
!han $1 billion 1o help eliminate a projected budget
deficit of $250 million in the fiscal year ending June
30.
The same increases will slay in effect over !he fol·
lowing two years and yield about $990 million 1o
help keep !he budge! slabilized.
The &gt;legislation had bipartisan support in both
chambers.
Tile proposal allocates an unrelated $1 billion in
bond-issue financing for capital improvement pro·
jeets, mostly at slate colleges and universities.

He is cum:ntly being held in the
who allegedly shot her in the heal!
Gallia
County Jail on a warrant
with a small caliber handgun Tuesfrom
!he
Wells1on Police Departday afternoon at her residence.
ment
on
a
charge of passing bad
The sheriff's department was
checks.
Salisbury
said he plans to
investigating Thursday to deter·
file
a
charge
of
felonious
assault
mine if !he shot· was self-inflicted
this
afternoon
with
the
county
prosCooory Sllaiff Dcmris Salisblll)' or fired by someone else.
ecutor's
office.
Mr. Snyder was ~rrested in
I
·Mrs. Snyder is.iq Cabell· HuntSalis1nuy said the vic.lim, Wellston Tuesday afternoon with a
ington
Hospital in Huntington,
o• s.,dl:l". 'MiiJIIicd informa' handgun in his possession that W.Va., where
she was reported in
ta "D•• +y afo•••• wllidJ liD- matched !he type used in the shootgood
condition
this morning.
IPS Ia' I I t, 0ayD A. Sny- ing.
der. S8. Wial:sYilk;. as die pmoo

Furdaer illwcsliption of the
Tlltsda) •"ioc d a 39-,ar-old
W"IDzswille- lias provided
wMjli+
• ••·
• • wbiicb may:
lm4 ID lllcdad ,t JJcq: dlalged
wilh felmlioas assaall. Gallia
'

100:.. 1992

FINANCE PEOPLE
WILL BE· HERE TO
FIGURE THE BEST
UTE AND TERMS:
AVAILABLE.

OUR COMPLETE INVENTORY - SPECIALLY PRICEP FOR

CHEVROLET LU.US
ll~tullr &amp; lurO'J),
CIVALIIIS, COISICAS;
IIREnM, GIO PIIDIS,
OLDSMIIU CIIUS TO
CHOOSE •aoa. WI WIU HOI
, II UIDIISOLD. PICK 011
lOW - THI PIICIIS IIIIITI

BOLl

I

E

Ill CDS MUST 10 IEFORE All. 1, l 993~ OUI LOSS IS YOUIIAII.
PRICES IIIHISAD IOOD IHRU DEC. 31, 1992
CALL US TOLL FREE 1·100.521.0014

I

"1'11:

.....

,~,,

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__,.... _.

1987 PLYMOUTH

1985 CHEV. IMPALA
4 DR. SEDAN.

1914 CHEV. 5-10

PKKUP

DUSTER

Goo&lt;ttrinopoMuon, low mlloo.

Air, 01110., QOOd ·-lomlly - " ·

WAS$2995
SALE

WAS $34115

· 1992 OtEV. LUMINA

1917 CHEV.
MOitTE WLO LS.

EURO COUPE
WAS $12,1100 $ ·

- - .7. Fully oqo~pp I d

Nr...o.............. , .....
WAS $31115

SALE

$

.1692

V.., 6-opoocl, dorll bluo. Prloodlo ga.

1l.n•2 .

SALE

$

SALE

1692

1987 DODGE DAKOTA

1989 CHEVROLET

lERmA
WAS $5985
$

WAS $2995

4192

, PICKUP 1

AMI, new s.-10 tr....

WAS$4~5

SALE

$

3592

FuiiJ-. """"""· 1011

,.

$68115

SALE · 3892
.

SALE

1987 PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE
Alr,tUio., AM=11.•

WAS$4{195
SALE

$5992

The Gallipolis Kiwanis Club WIC staff. The posters were proand the Gallipolis La Lee he League duced by Kiwanis International and
have joined to promote better La Leche International, a volunteer
health for babies by helping ' organization dedicated to helping
·women breastfeed.
women breastfeed. The program
The Kiwanians have a national also stresses tl\e unique bond
child health project which includes formed when a mother breastfeeds
distributing breastfeeding posters her inf~t.
10 health departments, hospitals,
The Breastfeeding Promotion
WIC clinicS and doctor's offices. A Project at WIC is sponsoring
poster has been donated to the breastfeeding classes several times
Meigs County WIC Breastfeeding a month, as well as individual conPromotion Project which is coordi- sultations with the breastfeeding
nated by Elaine Matheny, a certi· specialist. Anyone needing inforfied lactation consultant on the mation may contact Ms. Matheny

$4592

1986 CHEV. G-YU
. CONVERSION VU

4 Dl. SEDAN

$
3292

$6885
SALE

$4592

1987 CHEV. K·IWEI

SALE

414 PICKUP

SUPIEME

.....,,_a

LONI ea1, IIIIIJ - n , ctniJ D,CIOO
mlao, . .,.

WAS$8285

•

'

'

't

OUI.

oIOCIII,.r.
.. ~oea~-.... ""'"111"-··

---.-01o11-. .
IROUGIWA

MJ oqo PJI d

2 WAS$3':LE $3492 WASU~~LE $8292

year."

Teams B!ld their walkers participating in the event are as: Bank
One • Millie Midkiff, Marilyn
Wolfe, Joan Wolfe, Dianna Law·
son, Desmond Jeffers, Marilyn
Robinson and Doris Snowden:
Meigs High School faculty - Dana
Kessinger, Beck-y Baer, Cathy
Reed, Karen Walker, Jennifer
Walker, Ellie Blaeunar. Becky Cot·
frill and Fred Baley; Future Homemakers of America- Sherry Seddon, Tammy Queen, Ginger Holcomb, Shelly Sinclair and Lorena
Oiler; Veterans Memorial Hospital

at the ~C offi~, 992-6626.
Addttional mf~on ma~ be
oblamed by CODiaCtllll Ms. J~
Thompson of the Galhpolls La
Leche League. She has been
involved with the La l.eche ~
for 11 years; Ms. Thoen~ ~ •
anthropologiSt ~d ~ spccialOte:s
in mi~wifery, ch!ldbir111 and llaation (_breastfeedmg). S~ tew=~
pan-ume at the Uruvem.lY of_Rio
Grande. She conducts ~ccs
and worlcshops at tbe ~ ~
ty Health Department and ~e as
available for quesuons at all biDCS.

• Rhonda Dailey, Jackie Starcher,
Kim Shamblin and Charles Aikins;
Paul Gerard for Sheriff • Paul and
Niesel Gerard; Southern Local
Sc!Riols • Jan Hill, Mary Hill, :
Donna Norris and Jan Noms; Prosecutor's Office. Joyce McCarthy, .
Linda Warner, Nora Eason and
Steve, Nicholas, Allison, Anna and :
Ian Story; Middleport Amateur •.
Garden Club and Presbyterian ·
Group • Gladys Cumings; Middle· •
port Church of Christ - Dreama .
Pickens; walking as indi vidua1s
were Kimberly Fetty and Doris ,
We??.
•
The mission of the American ·
Heart Association is to reduce dis·
ability and death from cardiovascular disease and stroke. Heart disease is the number one cause of
death in Meigs County. Further
information may be obtained by
contacting the local president,
Sandy Iannarelli at 992.7039 or the
Central Ohio Region Office at 1·
800·282..()291.

small business
gro.up disagree over health bill

58592

COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) 6ov. George Voinovich says a
health care insurance bill approved
by the General Assembly is an
important first step in giving all
Ohioans access 1o affordable, qual,

1992 CHEV. METIO

CONVEmiLE

.,..,1110, l o w - T Jl 110Ctl

SB~~LE $7992

But the National Federation of
The bill also au~horizes, ia
Independent Business-Ohio says it anticipation of future Stile IIIII fed..
is diSappointed by the measure era! fundi~g. a propn to l*owide
because of what it calls a costly, ·health care coverage to aboul
unnecessary mandate.
400,000 children of :low-inooine .
The House and Senate sent the families who .do not qualify for
bill to Voinovich along with more Medicaid.
than 30 others, as legislators Thurs- .
Jones said the bill, if fully fund.
day night wrapped up their voting ed, could take care of ·at least 60
sessions for the year.
percent of tbe estimated L3 million
Action on the measures was uninsured Ohioans.
overshadowed by approval of a w
Voinovich said the measure
increase bill that will generate an would provide atabilily in the
extra $1.1 billion in revenue over heal:h insurlocc
the next 30 .months, and authorize
"My lldminlstrlllion looks furborrowing anoth~r SI billion to ward to continuins our efforts in
finance state consuw:tion projects.
health care reform and in lhe
Sponsored by Rep. Wayne implementation of lhis ililpor111lt
Jones, D-Cuyahoga ,Falls, the pi~de of leaiflalion," Voinovicll
health c~ bill would limit insur· S81 •
,
ance company administrative costs,
But Roser Oeis«. 1111e dim:tor
prohibit balance. billing far Medi· of the SIDIII-hiSinen 015 iqrion,
care patients and allow employees objej:ted to lhe cbild prevcatiw
to change jobs without fear of los· cam reqilila••"•
ing their health ins~..
''Wellaea propama for dlillt also would reqwre msurance ~n are a wonby - · bat il is
contracts to provide benefits for amponant 10 1101e daalwpa,as
preventive ClfC for cbildlen up :o already aubaiclize local llleald!
age 9, and create 1 Joan rqJayment d~p~ents lhat pto"-le --·program for doctors who apee to nuauons to IDJOIIO n:pRDets d
serve in inner cily and rural - . · ability 10 pay," ~ llli4.

-•C\ILICC

OLDSMOBILE

•'

-·-..ny

ale I :al••••jes

such as that !Vhich developed tech,
niques used for open heart surgery
and advancements in medications
such. as those that ~ontrol high
blood pressure," commented Millie
Midkiff, American Heart Walk
Chairman. "We truly thank everyone involved in making this frrst
national American Heart Walk
such a success. We hope walkers
keep up the regular exercise routine
and invite everyone to join us next

Voi~ovich,

·~::..":' condlllon.
-·only 42,000-.
I•
IWJU; $9815

WJC clinics and doctor's offices. l•ditlle
Thompson, rlcht, or the Gallipolis Ll Ledte
League, doaates a breastfeeding illformaliaa
poster to the Meigs County WIC Braslfeeflw&amp;
Promotion Project, represented by N-a Torres, RN, Nursing Director and WIC Healtll Professional.

FW fig
in: iill u!br: lw.!
Mei&amp;s Cc-•y bericzn Hearl
Walk, sp
•ed locally by Bank
Oae of P- toy IDd Whaley's
Aim Pans.by Led-

Gallipolis Kiwanis Club~. along with .
La Leche League, promote project

ILoodocllwln oqo tp - ·

WAS $5985 .••

,.

Fofty-nine take part in
Meigs County heartrwalk

19U PONTIAC
GRAND Pill

'* 111m.

lluot-

'

......... ,.•..

$ALE

1985 OLDS TORONADO

-·

ntt. .,. R0tl11d. .tll11

v.._ · - - -lon, .otr, allo.

$.1892

' "'

M

Pledges tDIIIl $2,673.85

BREASTFEEDING PROMOTED - In an
effort to promote better health for babies by
helping women breastfeed the Gallipolis Kiwa·
nis Club and the Gallipolis La Leche League
have joined together in a national child health
project which includes distributing breastleed·
h\g posters to healtlj departments, hospitals,

WAS$3485

said---

..

. r,

.
IIEART ••• CIRS. ftllaied is tile win·
ailtc._. rwdle Mdp C Is Aaerican Heart
w.a fllltr •
ita lll8't Allodation. Pre.- alltr.,.. lite bau U &amp; plllque is Millie
KVIf,IIBftWIA" •
llen iwd ' , k, Jlarie lind:, Dave Harris,

,left.r-m--

Sniptfrsfire

on U.S. Marines; no one hurt

BAIOOA. S•lli• (AP)
Sllipi:D lid • U.S. J [ •
Oil
lli&amp;lllpaal iill B • •-: _.III!IJIII'
~.,.i:dd tllldiJ., liD- oectotS
0
capitai w11ae aid .-brs
had bl:alliij;lt* , ..., " ptl

:, i.e

I•""

Paulioe Mayer and Debbie 'naptonstall. Other
members aot pictured include Amy Perrin, •
Dixie Sayre and Barb Rigs. The team eolleded
$958.75. Tbe Meigs County Walk was sponsored
locaUy by Wbaley's Auto Parts and Bank One.

It was. the fiTSt time troopS had

been fired on in the city proper
since arriviog Wedqesday,
although tbe airsuip where the
M11i11es have set up camp has been
. tiled on.

.

.

!"feanwhile, the U.S.: led muluTIIe v-ecs ~ ..rcr fire IIIPlnal force was readying to venT
1 if· CXJIIIS..11J'l*
~- ture into northern ~ogadishu,
Malk BltiiiiCS said IDII&amp;J- TiteR where ch~os an~ vto!ence ~re
reportedly mcreasmg. Stnce amv110 ;,.:.a _. tile "Z
did. . .diiP&amp;e.
ing in Somalia 11 days ago, troq15

have been concentrated at the airport and pon. in south Mogadishu.
U.N. spokesman Ian MacLeod
said forces would move into north
Mogadishu in the nel\l few days
' 'because !he security situation is
. deteriorating."
Angela MacKay, a spokeswoman for. CARE International, said 1
nurniJcr of ti11ings wm ~ in
northern Mogadishu, but no details· ·
· were.available.
·
-

-

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